CONSIDER THE NUMISMATIC ADVANTAGE
Unlike other types of investments, the numismatic gold and silver coin market gives you not one, but two ways you can profit.
First, the price of your coin can increases as the gold and silver that comprising it rises. Secondly, the price of your coin can also increase as its collector premium increases, too.
Rare Coins of Gold and Silver
Some of the most beautiful, most valuable rare coins in the world are also made of gold and silver. The famous St. Gaudens $20 gold piece, the $5.00 incuse Indian, the Morgan Silver Dollar, and the Peace Dollar are all examples of beauty, rarity, and inherent precious metal value.
So, not only does this rarity factor help put a “floor” on the value of these numismatic coins, but there can be an additional stimulus to the value of the coin when the gold or silver in it rises.
"The Very Definition of Rarity"
Even as the value of an investment rare coin may well be stimulated by a rise in the gold or silver making it up, there are other powerful forces at work that can elevate that value as well.
These powerful forces involve the law of supply and demand. Simply speaking, the demand is growing on a fixed supply.
With such new demand streams as the Internet, coin auction sites both on and offline, and the expanded marketing of the U.S. Mint combining with a naturally expanding base of coin collectors, investors, and dealers, there’s increasing competition for a "fixed supply" of investment-grade rare coins. Rising Value that's Not Dependent on Surging Gold Prices...
This unmet demand has a life all its own. It alone can drive the price of investment rare coins, independent of what gold or silver is doing.
For example, in 1994, gold fell to $325 per ounce...while an MS63 $20 Liberty soared to over $1,000, a 30% gain!
Purchase Bullion**The statements made in this website are opinions and past performance is no indication of future performance or returns. Precious metals, like all investments, carry risk. Precious metals and coins may appreciate, depreciate, or stay the same depending on a variety of factors. LCI cannot guarantee, and makes no representation, that any metals purchased will appreciate at all or appreciate sufficiently to make customers a profit. The decision to purchase or sell precious metals, and which precious metals to purchase or sell, are the customer's decision alone, and purchases and sales should be made subject to the customer's own research, prudence and judgment.
