My gold coin collection

In this episode of spare change we talk about the items you require to know about coin collecting (Silver and gold coins too). We go over what kind of American coins are out there to collect, what coin is worth what and how to steer clear of the scams when collecting In this series we will also talk about other coins around the world.
Video Rating: 4 / five
{ 49 comments… read them below or add one }
that rymes panda from china
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Good job dude. I love all of the Australian Lunar Series 1 gold coins. The Goat is a personal favorite. I enjoy the Pig as well. That Dragon you spoke of is so awesome. They actually made many variants of these coins and if you have the ability I suggest you go for the gemstone series if you can. A ruby eyed dragon or a diamond eyed dragon. They are quite beautiful. The Series II 1 kilo silver gemstone versions are just as striking.
Great collection! Please check out my video as well. All the best!
I like gold coins and silver coins but, gold cost more than $1400 and 2.5% more expinsive and silver coins cost more than $10 and 1.2%, 17.6%, and 12.1% more expinsive.
can i have one…………..Just kidding
4/20/11
Gold $1500/oz
Silver $45
hi um only 11 and i love collecting gold coins to
how many oz where all those gol cojns? and how much did you pay? (rough estimate)
thats cool!
@cirehj
two types of collectible coins, numismatic and bullion. Bullion is collected mostly for purity content 24 karat = pure gold. Numismatic coins have value due to the artistic picture, limited circulation, certain rare dates. Numismatic coins can also be made of pure gold or silver. Bullion generally goes for the going rate pf the precious metal minus small buyers premium. Numismatic value can go way over bullion value due to desirability and condition of coin.
i was told by a currency bullion exchange salesperson that gold coins are worth more than gold collector coins because the coins are much more pure… can anybody shed light on this?
soo much pretter than those paper bills that bought them
@bluediamond2077 Nothing wrong with buying Chinese gold or silver just as long as they are certified. I personally won’t touch anything Chinese unless it’s PCGS or NGC certified.
@sw640 Damn, I remember being able to go to market and buy palladium for $200… I’m so glad I decided to put all my money into what is my now failing buisiness.
Hello nice coins! Where i can buy this coin caps with inlays?
Thank you
@investornator Hey , thanks for that answer.
@BUILDINGWITHBULLION .The Perth Mint Makes Gold “Kangaroo s” and “Lunar “series coins.China is Australia s biggest trading partner so thats probably the reason why we make a Lunar coin.To export them to China for $1500 an Ounce.Regards from Oz.
@dirtydirty505
try APMEX.com or KITCO.com
@sw640 Hey brother, where can I check to see what the price of silver is on a daily basis???? Thank you
12/3/10 Gold $1416 , Silver $29.43 Plat. $1732.30
Wonderful collection Those are some beautiful coins. I still love the American Buffalo the best. I wonder why the Australian coins use the Chinese animal year references and have Chinese writing on them? Any ideas why? .
I bet you thought you were paying a lot when you got them at $300/oz huh.
@goofy932
I actually enjoy collecting the coins, them being made of precious metals is just a cool benefit, hopefully my kids will be more successful than I am and add to the collection for their kids. But I agree it is a “Hobby of the Kings” especially at these PM prices.
Nice collection bro. I hope you still have it.
Collecting coins is “Hobby of the Kings”.
Selling them is for loosers
@omedterry You can also go to local reputable coin shops in your area. Ebay has gobs of gold and silver dealers with positive feedback of 10,000+ as well.
If you guys like coins come check out my channel. I have some that are up for sale and I would appreciate if you watched my videos if you could leave feedback on what I could do better.
THANKS!!!
wow it only seems like yesterday when I first say this, but in reality it was years back
Its like the eutopia! lol
when i was a newbie i bought alot of coins from a company called numismatic bureau. most of the coins i got were in au 50 or better there grade. well i learn than they were a bunch of scammers. the last time i got a coin from them it was graded ms 70 which i could tell it was not once i got it. they slab there own coins. basement scammers.
I have a pcgs 50 dollar gold eagle coin, it’s pretty cool coin.
can you keep them in a book
i’m glad i watched this. I could started collecting in the dark
ms-60= “banged up”?wtf?
@markapsolon hi is it wise to buy set such as those your holding , 1:15 . they are not graded .
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northwest territory mint took about 3 months to send out the silver. Talked to several workers there and one was nice, but the others seemed to have serious personality problems. The silver bars look alright, but the stagecoach rounds look very crappy. Lots of machine marks, dull finish, defects and so on. The pan am rounds look rough as well. I would send the silver back for exchange, but i just about bet NWTM would not pay shipping. I think apmex is the way to go so far.
Mark, any advice on trustworthy, and responsible coin dealers in New York City? I am interested in getting involved in the hobby as a financially independent collector and thought some advice from professionals and hobbyists that are well established would be the best starting point. I have recently acquired a variety of early American $5 Half Eagles at a recent coin show in Philadelphia and am feeling optimistic about where these coins ($5 Half Eagles dated 1795 through 1838) might take me as
Mark, any advice on trustworthy, and responsible coin dealers in New York City? I am interested in getting involved in the hobby as a financially independent collector and thought some advice from professionals and hobbyists that are well established would be the best starting point. I have recently acquired a variety of early American $5 Half Eagles at a recent coin show in Philadelphia and am feeling optimistic about where these coins ($5 Half Eagles dated 1795 through 1838) might take me as
cool
I have a question? If you exchange money for silver money and take the face value don’t you realize a loss if so then would a Business realize a profit of a loss in face value.
I have a question? If you exchange money for silver money and take the face value don’t you realize a loss if so then would a Business realize a profit of a loss in face value.
This is a reasonably good primer for a new coin collector. This video includes information on coin handling, historical facts and coin grading. Mark talks about three good coin grading services, PCGS, ICG, and NGC. We’ve also found that ANACS (formerly part of American Numismatics Association) to be quite good. His comment about “basement grading companies” are spot on.
This is a reasonably good primer for a new coin collector. This video includes coin handling, coin grading and some interersting historical facts. Mark talks about 3 good coin grading services. PCGS, ICG, NGC. We’ve also found that ANACS (formerly part of the American Numismatic Association) is also quite good. His comments about “basement grading company” scams are spot on.
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Awesome new series. I didn’t really take the time to watch these when they first came out but I’m going to catch up on them now.
@David4everling Are you okay? gold777silver clearly noted that Coin World found that ACCGS clearly noted that some coins were cleaned, whereas PCGS and NGC didn’t catch the cleaned ones. How that translates to ACCGS “obviously sucks” defies not only logic, but basic language. One doesn’t have to think very deeply to know that exposure produces popularity. Since PCGS spends millions of dollars on advertising and ACCGS, owned by the Beverly Hills Coin Club, spends ZERO on self-promotion.
@markapsolon Coin World’s investigation of 7 leading grading services was very extensive & contradicts your findings. In not one single case did the “big 3″ agree with each other & in many cases, were as much as 7 points off. In most samples, Coin World found ACCGS was more conservative than PCGS & ACCGS correctly noted a few coins had been “cleaned” which were overlooked by PCGS & NGC. Not surprising, since PCGS graded many shipwreck gold coins without noting they had been in acid baths.