Numismatics are for Collectors, Not Investors

As a precious metals investor, you may heard much about numismatic and "semi-numismatic" coins, particularly the St. Gaudens $20 double eagle gold coin. While coin collecting can be an interesting hobby, it is not necessarily related to metals investing. Coins of this type vary in value with the ebb and flow of the collector market and are not strictly tied to metal value. Also, these coins often go for much more over spot price than bullion coins.

One of the concepts that gets bandied about quite a bit is the idea of U.S. government confiscation. While it is true that the U.S. government did have a gold recall in 1933 by executive order of FDR, gold coins of a significant value over gold value were not subject to this recall. Many dealers use this to imply that in the event of another confiscation these older coins would fall in this category in order to sell these types of coins to the unsuspecting or newer metals investor. However, the confiscation issue is a red herring for several reasons:

  • The dollar was backed by gold in 1933 and the recall was designed at least in part to stop the run on banks; the dollar no longer has any metal backing.
  • St. Gaudens $20 coins in almost uncirculated to mint state conditions are still very common even considering their age due to decades of mass storage in European bank vaults.
  • There is nothing that states that numismatic items could not be confiscated in the event of another recall; the original executive order no longer has any force of law.
  • Gold is no longer used in regular-issue U.S. coinage (the American Eagle gold coin, although it has a face value, does not count) and is typically used only in jewelry and privately-held investment vehicles such as bars and bullion coins which would be harder to recall and account for. The majority of recalled gold coinage in 1933 was housed in bank vaults.
  • As gold is no longer used as a monetary instrument by the U.S. government, confiscation is unlikely in any event.

Now, you may be wondering about silver in regards to this as well. Silver held sway as coinage for longer than gold, and some silver coins can still be found in circulation. However, silver has never been subject to confiscation, and its status as an important industrial metal gives good reason to believe that there will never be a silver recall.

90% and 40% silver U.S. coinage is still widely available, and although it sounds contrary to what I stated above, these coins are a good value - as long as they can be bought at near silver spot or less. This is an important distinction to make, as old silver coinage (often referred to as junk silver) often carries very little to no value as a collector item over the metal value. These coins, if anything, are semi-numismatic, but don't bank on collector value.

In short, if you approach this from the perspective of a metals investor never look at a coin for collector value. Collector markets are often hard to get a pulse on, and numismatics are much more illiquid than their bullion counterparts. If you're paying more than spot plus a modest premium, you're paying too much.

Find more articles on gold and silver investing at Gold and Silver: The Future of Real Money.

Trading Systems

A trading system consists of a set of rules for... Read More

Inflation Proof Your Investment Portfolio with ETF?s

Even though inflation has been relatively quiet in the U.S.... Read More

Success Trading for New Traders: What Does Bid and Ask Mean?

Do you ever wonder exactly what's going on in the... Read More

Everybody Wants to Know How to Invest

Those unfamiliar with the process of making and managing investments... Read More

What If You Absolutely Positively Could Not Lose - Would You Play the Stock Market?

Seniors on fixed incomes face a unique problem. Where do... Read More

Porters Five Forces Analysis

If you've ever listened to Warren Buffett talk about investing,... Read More

Better Investing Made Easy

If there were one piece of advice that an investor... Read More

Investing Offshore for Retirement

As an expatriate you are in a privileged savings and... Read More

Approaches to Investing

Here is a small summary of the three major approaches... Read More

Art Investing for a Financial Future

When we think of investing we probably conjure images in... Read More

Basic Options Terms

Options are good investing and speculative instruments. But options terminology... Read More

Copy Cat or How to Use a Successful Trading System

How many books have you read about successful traders? How... Read More

Investing and Asset Allocation

Sometimes you spend sleepless nights worrying about which stocks to... Read More

Making Your Investment Dollars Work for You

Investments are scary for some people, especially those who have... Read More

Property Investment Just Got Exciting

There is an area in Brazil that has lower crime... Read More

The Perfect Economy?

The U.S. economic data reported this week showed strong output... Read More

Invisible Mutual Fund Fees Erode Your Returns!

Many investors think that investing in mutual funds is free.... Read More

Investing As A Sport?

I said last week that money doesn't generally buy happiness,... Read More

It Must Be Joe Cockers Market

Agonizing displays of poor theatrics failed to entertain my mind... Read More

Planning for Retirement

Almost without exception, people don't start planning for their retirement... Read More

Why You Need To Buy and Sell Gold Coins (Part 5)

Grading coinsThe condition of a coin is commonly summarized by... Read More

Issuing Warrants to Investors

When raising capital for a business venture, warrants are a... Read More

Global Markets: A Window on the World Economy

Expectations drive the market. Every stock price is driven by... Read More

Before You Invest You Must Read This

It is important to answer the following questions before you... Read More

The Biggest Oil Opportunity in the World ? And How You Can Profit From It

Where is the second biggest deposit of oil reserves in... Read More