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This is a question only AF can answer...
Does Face Value Matter When Buying Gold and Silver Coins?
This is a question only AF can answer...
Does Face Value Matter When Buying Gold and Silver Coins?
Face futures? Facial features? Or is this just lip service?
How much is one US dollar marked $1 or one Canadian dollar marked $1 worth?
How much is one US dollar marked $1 or one Canadian dollar marked $1 worth?
$1 as legal tender $about $19 for silver content
The interesting coins are the canadian ones that they sell for the same price as marked on the coins - ie $20 for $20 and $50 for $50
Better to have a canadian $50 coin with a
Few dollars worth of silver in vs a $50 canadian bill
This is a question only AF can answer...
Does Face Value Matter When Buying Gold and Silver Coins?
Face futures? Facial features? Or is this just lip service?
What about tail value?
Silver and gold both down sharply the past few days
Silver http://smaulgld.com/live-silver-prices/
Gold http://smaulgld.com/live-silver-prices/
Oil is down
Fine art, fine wine, diamonds also down
Just the stock market that's up
Does Face Value Matter When Buying Gold and Silver Coins?
I've wondered that for future selling... Does it truly make a difference?
Is it better to have a face value ($1, $20, $50, etc.) on a silver or gold coin, or is it better just to to have it's purity, since it's melt value changes regularly?
If the value of FRN's falls in the future and it's time to break out the PM's to make purchases, what will be the better choice.
Ultimately its best to have the most silver at the lowest price
Irrespective of face value but if all things are equal its better to have the higher face value coin
The $20 for $20 and $50 for $50 silver coins are interesting
Because if you look at them not as a silver purchase but a partially silver backed
fiat, they make a good choice
Problem is they only let you buy three!
If you are going to have $60 better to have it in three $20 small silver coins
Face will be the currency in the post precious-metals Nazi cannibal biker gang slaves-tied-to-the-front-bumper road warrior economy.
Kitco and the curreny exchanges should track dollar-to-face, euro-to-face, and renminbi-to-face, as well as the face values of precious metals.
Ultimately its best to have the most silver at the lowest price
Irrespective of face value but if all things are equal its better to have the higher face value coin
What I was asking was, if you need to go out and make a purchase in the general marketplace using a silver coin in the future, is it better to have a Silver Eagle that is marked $1, even though today it's "worth" approx $20.
Or, is it better just to have a Silver Round that is marked as 1 troy oz. that is .999% pure and has no dollar denomination on it?
Silver eagles say $1 and one ounce on them so if you are getting paid on the silver content it shouldnt matter
But silver eagles sell for a premium so if you are only being paid for the silver better to have the silver round
The advantage of the eagle ive heard is they are more recognizable
Face will be the currency in the post precious-metals Nazi cannibal biker gang slaves-tied-to-the-front-bumper road warrior economy.
Kitco and the curreny exchanges should track dollar-to-face, euro-to-face, and renminbi-to-face, as well as the face values of precious metals.
Would like AF expert view on this
Right the silver eagle is NOT recognizable by most people any more than a round
The $1 marking may confuse people
A silver one ounce round is less money to buy and less confusing to sell if selling it as an ounce.
In the unlikely event of a govt confiscation they can claim fair value is $1
I thought the conventional wisdom was to have silver dimes and quarters?
What else are they going to use?
I thought the conventional wisdom was to have silver dimes and quarters?
What else are they going to use?
There is no real conventional wisdom
How much is a silver dime or quarter worth?
An ounce can be valued easier
An ounce can be valued easier
making change might be difficult? Assuming big time deflation.
From what I hear, the immigrants who face this problem say silver coins dimes qtrs and halves and dimes are better
An ounce can be valued easier
making change might be difficult? Assuming big time deflation.
From what I hear, the immigrants who face this problem say silver coins dimes qtrs and halves and dimes are better
In that case to avoid the face value issue( and the 90pct silver issue) there are. .999 pure silver 1/10 1/4 and 1/2 ounce rounds that would be easier to price
Or..
Just buy silver by the ton and sell it to the chinese
http://smaulgld.com/china-boosts-silver-production-domestic-use/
I called a coin dealer to get an approximate value of an 1898 $5 gold coin that was my father's from the year of his birth and he said without seeing it probably $250--I decided for that I'd rather keep it.
When they confiscated gold in. 1933 the holder would have got a $5 bill
A few months later they revalued gold from $20.67 to $35
http://smaulgld.com/think-fed-destroyed-dollar/
1/10 1/4 and 1/2 ounce
So at current prices that would mean 1/10 would be $2.00
Correct and and dime about $1.5
An ounce can be valued easier
making change might be difficult? Assuming big time deflation.
