by Pretorian » Mon 24 Mar 2008, 18:20:09
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'T')he best precious metals coin would be one that is also legal tender and the face value of which is closest to the value of the underlying precious metal.Thus, U.S. gold coins are not great to use as legal tender, since the face value is so much lower than the precious metals value. Same for silver coins. --snip--
This penny issue is reall great till you consider everything what's coming with it. Just think of it:
A copper penny is worth 2.4 pennies, but in reality you can get only 1.45 by selling it.
So you get 0.45cents of profit for every penny. There are anywhere from 300 to 750 copper pennies per $25 box;
You still have to go to the bank, make the line, explain everything twice to an attendant, get your 1-2 boxes if you are very lucky, get them home, unroll them, sort them ( how many do you think you will sort per hour? ), and take from 1800 to 2200 pennies per each box back to the bank, throw them in that counting mashine, wait a few minutes to replace a $50 bag when its full, keep feeding it, get the receipt, make another line, and finally get your money back. Mind me reminding you, that you can't do it every day in the same place.
all that to make from $1.35 (0.45X300) to $3.37 (0.45X750) per box.
You can surely say that you really get 1.4 cents per penny and not 0.45, but whats a point of it if you can never get that penny? Not even if the melting would be legal? I can tell you that the clay you walk upon also has its intrinsic value and even easier to get than pennies. Why don't you hoard clay instead?