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Understanding
the Rare Coin Market |
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II)
Is the size of the US rare coin market sufficient to provide
adequate liquidity?
"Profits are made
from buying" is a mantra among coin dealers. And it
is true that buying the right coins at the right time
at the right price creates the potential for profitable
sales. Nevertheless, investing in coins produces profits
only when sales transactions take place. Therefore fund
managers and individual investors considering investing
in rare coins should evaluate the liquidity of the rare
coin market. A liquid market requires enough buyers
and sellers so that, on any given day, there is plenty
of trading volume. It also requires sufficient dollar
volume so that even a relatively large institutional
investor can make a big sale without depressing the
market. Let’s first consider the number of participants
in the US rare coin market, then the dollar volume.
Number of coin collectors and investors
Leading rare coin experts that I have polled concur, based
on their evaluation of industry statistics and US Mint
data on sales and coins removed from circulation, on the
following estimates. Please note that these figures are
worldwide: many customers of US rare coin outlets do not
reside in the United States. This is particularly true
of those who purchase via the Internet.
Casual US Coin Collectors: 50,000,000 Collectors
who save US coins, such as Statehood Quarters and
Sacagawea Dollars, that they pull from change or get
in rolls from banks. Some are exposed to rare coins
when they shop for supplies, such as boards and albums
for displaying Statehood Quarters.
Average US Coin Collectors: 2,000,000 Occasionally
purchase coins on the Internet or from television
shopping channels, government mints, or in response
to print ads and direct mail.
Serious US Coins Collectors/Investors: 250,000 Collectors/investors
who have developed a numismatic strategy, participate
in registries, and have established a relationship
with one or more dealers. They buy quality rare coins
for their collections or for medium to long-range
investment goals such as such as college tuition,
retirement, and estate building.
Dollar volume of US rare coin market
Within the United States retail rare coin sales total
about $10 billion annually (a conservative estimate detailed
below). This figure does not include bullion coins such
as US Eagles, Canadian Maple Leafs, South African Krugerrands,
or Vienna Philharmonics, or US Mint coins meant for circulation,
such as the State Quarters. Nor does it include bullion
products from private mints or bank-issued bars, plates,
or ingots.
Bullion coins are silver, gold, and platinum coins
whose intrinsic metal content accounts for about 90% of
their value. Investors in and collectors of bullion coins
are exposed to rare coin marketing and frequently become
buyers of rare coins. Therefore bullion-coin marketing
indirectly helps raise demand for rare coins.
If a pension fund invested $100 million/year in rare coins
and had 100% turnover/year, its sales would represent
only 1% of the US market. $100 million/year is more than
most funds - let alone private investors - would contemplate
investing in coins, and 100% turnover would indicate that
on average coins were being held for too short a time
to reach the optimal balance between yield and risk. Therefore,
in terms of overall market size, a fund or individual
investing in coins would have no problem converting numismatic
assets to cash. Read
more 7.
The breakdown of the $10-billion annual retail sales
of rare coins to US collectors and investors is segmented
below:
- Traditional auction houses - $1.0 billion
- US Mint and World Mints - $1.2 billion
- Internet auction sites - $1.1 billion
- Direct-to-consumer - $0.5 billion
- Telemarketing companies - $1.0 billion
- Television shopping channels - $1.1 billion
- 400 largest US traditional numismatic dealers -
$1.2 billion
- 4,600 smaller US numismatic dealers - $2.3 billion
- 25,000 to 50,000 part-time dealers and hobbyists
- $0.6 billion
The above estimates, which we have tried
to keep on the conservative wide, total $10 billion.
Read
more about the indepth breakdown of the U.S. collectors
and investors market segment 8.
Wholesale rare coin trading - not
included in the total - $2 to $3 billion
Many large investor and collectors purchase
their coins from major rare coin wholesalers via telephone,
Internet, or trading networks. Wholesale dealer-to-dealer
networks like CCE and CoinNet enable over 500 dealers
and Associate Members to view over one billion dollars
worth of posted bids and asks for certified rare coins.
Coin Net www.coinnet.com
is an online dealer-to-dealer trading network founded
in 1982. More than 400 coin dealers and associates pay
a monthly fee to buy and sell through Coin Net.
Certified Coin Exchange (CCE)
www.certifiedcoinexchange.com
facilitates trading between 150 relatively large Member
Firms who post bid and ask prices online and execute
trades against those prices. An additional 275 Associate
Members subscribe to view the bid/ask prices and use
them as the basis for transactions with other dealers
or propose transactions to Member Firms based on their
posted prices. On the Internet since 1990, the roots
of CCE extend back to the FACTS message system, which
began in the 1960s as a teletype network.
I)
III) Who among well-known people has successfully invested
in rare coins?
Until recently, most long-term purchasers of what I refer
to as "investment-quality" rare coins have been hobbyists
who were buying primarily for enjoyment rather than financial
gain. Nevertheless, they and/or their estates realized
millions of dollars in profits through appreciation of
the coins they had purchased. On the average, their coins
appreciated more than their stocks, real estate, and art.
Until recently, most long-term purchasers
of what I refer to as "investment-quality" rare coins
have been hobbyists who were buying primarily for enjoyment
rather than financial gain. Nevertheless, they and/or
their estates realized millions of dollars in profits
through appreciation of the coins they had purchased.
On the average, their coins appreciated more than their
stocks, real estate, and art.
The Rothschild family
fortune began in the 1760s. Read
more 9.
Fast forward several centuries. The following
story is posted on the Harry W. Bass, Jr.
Foundation website www.harrybassfoundation.org:
Read
more.
Josiah K. Lilly, Jr.,
a third generation chief executive of the Eli Lilly
Pharmaceutical Company, died in 1968. His estate donated
his collection of over 6,000 gold coins from around
the world to the Smithsonian’s National Numismatic Collection.
Read
more.
Willis J. duPont, of
the family that founded DuPont de Nemours & Co.,
was a major coin collector. Read
more.
John J. Ford, Jr. died
July 7, 2005 at age 81. As a teenager during the Great
Depression, he paid 15¢ for a Confederate bill that
later sold for $200. Read
more.
Louis Elisaberg (1896-1976),
dubbed "The King of Coins" after photos of his gold
and silver coins shone forth from the pages of the April
1957 Life magazine, assembled the only complete collection
of US coins: every type, every date, every mint mark.
Read
more.
John Jay Pittman (1913-1996),
born in rural North Carolina, was 10 years old before
he owned a new pair of shoes. He became a chemical engineer
at Kodak and, on his adequate but limited income, slowly
proceeded to acquire US and foreign coins for his collection.
Read
more.
Former US Congressman from Louisiana
Jimmy Hayes put his collection of finest
known "first year of type" US coins on the auction block
in 1985 to finance his successful run for a seat in
the US House of Representatives. Read
more.
- Is
it safe to invest in rare coins?
- Is
the size of the US rare coin market sufficient to
provide adequate liquidity?
- Who
among well-known people has successfully invested
in rare coins?
- How
have rare coins performed as investment vehicles in
the past?
- What
is the current market outlook for rare coins?
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24
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