Are Aussie SS members under valuing ASE,s

silver kook said:
fishtaco said:
So many fools lol what about the joker who thinks ase,s only fetch $3-$4 over spot no matter what year rotfalao at you guys lol
2010 ASE available on this forum $24.70. Goldstackers has 2005 ASE $25.50. Good to see the premiums holding up!!! No numismatic value after 10 years! You can pay an extra premium if you like but I get them for spot plus $4. All the same design by the way.

Cant see the Forrest for the Trees lol

let me explain lol past years ase,s are selling as birthdate coins individually to a generation who already have everything, we can all harp on all day about how cheap you can buy tubes and tubes for 4 or 5 over spot but perhaps you should do some in-depth research into past year ase selling prices!

We can all go to coin fairs and think we know what is worth what but the truth is many coin collectors have missed is past year ase,s are actually selling outside those circles for about the same as kooks and more.

Birthdate "re print" newspapers selling by the hundreds of thousands

Birthdate Music "re recorded" on CD cards selling by the hundreds of thousands

Birthdate Past year ase,s "no re mints available" selling out fast lol do the math do the research then sell me your 80,s and 90,s and soon to be early 2000 ase,s for $4 over spot lol "supply/demand" "Math" "Trees/Forrest" lol
 
Last 1989 ASE I saw on eBay sold for $32 including postage in mint condition. Item 131534481219 ended June 15 by auction.
 
fishtaco said:
So many fools lol what about the joker who thinks ase,s only fetch $3-$4 over spot no matter what year rotfalao at you guys lol
1990 ASE last sale eBay $26 plus postage. Sold 23 June by auction item 181779580394. 25 years and still no increase in numismatic value over a generic round! We may be fools and jokers but at least we aren't paying premiums for generic bullion coins.
 
Auction result eBay. Lot of 5 ASE 91 92 94 97 and 1998. Sold for $130 on 1 July. Item number 281730642343. If they were Kookaburras of the same years I think they would have gone for more than $26 each. Still no increase in premium for ASE even if sold in a lot of mixed years and held for 20 years so I don't think they are very collectable.
 
silver kook said:
Auction result eBay. Lot of 5 ASE 91 92 94 97 and 1998. Sold for $130 on 1 July. Item number 281730642343. If they were Kookaburras of the same years I think they would have gone for more than $26 each. Still no increase in premium for ASE even if sold in a lot of mixed years and held for 20 years so I don't think they are very collectable.

I think the OP is at the " I DENY YOUR REALITY & SUBSTITUTE IT WITH MINE " stage
And calling everybody else mad :o
NO amount of convincing or hitting over the head with a big stick will help :P
 
Caput Lupinum said:
lol ASEs - such a noob fail

I didnt buy tubes of useless "missed the boat coins" So how have I failed?Another "Hat Whistle Flag Garage Train set lol " I can already sus you are one of the "Luna tic,s" lol and double lol lol Numi coin stamp collectors looking at alice in wonderland or star trek lol maybe those stupid gods of Olympus coins too lol and lol again
 
Lol proof is in the pudding lol, see how fast and what price and how quick ASE,s (toned at that!) sold for on SS between Sunday 2nd and Monday 3rd August from one seller lol :) :) :lol: "All Ase,s are worth just over spot!" lol and double lol

Boat-missed-cotton gloves still on lol "I love it" :lol:
 
fishtaco said:
Lol proof is in the pudding lol, see how fast and what price and how quick ASE,s (toned at that!) sold for on SS between Sunday 2nd and Monday 3rd August from one seller lol :) :) :lol: "All Ase,s are worth just over spot!" lol and double lol

Boat-missed-cotton gloves still on lol "I love it" :lol:
Yes they sold for an average of around $28 a coin from the recent ones to the ones going back to the 1990s. Can get them cheaper on ebay if you take the time. Just look at sold listings this will tell you what they usually sell for.
 
The main issue here is a two-part consideration: the difference between collecting and stacking and the difference between bullion coins and numismatic or "semi-numismatic" coins.

The ASE is a low-premium, mass-produced bullion coin with an unchanging design. It's close to if not the most common bullion coin in the world and it's meant for bulk stacking. It's not intended to be some prized, sought-after collector's dream showpiece, it has minimal numismatic value and even the most limited mintage years have only modest premiums. Stackers frequently want to have a sizable portion of their overall stack in low-premium government bullion coins and when they do that, the main bullion coin of the country you live in is usually accepted as the most sensible coin to stack. That's where the ASE comes in and that's what it's for. "Collecting ASEs" is a contradiction in terms that's generally beloved of newbies who haven't yet fully grasped the difference between stacking and collecting or the difference between bullion coins and numismatic or "semi-numismatic" coins.

If I wanted to "collect" something, I'd get serious and collect graded Morgans or Sovereigns. Doing that for long enough could result in a collection with significant value. A "collection" of ASEs will never be anything more than a low-end, low-value "collection". You might as well "collect" Armenian Noah's Arks, Austrian Philharmonics or Canadian Spotted Maples.
 
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