>14.50 for one fork Was it really a cheapie? how much does it weigh? Also you will never be able to sell it for spot in weight.
Zachary Garcia
>Canadian Maples There's a chance that this is the last year of their production. Either the Truckers start a revolution or Trudeau successfully becomes a dictator. Might 2022's go up in value as a collectible? Or will they be seen as evil and go down in value?
>Also you will never be able to sell it for spot in weight.
I get it refined into bars that sell for higher premiums than American silver eagles, stacking thousands of ounces significantly below spot is peak comfy.
>Also you will never be able to sell it for spot in weight. Why? It's silver. Silver is silver is silver. If you have sterling silverware, it's always, ALWAYS going to retain the value of the silver content at the absolute minimum. If you can buy for notably below spot for sterling silverware, please direct me as to where you get it because I'm going to buy some.
>10.36g of gold for $100 Is my math wrong? Cause if not holy shit that's a steal.
Aaron King
>you really buy thousands of ounces worth of forks and spoons?
And larger articles, yes. Paying $30/ozt is unthinkable when I can easily hunt down scrap and pay $10/ozt on average, and as low as 10-15 cents per ounce in some cases. It's an extremely enjoyable and rewarding hobby.