Perth Mint "The Simpsons" Coins

Soprano16

Well-Known Member
Silver Stacker
Has Perth Mint ever done anything official with The Simpsons before? I had a quick look around online and couldn't see anything which led me to think this will be the first time

I just noticed this on the list of upcoming releases by The Perth Mint scheduled for Feb 1 release
  • Homer Simpson 2019 1oz Silver Coin
  • The Simpsons Family 2019 2oz Silver Proof Coin
  • The Simpsons Donut 2019 1oz Silver Proof Coin
I'm quite curious and keen to see how these look. Being a show that so many people have grown up with, I'm hoping these coins look really good because I can think of a few people who these would make great Birthday/Xmas gifts for

Has there ever been official "The Simpsons" silver coins done before?
 
I'll get a look at them in the Flesh in Berlin.... Maybe I'll twist their arms and see if I can score one for the DD Meet Door prize... Or should I say Do'h prize?
 
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Super low mintage on these

Donut = 3,000
Family = 2,000
Homer = 1,000
 
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The homer one is 25,000 maximum mintage, which means it will probably appear in some other form shortly (i.e. Bullion rolls)
 
Carded Homer specimen $ $ and you have a donut inside there free
Family for 2 oz Proof expensive
 
The carded Homers are already sold out! The thing I don't like about these coins is they have Tuvalu on the back rather than Australia. This will tend to reduce their value in the long run. Also I have seen the bullion Homers up for pre sale on overseas dealers sites for about $37 a coin. They might be a good buy considering they are only 25,000 mintage.
 
The carded Homer is selling for $130 on eBay now. Good return after 1 week. Just wondering is the Perth Mint going to release rolls of the Bullion Homer or have they all been sold to overseas distributors? Can't find any info on the Perth Mint sites.
 
I'm curious about coins like this. How does there value change over time?
Like anything numi, you have no guarantee it will ever have any value besides roughly spot price.

...Personally, for the same money, I'd take a couple silver bullion coins and a Simpsons toy or trading card or keychain on my office shelf over just a single Simpsons silver coin. And yes, I am a Simpsons fan, but I'm also not into wasting money. Perth is the king of mixing silver coins (real commodity value) with art or branding (collectibles, aka subjective value), and that gives illusion of additional value.

In the end, as was alluded to, it's all about finding a buyer down the line who thinks these, or any, 'special edition' coins are rare and worth a high price. You also have to remember that there are new "rare" sets with cartoons, musicians, comic books, wildlife, etc, etc coming out every year that bury the old ones. There is also nothing (outside royalty fees) stopping Perth, or any other govt or private mint, from doing another Simpsons set in anytime if this one sells very well. To each their own, though.

The homer one is 25,000 maximum mintage...
Sounds super rare and worth three times spot price^^

Though I'd be guessin the reason for the crazy prices is those who grabbed a few :rolleyes:
Exactly. Every new set is "hard to get" in the beginning... if you want these, just give it a couple years and buy when sellers are underbidding each other and happy to accept reasonable best offers on these.

If that doesn't happen to this set and it becomes one of the few that holds its value long term, oh well... you still have cash in your pocket. There will be plenty of other cartoon and collector sets you can get instead; many will be close to spot. It is best to always have an abundance, not scarcity, mentality as a buyer. It will serve you well.
 
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not everything, but many things
its ok not to buy, but how to offer people here at spot when the mint just sold out and people are willing to pay $130 a doh!
it may never come to spot again, at least for majority of the carded doh
but for the roo hope to buy when there are bargains around
 
SlyGuy and I have had this dance before but it still makes me smile that people keep running numis back to base metal price. It's the equivalent of valuing the Mona Lisa at the cost of canvas and a bit of paint. Or a house on the beach at the cost of the bricks and mortar. "Eventually, when everyone loses interest, this is what you'll buy it for". If you buy smartly you will invariably get far more growth over time as has been shown. Just don't buy the equivalent of the beautiful house with the view next door to the nuclear power plant. It's not rocket science.

malachii
 
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