Posted on 02/20/2011 11:34:57 AM PST by blam
Why You Need To Own America's Last Honest Currency, Now
Robert Wenzel
Feburary 18, 2011
I have been writing about the great investment opportunity in nickels for some time. Nickels are an inflation hedge. Nickels are a deflation hedge. And you can buy them at a discount to their metal value. What's not to like?
Gary Gibson does a great job of explaining the dynamics of the nickel:
Every single circulating nickel still has 3.75 grams worth of copper each along with 1.25 grams of nickel. Copper is currently about $4.46/lb. Nickel is currently about $12.97/lb. So if you do the math, each nickel is worth about 7.3 cents.
120 nickels pieces is worth $6.00 at face value. Those 120 coins contain about a pound of copper and 1/3 pound of nickel. Thats about $8.76. You cant cash in on this arbitrage directly (anti-smelting laws for pennies and nickels were introduced in late 2006). But the bullion market for cupronickel coins will develop, just as it did for silver US coins. This will happen once the government starts minting five-cent pieces made out of cheaper metals.
To those who doubt this will happen, I refer you to the bags of silver coins trading as bullion for over 20 times their face value. You can easily order such a bag right now by going to any of a number of online bullion dealers. These bags of coins sell right alongside silver bars and rounds.
Right now, the government is subsidizing your copper and nickel purchases and cutting out the middleman. As much as we complain about government, we ought to stop and offer them a little thanks for this one.
Whats even more interesting is that hoarding nickels provides an imbedded hedge against deflation. Thats because a nickel will always be worth a nickel, at least. So if the dollar strengthens and copper, silver, and gold all get cheaper in dollar terms, you can still spend your nickels just like any other money. Your purchasing power stays the same, maybe even increases.
But if the dollar declines, then the value of the cupronickel in the currency will rise against the face value. Eventually at two or three times face value these five-cent pieces will trade as bullion just as 90% silver quarters and dimes did and still do.
Again, there is currently no transaction cost to saving in nickels and no risk from plummeting metal prices. There is literally nothing (in case of deflation) to lose and everything (in case of inflation) to gain.
Your only real problem is storage; a few thousand dollars of nickels takes up a lot of space and its heavy. But people had the same problem with silver when it was cheap. I doubt theyre complaining now. [Silver coins trade at 20 times face value]
Having too much cupronickel wont seem like much of a problem if inflation continues to drive the cupronickel in five-cent pieces far in excess of face value. The cupronickel is Americas last piece of honest currency.
Didn’t know that, but it’s not a surprise. Wonder what they’ll find that’s cheap enough as metals go up and the dollar continues to devalue.
Plastic disks.
Wouldn’t surprise me.
I thought you meant lottery tickets.
Do you really think that they will care if you are willing or not?
NO. We’re just not at that point where the US gov’t would even try to get us to buy into some international currency scheme.
I searched my change jar today and I found a 1943 S Nickle. Web Site said it was worth $50 in the best shape almost $1,000.
Makes me wonder about all the nickels I have.
War years Nickels do not contain Nickle, they contain silver!!!
Yup.
That's covered in post #44 in the thread linked in post #2.
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