Pirocco said:
Mulligan Mint ceased to exist.
There won't be produced more.
Aside of my liking of the designs, that also played an important role in decision taking.
What will endless remilking of existing designs and corresponding production do to the price the newer-older go for? What's the difference between 1 limited issue of 10000 and 100 limited issues of 100?
There has to be innovation for success.
Remilking is a dead end, I agree.
There was a time, in the USA, and if you didn't wear a plain white T-shirt, you didn't wear a T-shirt.
Then someone put a message, logo, slogan on a T-shirt, and every changed. Who would have guessed.
When were the first collectable silver rounds with a political or philosophical message? Isn't this a new event - at least on this scale?
I know silver rounds were available from gift shops and such, but not meant for collecting.
I think this is the start of a long running trend, which lasts longer than a fad.
I think it is a money maker, and will attract talent, for design, die making, production, more.
There is a lot or rehashing going on, and that probably will not succeed.
The profit, for those on the minting and production end, is not cheap generic rounds for hard core stackers.
Creativity and artistry lead to profit. Money is needed to attract that talent, and that means premiums on the rounds.
I see an emerging market, not a worn out fad.
The idea of 'limited minting' is not so clear. The Zombucks Walker bullion, 40k+, not many considering demand. The proof version, 10k, and that is a whole lot, considering demand at the issue price 3 times the bullion.
If you came across a whole room full of New Old Stock vintage porcelain dolls, would it matter to you if there were 10,000 of only one design, or 100 designs, and 100 of each design?
You do not get to pick the design, you just happen on this room through a friend.