phrenzy said:It's a great idea, you have all your fiat in them, if you want more silver you use the face value to buy bullion and as a back up you have more silver than you would have if you wake up one morning and find yourself in a Zimbabwe situation.
I don't get why everyone is down on this, people love the idea of pre decimal silver coins, this isn't much different. The face value to silver content value isn't that much different than a shilling at various times.
You can turn it into paper or bank balance at any time or spend it on bullion at any time. It's like paper money with a 1/4 silver value insurance built in. Why wouldn't you have them?
yrh0413 said:Not sure about the rest of you, but to me slapping a $100 dollar value on a $30 worth of metal is the same as printing $100 dollar value on a $0.50 paper note.
And for those who are on the edge of getting this 100 coin, you might want to consider getting 5x 20 for 20 which net you 2.5oz worth of silver. You get to convert your fiat to silver and you get more silver.
1for1 said:yrh0413 said:Not sure about the rest of you, but to me slapping a $100 dollar value on a $30 worth of metal is the same as printing $100 dollar value on a $0.50 paper note.
Perfect logic.. agree 100%
Play Silver buy getting low premium silver near spot.. this is overpriced bullion with a high fiat face which you will have extreme difficulty cashing in.. but its as stupid as hoarding fiat under the mattress (price inflation).. surprised people see this as "zero to lose" tying up you valuable capitol in a investment purchase that is almost certain to lose you purchasing power and also the opportunity cost of buying investment silver at a lower price and holding more ounces exposing you to silver upside (or downside) price swings.
fishtaco said:mmissinglink said:fishtaco said:But if you are in the UK a 100 pound 2 oz silver coin for 100 pounds is a good deal to a coin collector. As said by another member you can go and cash it in at a bank for its 100 pound cost and face value any time.
A 50k mintage of any silver coin mintage with big Ben on it would be a winner.
I would also buy a $200 2 oz silver RCM coin for $200 as well as this coin because I cant see silver reaching $100 an oz in my lifetime.![]()
1) Why on earth would someone want to buy a coin that has a face value of 100 pounds just so you can trade it in to get 100 pounds fiat ???
2) 50K mintage is not a low mintage for a coin with a high price tag. Want a low mintage coin...there are enough modern silver coins around with a mintage of below 1,000 mintage.
3) If you believe silver will be reaching $100/oz, then you are pricing this coin's value in the metal content and you'd be much better off buying silver coins much closer to the current spot. You could buy at least 5 popular 1 oz silver coins for the same price as this 2 oz coin instead and then if silver shoots to the moon as you believe it will, you would have at least double if not triple the value than you would were you to buy this 50,000 mintage coin.
Just sayin'.
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Try reading my post you quoted again taking special note of this bit! " I cant see silver reaching $100 an oz in my lifetime." smile
So you dont accept fiat for anything? You wouldnt swap a damaged $100 note for a new $100 note? you wouldnt accept a legal tender $100 silver coin in place of a paper $100 note?
mmissinglink said:fishtaco said:mmissinglink said:1) Why on earth would someone want to buy a coin that has a face value of 100 pounds just so you can trade it in to get 100 pounds fiat ???
2) 50K mintage is not a low mintage for a coin with a high price tag. Want a low mintage coin...there are enough modern silver coins around with a mintage of below 1,000 mintage.
3) If you believe silver will be reaching $100/oz, then you are pricing this coin's value in the metal content and you'd be much better off buying silver coins much closer to the current spot. You could buy at least 5 popular 1 oz silver coins for the same price as this 2 oz coin instead and then if silver shoots to the moon as you believe it will, you would have at least double if not triple the value than you would were you to buy this 50,000 mintage coin.
Just sayin'.
.
Try reading my post you quoted again taking special note of this bit! " I cant see silver reaching $100 an oz in my lifetime." smile
So you dont accept fiat for anything? You wouldnt swap a damaged $100 note for a new $100 note? you wouldnt accept a legal tender $100 silver coin in place of a paper $100 note?
