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 Thursday, July 17, 2008
What would you say about coin designs?
Posted by Dave
If you had the chance to give your input to the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee, one of the two national panels that offer design advice to the secretary of the Treasury, what would it be? A planned meeting of the CCAC 9 a.m. Aug. 1 at the American Numismatic Association’s World’s Fair of Money in Baltimore at the convention center might just be your chance to see how this particular government body works. Specific design candidates on the agenda are proposals for the reverse of the 2009 proof platinum American Eagle and for a privy mark. However, there is also going to be a public forum immediately after the meeting. That would be your chance to offer input. “We hope that any interested numismatists will come to our meeting and forum to see the coin design process in action, and especially to let us know their opinions about American coin design,” said Mitch Sanders, the CCAC chairman. Once you take the floor and everybody is listening, what would you tell them? I will be in attendance to find out, but if you want to make a few comments here as to what you would say if you had the chance, please do so. I know that not everybody will have the opportunity to be in Baltimore. What I have heard at public meetings such as this have been very interesting. The first time I heard collectors suggest edge lettering on American coins was at a listening session of a former Mint director. This became a reality on the Presidential dollars and led to the "Godless Dollar" controversy that prompted Congress to mandate putting the motto on the obverse. Collector ideas might be good or bad, but we can't say that our public officials are not listening.
7/17/2008 8:56:33 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, July 16, 2008
One paper money advantage over coins
Posted by Dave
“Leaving a paper trail” is device for accountants or investigators to find out where the money went. In the case of actual collectors of paper money, the paper trail is vital in knowing the history of a particular bank note you might be considering buying. If you are buying a high-grade note, it might interest you to discover that it had sold before as a lower grade note. Figuring this out is possible because notes have serial numbers that can be recorded and traced. Assembling this information, or blazing the paper trail, is Martin Gengerke, a professional in the field who originally introduced the Gengerke Census and now is taking it one step further called the Gengerke Census Lite. It is geared to coin dealers and paper money newcomers to help them identify a note and assess its rarity. It offers a complete census of large-size type notes issued before the conversion to small-size notes in 1929. It also offers a complete census of National Bank Notes, which were issued by individual banks 1863-1935 with a federal guarantee behind them. The Gengerke Census Lite is a cheaper alternative at $30 than the version with all the bells and whistles. It comes on a disk and is updated once each year. The full version costs $175 and is updated continuously and can be downloaded over the Internet. If you have a budding interest in paper money, you might consider e-mailing gengerke@aol.com for more information.
7/16/2008 9:05:14 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Ignorance ain't bliss
Posted by Dave
First I wanted laugh. Then it was “uh-oh.” The lesson just might apply to numismatics, too. IndyMac Bank of Pasadena, Calif., failed Friday and yet a run on it by depositors seems to have started afterwards if the news footage from yesterday is any guide. So, after the bank failed, after the government took it over, after the obligations of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to cover any deposit of $100,000 or less were triggered, that’s when people decided to start a run? How silly is that? Any money to be lost was already lost, and 98 percent of the depositors are covered by the $100,000 guarantee. Why was there a run at all? The FDIC guarantee should be well known, but it obviously isn’t. How can that be the case in the Internet age with so much information at our fingertips? Apparently fingertips aren’t close enough. It needs to be in your head. What’s the numismatic connection? Think about it. Collectors have always stressed knowledge and they are quite right to do so. However, the threat isn’t from our lack of knowledge, but like the bank run, the danger comes from the lack of knowledge of the uninformed. If coin dealers are going to be put out of business by overzealous regulators, it is the ignorance of those regulators we should be worried about. A city council that cannot tell the difference between a fly-by-night motel coin buyer and a community based shop owner is dangerous. The state department’s seemingly willful blindness in equating collectors of ancient coins with looters is dangerous. People who buy supposedly bargain coins online from sellers in China are dangerous because all they know is that they bought coins and they lost money. It isn’t our ignorance that’s the problem. It’s there’s.
7/15/2008 8:59:02 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, July 14, 2008
Baltimore next up for me
Posted by Dave
Judging from the attitudes of people attending the Iola Old Car Show, life goes on despite high gasoline prices and other distractions. People who visited seemed relaxed and had a good time. Those of us cooking hamburgers on Sunday morning marveled at the quantity of food that was being packed away. We haven’t done so many burgers in years. Yet the crowds were no bigger. Those of us on the crew were unanimous in thinking that the crowds, if anything, were smaller than they were in the last couple of years. So what is going on? How can fewer people consume more food? The first thing to remember is my personal impressions of a show that is widely spread out may have little to do with overall results. But the other thing to remember is that there probably were a few people who were scared away by $4 gas. Those who attended the show swallowed the price hike and made it to Iola anyway. That means by the time I saw them, they had already made a greater commitment to the show than they have for prior years. When they got hungry, they ate. So those who made it here were determined to have a enjoyable show. I hope we gave it to them. I talked to many people who were veteran show-goers. I talked to one fellow who said he attended every other year. At the end of our conversation, I said I would see him again in 2010. In two weeks, the World’s Fair of Money will get under way in Baltimore. Like the car show, the American Numismatic Association convention is an annual tradition for many collectors. I assume a few potential convention-goers won’t make it, but those who do come will behave like the car show attendees. They are the veterans and they will continue to enjoy the hobby that has given them so much. Baltimore is a great location for a coin convention and those of us who get there will have a good time. See you there.
