For Maples, later years have 1 advantage. The anti-counterfeiting features are improved especially in the last few years with fine laser etching. It poses a high barrier to cross for counterfeiters.
Anyone who wants to get more because they have a low mintage year might have to do a fair bit of shopping around to get the price they want. I think if you buy a piece of bullion then that's what it is. If you want a coin with a premium buy an actual collector coin and skip the bullion
@@2is1goldpeople who wanna feel exclusive and in the collectors club but are short armed and deep pocketed to actually pull the proverbial trigger on such a purchase😂🎉❤ so they fabricated a middle ground to stand on. Did notice JM bars tend to fetch more than other types of bullion like argor heraeus. Pamp is another player of that considering it’s newly minted stuff yet premiums gone wild 🤪 cheers sir 🧐 🥃
Gold is gold when it's melted same as silver.And when it matters in the future none of the people buying from you are going to care if it's a 1889 smesh coin from the valley of bf. Who gives a crap, and time will prove it to be true, when the dollar goes away gold and silver will be king and queen. The people who have it will be the lucky ones. So save up fellow Americans, cause when the dollar goes tits up you'll wish you had it..... in my personal opinion lol 😆
The only coins I own with date in mind...Pre 33 $10 and $20.00 Double Eagles and Indian Eagles. Those coins were bought based on BU condition, not dates.
MS 63 is the sweet spot - and not usually much more -most common date pre-33 anyway. 64 no advantage and 65 gets expensive- unless you have a good crowd to sell to.
@@Greg-p2i I've read that MS63 is the most bang for the buck in graded coins but sometimes they have sales on higher rated coins that make them about the same price as those of lower rating that are not on sale.
Right am I missing something? Gold is gold. Why does what’s printed on it matter? It’s the metal we care about the the image and writing that’s on it lmao😂
@@prettykitty5416I guess because when and if you go to sell it the buyer may only be looking for certain coins or if it's a dealer may pay more for one coin over another but really it's all about the gold at the end of the day.
@@lethalwolf7455 Obviously the 50 peso has more gold in it than the double eagle. I meant all gold eagles should be the same price no matter the year as well as any other coin that contains the same about of gold.
I just recently learned this the hard way. Also learns the hard way what NGC app shows what a coin is worth is not what you’ll get when you go to sell. Set me back 6 months
So true - I was even offered a slabbed proof 1/4 Oz gold eagle for the same price at a local coin shop when I was really looking for a raw 1/4 Oz gold eagle. They even told me to buy their proof and whenever a raw 1/4 Oz was sold to them I could bring the proof back and do a simple trade. It’s a weird kind of deal when you see some other dealers sell these as premium and eBay sellers think they are something special! LOL
Right! It’s the weight only and collectors, not stackers are thinking they are getting a bad deal. In my years of stacking and visiting local Gold/Silver and LCS, it’s a pure business of making money and selling in volume - and that’s it!! Making money and then buying cheap as they can - the risk is back on them to sell it and try to make the highest premium they can. I have literally bought silver and gold after I see it getting sold to the dealer, the customer walks out and I buy it moments after. I’ve gotten some great deals by just hanging out a little bit and talking with people in the shop. Cheers from Texas!!
I’d love to be able to say that I can bust out a tube of 1oz gold coins. Of any government mint for that matter. But, I’d have to guess that a vast majority of us are far from that point. Hence, I stack what’s recognizable and could only hope to one day have something recognizable for a key date. For now, I’ll stack some gold…any kind. In fact, my father gifted me 2 liberty half eagles. Awesome gift. GF automatically assumed they’d be worth far more than their weight. Sorry, beautiful. Unless they are AU or BU and/or key dates. Not really the case. Just some nice pre 33 pieces.
