What is the cheapest way to sell my American Eagle gold coins?

April 7, 2011 by · 1 Comment
Filed under: Collecting Gold Eagles 

Question by RB: What is the cheapest way to sell my American Eagle gold coins?
I have 10 one ounce 2008 American Gold Eagle gold coins that I want to sell.

I could go to the broker I bought it from, but he charges 3% commission.

Are there anywhere else that I can sell it for cheaper commission?

Best answer:

Answer by T.J.
You need to call around to several coin shops in your area.

Bullion coins are in demand now. You should be able to get spot or above.

I sold some last week for $ 10 over spot. The current spot price is about $ 1,345, but changes throughout the day. I would not take less than spot. Call around and see who is paying the most, I would stay away from a broker. That sounds like a ripoff. Do a google search for "gold bullion + your city". The local coin shops pay the most. The spot price may go up or down by the time you drive over to the shop, but at least you know who is paying the most over spot.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

Should I sell my 2008 W BUFFALO $50 1 OZ PROOF gold coin now?

April 25, 2010 by · 2 Comments
Filed under: Questions 

Will the current market price for this coin which is currently $2300, drop when the economy recovers? Should I sell it now when the price for gold is at the highest? Will the value of this coin keep on increasing since it has the lowest mintage of all gold buffalo ever minted. Or will the price for this coin drop sharply when the 2010 gold buffalo is minted next year?

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To Repeat: “Sell Bonds”

January 8, 2010 by · 1 Comment
Filed under: Gold Bullion News 
Once more, with feeling...

ON MONDAY THIS WEEK
Bill Bonner offered his new "Trade of the Decade", reports Eric Fry from Laguna Beach, California for The Daily Reckoning.

In all probability, this trade will not deliver a result as dazzling as his last "Trade of the Decade", starting in Jan. 2000 when Bill urged the Daily Reckoning faithful to "sell stocks; Buy Gold."

As fate would have it, stocks produced a LOSS during the ensuing ten years, while the Gold Price quadrupled. Good call!

Bill has now gazed into his crystal ball once again, and he is offering a brand new Trade of the Decade: Sell US Treasury bonds; buy Japanese stocks. Here in California, we heartily endorse Part I of this trade (while professing agnosticism on Part II).

Because Treasuries are indeed a "sell".

In fact, Treasuries have been a "sell" for several months already. In the year just passed, long-dated Treasury securities produced their biggest annual loss since 1978. During the month of December, alone, yields skyrocketed along the entire yield curve, as price tumbled.

Just maybe, bond investors are growing a bit nervous about America's mushrooming deficits.

"President Barack Obama is borrowing unprecedented amounts for spending programs," Bloomberg News reports. "US marketable debt increased to a record $7.17 trillion in November from $5.80 trillion at the end of last year."

This disturbing trend leads economists Brian Wesbury and Robert Stein to conclude that "Government" will be the first major bubble of the new decade.

"Some claim a bubble has already formed in the global stock market, with prices up 60%-plus since the bottom in early March," the duo observes. "Others claim commodities will be the next bubble...Still others say US Treasury securities are already in a huge bubble, with interest rates way too low. But maybe the worst bubble has nothing to do with the private sector at all. The public sector, particularly the federal government, has benefited enormously from absurdly low interest rates.

"Think about it; the federal deficit was $1.4 trillion in the fiscal year that ended in September, or 10% of GDP, the largest peacetime deficit on record. But net interest – the cost of servicing the national debt – was only 1.3% of GDP, the lowest in about 40 years. For comparison, net interest was absorbing about 3% of GDP in the 1980s and 1990s."

Unfortunately, the skeptical economists observe, the government is relying on low-cost, short-term financing, which creates the delusion that "a massive increase in government spending [is] an easy burden to carry...Just like homeowners who relied too much on short-term adjustable rate mortgages, the federal government's average debt maturity remains less than 4.5 years, which means net interest costs will soar over the next several years as the government rolls over its debt at higher interest rates."

Maybe the US Treasury pulls off this financial miracle without a hitch. But we would take the other side of that bet. The Treasury auctioned off $118 billion of Treasury notes during the last week of 2009 – a record quantity. We predict this record will fall in 2010...several times. As these monstrous auctions sweep through the bond market like rogue waves, interest rates are sure to rise.

To repeat: Treasuries are a "sell."

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