7/14/2008 9:06:32 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, July 11, 2008
Buffalo gold arrives July 22
Posted by Dave
How many U.S. gold coins can coin collectors stand? The U.S. Mint may be about to find out. Starting July 22, proof and uncirculated collector 2008 Buffalo gold coins will go on sale. This year in addition to the one-ounce size that made its first appearance in 2006, the Mint will also offer fractional sizes of half ounce, quarter ounce and tenth ounce. For the proofs, the one-ounce coin, which has a $50 face value, is priced at $1,199.95 each. The half ounce with a $25 denomination is $619.95. The quarter ounce with a $10 denomination is $329.95. The tenth ounce with a $5 face value is $159.95. A four-coin proof set is priced at $2,219.95. The mintmarked uncirculated collector versions with “W” for West Point start at $1,059.95 for the ounce, $539.95 for the half ounce, $289.95 for the quarter ounce and $129.95 for the tenth ounce. Price of the four-coin “W” uncirculated Buffalo set is $1,959.95. The Buffalo gold coins are .9999 fine gold and they are encapsulated and then placed in a hardwood holder. Sales will begin at noon Eastern Time, July 22. Visit the Mint’s Web site at www.usmint.gov. It might take a few more government stimulus checks to raise the $4,279,90 cost of the two four-coin sets.
7/11/2008 12:22:01 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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Parks quarter idea moves ahead
Posted by Dave
Wow, the National Parks quarter bill passed the U.S. House of Representatives July 9 on a vote of 419-0. Now action shifts to the U.S. Senate. Will it concur or will it allow the legislation to languish? You never really know until it is a done deal. The 2009 District of Columbia and territories quarter legislation died in the Senate multiple times. The current legislative period runs until Aug. 8, when the usual summer recess occurs. That recess culminates in the national conventions for the Democratic and Republican Parties. The Democrats meet in Denver in late August and the Republicans meet is St. Paul, Minn., in early September. Whether National Park quarter legislation will be considered important enough to spring to the head of the line or will it die as in the past? What do you think will happen?
7/11/2008 8:20:26 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, July 10, 2008
Crowds arrive at Iola Old Car Show
Posted by Dave
Today I write about the Iola Old Car Show. It is not a numismatic topic, but it does have a major influence on all of the employees of Krause Publications, parent firm of Numismatic News. Our regular parking lot is turned over to collectible cars, so the employees must park elsewhere and walk a bit to get to the building. Fortunately, the weather is beautiful and we hope attendance will be high despite $4-a-gallon gasoline. The financial futures of more than 100 service clubs in the area are largely determined for the next year by the proceeds raised from working at the show. The show is incorporated as a nonprofit and the money that is raised is shared among the organizations. In prior years we have attracted around 140,000 people over the course of four days. It is certainly something worth seeing. For me, it gives me a chance to see another kind of show and how it works. I also cook hamburgers for the Lions Club. It is certainly unlike coin shows, but there are certainly lessons to be learned. One of them is the importance of food. The big coin shows often fall down on food availability. I imagine these shows are trapped by convention centers. The food at these shows is high priced and a treatment, not a treat, to eat. It reminds me of what airport food used to be like before the national food franchises arrived at airports. Perhaps something can be done, perhaps not, but at least the car show has inspired a thought related to numismatics.
7/10/2008 9:06:20 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, July 09, 2008
Hoarded quarters put to use
Posted by Dave
More and more of the older state quarters seem to be finding their way into circulation if what I am getting is any guide. I had a beautiful Delaware quarter come my way the other day. The recession is making people dig into their accumulations to pay daily bills. This is something that could go on for years. It is also something that might break the quarter habit for many people. If you have been faithfully saving the coins in any quantity and you arrive at nearly the end of the 10-year program to find out that what you have squirreled away is not really worth anything more than face value, the whole hoard might eventually get dumped as money is needed. Or, it could be something of collector’s remorse. If you have been faithfully accumulating rolls of the coins and circumstance forces you to stop, you might just feel frustration and guilt and give the whole effort up. Either way, if the phenomenon occurs, we could experience lower mintages in future years as these coins clog the banking system, requiring fewer orders for new coins from the Mint. This could be a little bit like what happened to coin mintages in the 1880s. Numbers were down because all of the silver coins that disappeared from circulation during the inflationary crisis spawned by the Civil War found their way back into circulation after the Resumption Act that went into effect Jan. 1, 1879, made the dollar basically as good as gold after a lapse of almost 18 years. We’ll see.