Whether one believes silver will be $100/oz or stay at around $20/oz in or over the next 20 or 60 years, doesn't matter....the same principle I noted applies - that is since you are valuing the coin in metal content, you are much better off buying silver coins which are priced closer to spot. Now, if you were valuing the coin mainly in terms of numismatic (or collector) value, then the fact that it is made of Y% of .XXXX silver is not the most important feature of the coin so highlighting your expectations of the price of silver would be mostly irrelevant.
As for exchanging fiat for equal or lesser value fiat (in 50 years, inflation adjusted, that 100 pounds might be worth 50% of what it's worth today), I don't see this as a productive use of anyone's expense in time and energy.
The only reason I would see someone buying this coin is if they believe that it will be very popular and thus gain collector (numismatic) value. I'm not smart enough to know if it will or won't but I'm just saying, if your play is to namely benefit in terms of most bang for the buck on metal content you should look elsewhere to other silver coins priced at closer to spot.
Anyone should buy whatever they feel they want to have...my advice is not to buy, but rather think more critically of why you are buying the product.
Personally, I think the design of this coin is fine but not so fine as to persuade me to buy it at that price. I have paid plenty more than that for an equal amount (percentage wise) of silver for some coins and medals, so I do buy some silver coins and medals based on my perception of a coin / medal's collector value, but this particular RM coin definitely doesn't cut it for my criteria.
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1for1 said:yrh0413 said:Not sure about the rest of you, but to me slapping a $100 dollar value on a $30 worth of metal is the same as printing $100 dollar value on a $0.50 paper note.
And for those who are on the edge of getting this 100 coin, you might want to consider getting 5x 20 for 20 which net you 2.5oz worth of silver. You get to convert your fiat to silver and you get more silver.
Perfect logic.. agree 100%
Play Silver buy getting low premium silver near spot.. this is overpriced bullion with a high fiat face which you will have extreme difficulty cashing in.. but its as stupid as hoarding fiat under the mattress (price inflation).. surprised people see this as "zero to lose" tying up you valuable capitol in a investment purchase that is almost certain to lose you purchasing power and also the opportunity cost of buying investment silver at a lower price and holding more ounces exposing you to silver upside (or downside) price swings.
lostwords said:hopefully the coin comes with capsule, box and C.O.A
fishtaco said:mmissinglink said:fishtaco said:Try reading my post you quoted again taking special note of this bit! " I cant see silver reaching $100 an oz in my lifetime." smile
So you dont accept fiat for anything? You wouldnt swap a damaged $100 note for a new $100 note? you wouldnt accept a legal tender $100 silver coin in place of a paper $100 note?
Whether one believes silver will be $100/oz or stay at around $20/oz in or over the next 20 or 60 years, doesn't matter....the same principle I noted applies - that is since you are valuing the coin in metal content, you are much better off buying silver coins which are priced closer to spot. Now, if you were valuing the coin mainly in terms of numismatic (or collector) value, then the fact that it is made of Y% of .XXXX silver is not the most important feature of the coin so highlighting your expectations of the price of silver would be mostly irrelevant.
As for exchanging fiat for equal or lesser value fiat (in 50 years, inflation adjusted, that 100 pounds might be worth 50% of what it's worth today), I don't see this as a productive use of anyone's expense in time and energy.
The only reason I would see someone buying this coin is if they believe that it will be very popular and thus gain collector (numismatic) value. I'm not smart enough to know if it will or won't but I'm just saying, if your play is to namely benefit in terms of most bang for the buck on metal content you should look elsewhere to other silver coins priced at closer to spot.
Anyone should buy whatever they feel they want to have...my advice is not to buy, but rather think more critically of why you are buying the product.
Personally, I think the design of this coin is fine but not so fine as to persuade me to buy it at that price. I have paid plenty more than that for an equal amount (percentage wise) of silver for some coins and medals, so I do buy some silver coins and medals based on my perception of a coin / medal's collector value, but this particular RM coin definitely doesn't cut it for my criteria.
.
How do you price a silver collector coins value that cost you more than silver value? How do you determine its selling value? against fiat
If you buy a 2 oz silver coin for 100 pounds and it looses some collector value it becomes worth less, if you buy a 2 oz silver coin with a 100 pound face value it will always be worth 100 pounds regardless its collector value.
This is the reason many like to buy Maples because of the higher face value of $5 as opposed to most others $1 face value,![]()