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Two years ago to help the Coin industry – the coin industry has a lobby – the government decided to stop making them available to the banks in rolls and left coin collectors with three options. You could ask for change and hope to find a coin in General Circulation, a poor quality. Or, you could go to the Coin Stores which now dramatically increased the prices. The other option was to purchase the coins in Rolls at a slight markup from the Mint Directly.
That changed prices dramatically. In the past, because the coins were so easy to get, the coin stores only made a small profit. A new 25 cent Presidential Quarter in uncirculated condition (meaning it was never in public circulation) cost about 50 cents. Today, you have to pay $1. The Gold Dollars, which you could get for $1.25, were now more than $2 each.
Coin collection was no longer a hobby. It turned into real labor. In 2010, when the banks stopped selling the new coins, the coin stores dramatically increased the costs.
Seeing their profits rise, the greedy government Mint started to make even more coins, like quarters honoring the nation’s great parks and landmarks. Three of each, P, D and S.
Those are impossible to find, unless you are wealthy, don’t have to worry about putting food on the table, and can spend $100 a month to get the most basic quality of new coins.
read more Ray Hanania, Baby Boomers: Coin collecting hobby has lost a lot of its value
That changed prices dramatically. In the past, because the coins were so easy to get, the coin stores only made a small profit. A new 25 cent Presidential Quarter in uncirculated condition (meaning it was never in public circulation) cost about 50 cents. Today, you have to pay $1. The Gold Dollars, which you could get for $1.25, were now more than $2 each.
Coin collection was no longer a hobby. It turned into real labor. In 2010, when the banks stopped selling the new coins, the coin stores dramatically increased the costs.
Seeing their profits rise, the greedy government Mint started to make even more coins, like quarters honoring the nation’s great parks and landmarks. Three of each, P, D and S.
Those are impossible to find, unless you are wealthy, don’t have to worry about putting food on the table, and can spend $100 a month to get the most basic quality of new coins.
read more Ray Hanania, Baby Boomers: Coin collecting hobby has lost a lot of its value