Stupid gold commemorative coins
Stupid gold commemorative coins
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Discussion

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Monday 24th June 2024
quotequote all
someone i know has spent a fair wad on these things, £20k.

tell me they aren't worth any more than their weight in gold.

i called him an idiot.

smile

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Monday 24th June 2024
quotequote all
They are worth scrap value. Buying gold in itself is a good thing long term, as long as he didn't pay much over scrap value for them?

Otherwise he might as well have just bought 1Oz ingots.

rossub

5,592 posts

214 months

Monday 24th June 2024
quotequote all
I always laugh when they try to justify their ‘rareness’

Only 4,999 households will own one scratchchin

asfault

13,595 posts

203 months

Monday 24th June 2024
quotequote all
rossub said:
I always laugh when they try to justify their ‘rareness’

Only 4,999 households will own one scratchchin
Adverts for a new type come out every couple of weeks,
Usually seem to be on the history channel etc during a ww2 documentary is when i see them.

Doofus

33,333 posts

197 months

Monday 24th June 2024
quotequote all
ThingsBehindTheSun said:
They are worth scrap value. Buying gold in itself is a good thing long term, as long as he didn't pay much over scrap value for them?

Otherwise he might as well have just bought 1Oz ingots.
Ingots attract CGT. Coins don't.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Monday 24th June 2024
quotequote all
Doofus said:
Ingots attract CGT. Coins don't.
Interesting.
Will probably take a while to get what he paid though I reckon.

SlimJim16v

7,595 posts

167 months

Monday 24th June 2024
quotequote all
Doofus said:
Ingots attract CGT. Coins don't.
Only if they're legal tender, so sovereigns and Britannias.

Doofus

33,333 posts

197 months

Monday 24th June 2024
quotequote all
SlimJim16v said:
Doofus said:
Ingots attract CGT. Coins don't.
Only if they're legal tender, so sovereigns and Britannias.
Many (most?) commemorative coins are legal tender (albeit IOM, or Jersey, usually).

Grandad Gaz

5,261 posts

270 months

Tuesday 25th June 2024
quotequote all
The ones I have seen advertised are incredibley small. 11mm diameter!!

That is a lot smaller than an old sixpence, which was around 19mm!


Scootersp

3,958 posts

212 months

Tuesday 25th June 2024
quotequote all
ThingsBehindTheSun said:
They are worth scrap value. Buying gold in itself is a good thing long term, as long as he didn't pay much over scrap value for them?

Otherwise he might as well have just bought 1Oz ingots.
I prefer "Spot" value, Gold my dear boy does not get scrapped biglaugh