From what I hear, the immigrants who face this problem say silver coins dimes qtrs and halves and dimes are better
As long as there are central banks we wont have deflation- we should have had it the last six years
I particularly like Mercury dimes and Franklin halves
prefer mercury dime to Roosevelt for sure!
can't go wrong with franklins but the walkers are nicer looking
How much is a silver dime or quarter worth?
An ounce can be valued easier
IF the time ever comes, the public will quickly learn the difference between a pre 1965 90% silver coin and the parking meter tokens we call money today.
True but a silver dime quarter will have harder to determine dollar values than divisible silver rounds
How much is one US dollar marked $1 or one Canadian dollar marked $1 worth?
$1 as legal tender $about $19 for silver content
And the paper of fiat has zero intrinsic value.
Consider the coins to be derivatives (options?), with a face value floor and theoretically unlimited upside, which is subject to manipulation.
Consider the coins to be derivatives (options?), with a face value floor and theoretically unlimited upside, which is subject to manipulation.
right and the $5 Canadian one ounce coin would be worth more than the $1 one ounce US coin.
But what do you make of the $20 and $50 coins that have about $5-12 in them.
They will always maintain their face value and they may grow into their face value via their silver content
But what do you make of the $20 and $50 coins that have about $5-12 in them.
They will always maintain their face value and they may grow into their face value via their silver content
The floor is all you get. The rest is underwater. Since the face value is literally fixed, consider it to be fiat with an intrinsic value option, currently out of the money.
Since the face value is literally fixed, consider it to be fiat with an intrinsic value option, currently out of the money.
precisely. And the $5 Canadian one ounce silver coin is a fiat hedge against a drop in the value of the silver in it
What about Silver bullets vs rounds or coins? https://smaulgld.com/how-to-buy-silver/
1/10 1/4 and 1/2 ounce
So at current prices that would mean 1/10 would be $2.00
7:28 – Silver coins are better for small barter transactions.
http://blog.europacmetals.com/2014/09/gold-videocast-peter-schiff-answers-your-faqs-video/
As long as there are central banks we wont have deflation- we should have had it the last six years
If inflation gets going Yellin will have to raise interest rates which will cause some/many to default. This will bring about deflation. How do see this not happening?
If inflation gets going Yellin will have to raise interest rates which will cause some/many to default. This will bring about deflation. How do see this not happening?
another disincentive to raising rates much- the US can't afford it nor can the economy or any one who owes any money -they want and need inflation and they will have it.
nother disincentive to raising rates much- the US can't afford it nor can the economy or any one who owes any money -they want and need inflation and they will have it.
Yup, BUT if you have printed 4 TRILLION dollars out of thin air the likelihood of inflation is just about guaranteed.
I know but we haven't seen it yet, BUT...
What about Silver bullets
The Lone Ranger is still around?
or, were you referring to Coors Light?
No actual silver bullets- They are referenced in one of the early paragraphs with a link here:
https://smaulgld.com/how-to-buy-silver/
I know but we haven't seen it yet, BUT...
We HAVE seen massive inflation in asset prices of real estate and the stock market-that do not correspond to fundamentals The prices are higher as a result of the inflation of the money supply.
This is the "great deformation" that Stockman writes about.
We also have food price inflation and all prices higher than the otherwise would have been if the market had been allowed to enter its deflationary depression in 2008/09
We also have food price inflation and all prices higher than the otherwise would have been if the market had been allowed to enter its deflationary depression in 2008/09
I'm looking at the purchasing manager's report a week ago and China's PMI report being flat Germans' being down and the US report being up. If manufacturing is on shored as it is being this is one of the ways that inflation can get percolating in the main part of the economy.
I'm looking at the purchasing manager's report a week ago and China's PMI report being flat Germans' being down and the US report being up. If manufacturing is on shored as it is being this is one of the ways that inflation can get percolating in the main part of the economy.
Could be. I am in the stagflation camp
inflation with no "benefits"
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Government minted silver and gold coins are generally considered legal tender in their country of issuance.
The silver and gold content of the coins, however, vastly exceeds the numbers printed on the coins by the government issuer.
The Canadian Mint produces a one ounce coin marked $5. The US mint produces a one ounce coin market $1.
The Canadian Mint also produces a quarter ounce coin marked $20.
Does this matter at all?
https://smaulgld.com/american-silver-eagles-vs-canadian-silver-eagle-coins/