All I heard was *clank scratch clank ding scratch scratch ding clank* playing with the gold like Scrooge McDuck. You keep handling them like that and you're likely to lose all the gold through wearing them down 😂
@@xiangyuwang9073 No, that's not how that works at all. I was joking about wearing them down to nothing. Maybe if you kept it in your pocket for 60 years you could get it down to a nugget. Doing this all you want isn't gonna actually scrape enough gold off the coin to even be measurable on most scales. But it will put a bunch of tick marks and hairlines into the coin which really ruins the eye appeal because people expect these to be high grade coins.
@@TheWinstonDouble but for 24k coins there is a real risk of wearing enough metals off if not handled properly given how soft the gold is? I was trying to say your joke would speak more true for 24k coins rather than 22k ones
I have two bullion stores near me that sell Canadian Maple Leafs. New or random-date gold one-ounce coins are about cost the same at both dealers, but one marks older coins up to $100 more than newer coins whereas the other prices them the same. So i buy the older ones from the 2nd dealer since they are "notionally" worth more. I do note that the dealer that marks older coins up for sale only buys them back at the same price as the new coins. Caveat emptor.
It also depends on price. People bought at a high price do not want to sell for a loss.. doesn't make financial sense.. this yr all time high.. but money has a different value over the years.
I keep trying to explain this to sellers, but they insist that $1 and $3 Indian princess coins are worth far more than spot. Clearly this is a global conspiracy against me personally.
Can you do the ultimate full stack video plz. I wanna see stacks of gold coins just stacks of them. Something that looks long and boring to have done but you still did it. Sal did 43 oz last year. Do you have long term stack or do you convert it to real estate at a certain number?. I was going to sell for another property but I'm going to hold another year first.
For the vast majority of these bullion coins, the date is irrelevant. However, that won’t stop the dealers from making you believe there is some rarity that makes it more valuable.
sold my 2 gold eagles this week, since the value almost doubled since i bought them. it was worth it but i also miss them and my feed is full of gold lol.
The issue with American eagles is most places will still only offer u gold scrap prices so your better off jjst buying the cheaper mints u less u just like the eagles then do u
@@2is1gold And then again, maybe not. I don't have any 1/10 oz. gold coins but do have a double handful of 1-oz., 1/2-oz., and 1/4 oz. coins. And I have basketball gripping hands. lol
I have not been thinking of dates recently, but i have bought some Australian Sovereigns and have thought that maybe the date and even location of mintage here in Australia would get some more value? i do know there was a error in the 1920s with the dates of Sovereigns i believe. maybe those would have more value
@@2is1gold yes, it would certainly take a lot of time to find a person interested in a certain date coin rather than simply selling it for the numismatic and gold value.
Most cases NOPE! Typical line given from anyone who will redeem or redeem or redemption is the gold weight and purity value Period. Unless you find an extremely rare collector who absolutely will haggle to pay you slightly more.
I disagree with you 2014 should be worth more, because of the small mintage..I would definitely ask for more money. And if nobody buys it, I just keep it ,and in the long run value will go up in price 👏👍😎🇺🇸
True for 1 oz but not fractionals. Key date BULLION version eagle sells for double spot plus all day long. Maybe your LCS is ignorant but national dealers will pay up. Two seconds of research can make you thousands
That gold pile looks so satisfying
This man has balls posting these shorts
It’s like a cardinal rule; never show your stack.
Every RUclipsr that discusses precious metals posts some (or all) of their stack for discussion purposes.
@@stormforge68 you have to show zero of your stack to talk about it
@@ogluster8873 we agree to disagree
@@ogluster8873 Glock can protect his gold
Hey they could be fake just for entertainment purposes 😂😂😂😂
For Maples, later years have 1 advantage. The anti-counterfeiting features are improved especially in the last few years with fine laser etching. It poses a high barrier to cross for counterfeiters.
Maples are gorgeous coins and 4 9s fine, and at a reasonable premium. I’ve thought about buying them, and I’m American.
