I read that they buy a lot of blanks from OZ, presumably the Perth Mint?
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1. There you have it, they should make their own blanks. If mint would be private owned, such lame excuses would not go far.mmissinglink said:What may not sound convincing to you may in fact be the raw truth.
1) Allegedly, the US Mint sources its ASE blanks externally and so they don't have control over the production of the blanks.
2) There's no other original seller of ASE's except the US Mint so I have no idea why you are even bringing up "every other seller".....what does that have to do with the price of tea in China?
3) Returns are always accepted by the US Mint. It's no different for any product they sell retail. It would be no different if they sold bullion ASE's retail. And this is likely the reason they don't....too much cost to make it worth selling retail as opposed to selling to a small number of very large distributors. What other possible sensible and realistic reason would they have for not selling bullion ASE's retail if not because it isn't cost effective for them to do so?????
Golden said:But if those others don't have enough of them and you don't do anything about it year after year, you're missing out on a lot of profit.
And mint without capacity for making blanks is not really a mint. Maybe they should outsorce striking coins also and just wait for paychecks at home.
KeepOnTrying! said:And Yes, Find ways to reduce the Collector scalping that goes on during product launch. The "free-market" shenanigans that go on at these times skyrocket the coin valuation to levels that are untenable thereby stunting the medium to long term numismatic growth of the products. The 2014 Kennedy 1/2 Dollar coin is an appropriate example.
Ipv6Ready said:KeepOnTrying! said:And Yes, Find ways to reduce the Collector scalping that goes on during product launch. The "free-market" shenanigans that go on at these times skyrocket the coin valuation to levels that are untenable thereby stunting the medium to long term numismatic growth of the products. The 2014 Kennedy 1/2 Dollar coin is an appropriate example.
The scalping is market forces driving prices up though.
Without scalper prices wouldn't sky rocket.