7/9/2008 9:02:27 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, July 08, 2008
NASA not on Pluto
Posted by Dave
There is legislation kicking around to honor the National Aeronautics and Space Administration otherwise known to many by its initials, NASA. Those of us who grew up with the space race think of it with a little bit of awe. A coin issued by the Cook Islands with the theme of Yuri Gagarin’s first manned space flight in 1961 put me in a reflective mood. Isn’t it interesting that there are so few coins related to the space programs from either Russia or the United States? Those that do exist tend to be from other countries, like the Cook Islands, the Marshall Islands, etc. In the 1980s Numismatic News asked Mint Director Donna Pope about putting the then new Space Shuttle on a coin. Her response was that it would look old-fashioned as time passed. I can’t argue with the comment, but I am still puzzled as to why the United States hasn’t done more to commemorate the space program, either the early astronauts, or the various programs in sequence from Mercury to Gemini to Apollo. Even the NASA coin legislation asks for depictions of the sun and planets rather than what the organization has achieved. Why is that?
7/8/2008 9:02:45 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, July 07, 2008
Back to work. ANA settles suit
Posted by Dave
I hardly thought about coins at all during the three-day weekend. What with the 4th of July parade, fireworks, corn on the cob and other markers of the summer holiday, I was rather busily engaged in organized relaxing. However, coming back into the office and looking at the calendar makes me realize that its an easy slide to the annual American Numismatic Association summer convention in Baltimore and then its another easy lope to the autumn collecting season. As my grandparents always seemed to announce as soon as the last firecracker blew, “Summer’s over.” Sure they were premature, but they were as predictable as a clock. The colder nights of autumn are just about two months away in these parts. There was good news in my e-mail. The ANA has settled a lawsuit with its former employees and apologized to them at the conclusion of the Summer Seminar last week. The four are John Nebel, Susie Nulty, Larry Lee and Wayne Abraham. It must have been a great July 4 for them. This is something that the ANA voters who elected the new board last year have been waiting for, but as everyone knows, the workings of the law can be much slower than the wishes of the membership would like. Kudos to Larry Shepherd, the ANA executive director, Ron Sirna, the ANA legal counsel, and the ANA board for getting it done. Finally. The suit was first filed July 22, 2005.
7/7/2008 9:02:39 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, July 03, 2008
Contemplating the future of type collecting
Posted by dave
Starting the day off in the dentist’s chair is no fun, but it happens more and more as my teeth age and fillings age and need replacement. It gives me a chance to ponder the great questions of the age. The one I chose today has to do with an e-mailed question that was thrown out to me to think about by Mack Martin, a type collector who puts together great exhibits. I happened to give him the Bank Note Reporter Most Inspirational Exhibit Award down at the Memphis paper money show on Saturday. It was a great Baby Bonds exhibit (Southern state bonds with a vignette of a baby on them). But Mack’s question to me yesterday is another one of those coincidences I wrote about on Tuesday. It had a lot to do with state quarters, which I wrote about Wednesday. He said he was a type collector. That means collecting just one of a given design instead of a whole series. But Mack asks, with the proliferation of state quarters (50 types), and Lewis and Clark nickels and its successor design (5 types) and other denominations starting off new design series, how will a type collector in 100 years cope? The whole point of being a type collector is to have some of the fun and variety of the many series of coins struck by the U.S. Mint, but not the expense of having to buy all of them, including expensive key dates. What will type collectors do in the future? Will this approach to collecting still exist? They are all good questions. I will probably have to think about them again after I get out of the dentist’s chair because I don’t think I can quite trust any thoughts I might come up with during the treatment. What do you think?
7/3/2008 9:35:31 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, July 02, 2008
State quarters make appearance
Posted by Dave
As I finish up the July 15 issue of Numismatic News, I can mention that on the Mint Statistics page that the state quarter mintage box makes a one-week comeback. I had an e-mail from Halbert Carmichael. I first met him in 1987 at the Charlotte American Numismatic Association convention. His point to me in his recent e-mail was that he thought it was about time to bring them back onto the page. That’s a difficult task considering the First Spouse box, the Kennedy half dollar box and the list of various Presidential dollar options that the Mint currently sells. But fundamentally, Halbert is right. It has been a long while since the box appeared, so it is time to bring it in. What has changed since the last time it appeared was the inclusion of the Oklahoma and New Mexico mintage totals. The Denver quarter with the Oklahoma design now has the distinction of having the lowest mintage total in the series. It is 194,600,000. That is the first issue to slide under 200 million. We have touched the low 200 millions before with the P-mint Iowa of 2004 at 213,800,000, Ohio of 2002 at 217,200,000 and Maine of 2003 at 217,400,000, but none has gone below the mark. We probably can thank the current nonrecession recession for reaching this new low. Coin demand is down in the banking system. Perhaps the last three states will challenge Oklahoma for the overall low point for the entire 10-year series. We’ll see. We have come a long way from the Virginia of 2000 where the Philadelphia issue racked up a mintage of 943,000,000 and Denver came in at 651,616,000. Coin demand in the economy has never recovered to the highs achieved in 2000 at the very peak of the tech boom. It is beginning to look like it never will. Perhaps that is why there are so many noncirculating products listed on the Mint Stats page. The Mint and its employees need something to do.
7/2/2008 9:00:40 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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