I'm from the UK and have a sparkling collection of 2 maples. 😂 Only started stacking this year
Anyone who wants to get more because they have a low mintage year might have to do a fair bit of shopping around to get the price they want. I think if you buy a piece of bullion then that's what it is. If you want a coin with a premium buy an actual collector coin and skip the bullion
The idea that mintage affects bullion value is more widely held than I would have guessed. Doesn’t make it true. 😄
@@2is1goldpeople who wanna feel exclusive and in the collectors club but are short armed and deep pocketed to actually pull the proverbial trigger on such a purchase😂🎉❤ so they fabricated a middle ground to stand on. Did notice JM bars tend to fetch more than other types of bullion like argor heraeus. Pamp is another player of that considering it’s newly minted stuff yet premiums gone wild 🤪 cheers sir 🧐 🥃
@@JFEnterprize Cheers!
Gold is gold when it's melted same as silver.And when it matters in the future none of the people buying from you are going to care if it's a 1889 smesh coin from the valley of bf. Who gives a crap, and time will prove it to be true, when the dollar goes away gold and silver will be king and queen. The people who have it will be the lucky ones. So save up fellow Americans, cause when the dollar goes tits up you'll wish you had it..... in my personal opinion lol 😆
Unless it's graded/certified...otherwise spot only
The only coins I own with date in mind...Pre 33 $10 and $20.00 Double Eagles and Indian Eagles. Those coins were bought based on BU condition, not dates.
Personally, I’d rather have BU than a specific date…. Just a quirk of mine.
MS 63 is the sweet spot - and not usually much more -most common date pre-33 anyway. 64 no advantage and 65 gets expensive- unless you have a good crowd to sell to.
@@Greg-p2i I've read that MS63 is the most bang for the buck in graded coins but sometimes they have sales on higher rated coins that make them about the same price as those of lower rating that are not on sale.
1997. First year the platinum eagle was minted 🦅
Perth mint lunar are the only thing in my stack that seems to have more value/premium as they get older! Some of those designs are just beautiful.
Yeah, Perth Mint Lunars are great. Cheers!
I see no reason why one should be worth more than the other. It's just gold bullion.
Maybe a whole $10.🎉😅
Right am I missing something? Gold is gold. Why does what’s printed on it matter? It’s the metal we care about the the image and writing that’s on it lmao😂
@@prettykitty5416I guess because when and if you go to sell it the buyer may only be looking for certain coins or if it's a dealer may pay more for one coin over another but really it's all about the gold at the end of the day.
I have a 50 peso from 1947 that disagrees with you, so does my double Eagle from 1907
@@lethalwolf7455 Obviously the 50 peso has more gold in it than the double eagle. I meant all gold eagles should be the same price no matter the year as well as any other coin that contains the same about of gold.
I just recently learned this the hard way. Also learns the hard way what NGC app shows what a coin is worth is not what you’ll get when you go to sell. Set me back 6 months
Lots of information out there based on edge cases.
Thank you for covering this topic.
Excellent point. I don’t understand why online gold companies charge more for certain dates. It makes no sense
Bullion vs numismatics...
Exactly. Nobody gives a sh*t about
bullion dates. Actual coins are what matters.
Gives banging gold coins with no white gloves a whole new meaning.
So true - I was even offered a slabbed proof 1/4 Oz gold eagle for the same price at a local coin shop when I was really looking for a raw 1/4 Oz gold eagle. They even told me to buy their proof and whenever a raw 1/4 Oz was sold to them I could bring the proof back and do a simple trade. It’s a weird kind of deal when you see some other dealers sell these as premium and eBay sellers think they are something special! LOL
Yeah, I see that a fair amount. I'm sure it's shocking to people trying to sell a proof coin to a local shop. They don't care!
Right! It’s the weight only and collectors, not stackers are thinking they are getting a bad deal. In my years of stacking and visiting local Gold/Silver and LCS, it’s a pure business of making money and selling in volume - and that’s it!! Making money and then buying cheap as they can - the risk is back on them to sell it and try to make the highest premium they can.
I have literally bought silver and gold after I see it getting sold to the dealer, the customer walks out and I buy it moments after. I’ve gotten some great deals by just hanging out a little bit and talking with people in the shop.
Cheers from Texas!!
@@gilsgriddleandgrill Smart!
I’d love to be able to say that I can bust out a tube of 1oz gold coins. Of any government mint for that matter. But, I’d have to guess that a vast majority of us are far from that point. Hence, I stack what’s recognizable and could only hope to one day have something recognizable for a key date. For now, I’ll stack some gold…any kind.
In fact, my father gifted me 2 liberty half eagles. Awesome gift. GF automatically assumed they’d be worth far more than their weight. Sorry, beautiful. Unless they are AU or BU and/or key dates. Not really the case. Just some nice pre 33 pieces.
Nice!
Between 2012 and 2017 I was all about key dates. By 2018 and 2019 I was stacking hard going forward.
All I heard was *clank scratch clank ding scratch scratch ding clank* playing with the gold like Scrooge McDuck. You keep handling them like that and you're likely to lose all the gold through wearing them down 😂
You do know that’s 22k right? 😂
@@xiangyuwang9073 Sure. I don't know what that has to do with the joke.
@@TheWinstonDoublelike they make it 22k instead of 24k to add durability, so that you are safe to handle like that
@@xiangyuwang9073 No, that's not how that works at all. I was joking about wearing them down to nothing. Maybe if you kept it in your pocket for 60 years you could get it down to a nugget. Doing this all you want isn't gonna actually scrape enough gold off the coin to even be measurable on most scales. But it will put a bunch of tick marks and hairlines into the coin which really ruins the eye appeal because people expect these to be high grade coins.
@@TheWinstonDouble but for 24k coins there is a real risk of wearing enough metals off if not handled properly given how soft the gold is? I was trying to say your joke would speak more true for 24k coins rather than 22k ones
I have been buying gold since it was $350 an ounce. I don’t worry about what year they’re made Gold is Gold .
I'm with you.
I’ve never once cared about dates for bullion
I have two bullion stores near me that sell Canadian Maple Leafs. New or random-date gold one-ounce coins are about cost the same at both dealers, but one marks older coins up to $100 more than newer coins whereas the other prices them the same. So i buy the older ones from the 2nd dealer since they are "notionally" worth more.
I do note that the dealer that marks older coins up for sale only buys them back at the same price as the new coins. Caveat emptor.
I'm going to party like I've been minted 1999! 🎉
What ounces are these gold coins. Because the 1 once gold coin cost a lot right now.
They’re 1 Troy Ounce.
It also depends on price. People bought at a high price do not want to sell for a loss.. doesn't make financial sense.. this yr all time high.. but money has a different value over the years.
Gold is gold. I stick to pre-33. Other than that, dates mean nothing to me.
Been trying to find a 1 oz 1995 for a long time. They are DEFINITELY more expensive
Proof back dates. -also specialty commemorative with low mintage
It's called numismatic value !
I'm happy to have 2020 coins, I think history will note that date.
i wish i had that many coins , even if it was only silver , just holding that many coins would be amazing
I keep trying to explain this to sellers, but they insist that $1 and $3 Indian princess coins are worth far more than spot. Clearly this is a global conspiracy against me personally.
Can you do the ultimate full stack video plz. I wanna see stacks of gold coins just stacks of them. Something that looks long and boring to have done but you still did it. Sal did 43 oz last year. Do you have long term stack or do you convert it to real estate at a certain number?. I was going to sell for another property but I'm going to hold another year first.
For the vast majority of these bullion coins, the date is irrelevant. However, that won’t stop the dealers from making you believe there is some rarity that makes it more valuable.
sold my 2 gold eagles this week, since the value almost doubled since i bought them. it was worth it but i also miss them and my feed is full of gold lol.
The issue with American eagles is most places will still only offer u gold scrap prices so your better off jjst buying the cheaper mints u less u just like the eagles then do u
Good stuff, thanks
1907 St Gaudens - first year.
What about the ones with Roman numerals?
Same thing. Private buyers might pay more if you can find them, but dealers won’t. Cheers!
I'm guessing there are more tenth oz gold coin collectors than other denominations.
Possibly
@@2is1gold And then again, maybe not. I don't have any 1/10 oz. gold coins but do have a double handful of 1-oz., 1/2-oz., and 1/4 oz. coins. And I have basketball gripping hands. lol
What about ASEs? I bought various years for my Family’s Birthyears and some were $40 and some were $70 when Spot was $30-ish. Did I blunder?
That’s a lot of bananas
What about 1999 1/2 oz eagle? No montage just regular BU
My gold coin is an 1834 type2
1 and 5 oz gold bars are more cost effective.
I have not been thinking of dates recently, but i have bought some Australian Sovereigns and have thought that maybe the date and even location of mintage here in Australia would get some more value? i do know there was a error in the 1920s with the dates of Sovereigns i believe. maybe those would have more value
There are few ways to play that but it requires a buyer pool.
@@2is1gold yes, it would certainly take a lot of time to find a person interested in a certain date coin rather than simply selling it for the numismatic and gold value.
Most cases NOPE!
Typical line given from anyone who will redeem or redeem or redemption is the gold weight and purity value Period.
Unless you find an extremely rare collector who absolutely will haggle to pay you slightly more.
Casually has $40,000 of gold
Probably not too unreasonable if you're an average person with dedication and many years
Truth
Any coin that has a mintage in the hundreds of thousands is a lot so their price is not that much.
Does the US mint use their gold stockpile from Fort Knox to mint gold coins?
Hey where do you buy your gold from
Getting a date was never easy for me
So any date is gold !
Congrats on acquiring your stack. How long did that take you to acquire?
Thanks for the info btw
Nice tray 🤙
why are some in Roman Numeral dates?
Gold is gold
They matter as it’s stops you from selling after buying them! Bullion non dates are easier to sell!😂
Key dates don't matter when you clank them together like that 😬😉
Eagles can clank. It’s one of their features. 😄
What about 1988 eagles
Damn I could stare at it all day😂
This shit hard af
I disagree with you 2014 should be worth more, because of the small mintage..I would definitely ask for more money. And if nobody buys it, I just keep it ,and in the long run value will go up in price 👏👍😎🇺🇸
It's a big world. You might be able to find a person willing to pay more!
Not to me. Feel free to send me your old coins.
This dude rich rich
Wait a damn minute, you're a numi guy? Thought you stacked for weight 🧐
Totally different for pre 33,s agreed?
What about rare 20 francs, are they going to make me rich?
They're going to make you spend more. Does that count?
Bro why are you flexing your gold coins in my FACE 👀👀
Telling it like it is. 😊
You should look these things as hobbies now not investment opportunities
Because they are not
I will take one of the high mintage
Coins with roman numbers 😏
thoughts on platinum?
It’s not seen as a monetary metal, so I don’t stack it.
How many were minted in 2024?
Yeah, they're not worth much. I give ya $300 each.
Why buying something that isn't pure gold?
Because 22 carat is more durable
Because it’s the most popular gold coin in the U.S., and it isn’t even close.
I would say there worth more when buying online but in a shop there the same at least from my experience
I don’t even see shop owners look at dates. You get what you get and you don’t throw a fit. 😄
@@2is1gold lol ya
Weight not date .
We the people
2924
🇺🇸
Gold is a scam. Bismuth is the real money.
They will not make you rich lol, but good news is you won't be poor either !
True.
Go one and check the up! ……..
True for 1 oz but not fractionals. Key date BULLION version eagle sells for double spot plus all day long. Maybe your LCS is ignorant but national dealers will pay up. Two seconds of research can make you thousands
Complimenti for coins wow 🎉🎉🎉 un saluto da RUclips Rocco Monete
Interesting..
Not sure that’s correct gold pandas depending on the year can sell for much higher prices 🐼
love my apartheid era Krugerrands, won't stack any other kind of gold.
That depends on how and where you sell it , beautiful coins 🪙