Is Copper A Good Investment?
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 7 ก.พ. 2025
- In this video I answer the question - is copper a good investment.
I analyze it from the angle of copper bullion coins being sold online as well as saving copper pennies.
Be sure to watch the entire video to find out if copper is the next silver.
Links to data sources:
Apmex Copper Bullion Link
www.apmex.com/...
Copper Price Chart
www.tradingvie...
Silver Price Chart
www.tradingvie...
#copper #investing #preciousmetals
"IF" we were to go back to a gold silver monetary system we would need copper and nickle to "make change". So if you are " stacking"......stack "some change ".
The world is going back to precious metals to back currency around the world as we speak. All the metals will soar. Mark my word.
Ty. I agree…
Won't work now the populations are to big and wit technology now it would be to easy to counterfeit
Just don't buy it to stack it. Keep scrap
Coin roll hunting for the pre 82 pennies might be worth it if you got the time
Thank you for clearing up my copper conundrum!!
I have probably 40 or 50 copper rounds of various designs. I don't buy them as any kind of investment. I know they will never be worth that much. I just think they are really cool!
Same I just started buying them because they’re cheap, they’ll still hold value, and honestly they’re really cool. Not because I hope they’re going to jump up a lot in value. Also if SHTF you could still use it to barter with, I’d rather give away my pretty copper bars, or even aluminum vs my silver and gold. Even with silver I buy different size coins/bars grains, grams, 1oz, 5oz etc. so I have different values to trade if I only have 1oz coins I’d have to trade a whole oz for a can of beans vs maybe only a few grains.
Same, copper just looks cool.
I've saved up a little over $26 in copper pennies so far. I've been rolling them up as I go and have filled a penny box. I've also been saving nickels. I have 21 rolls which is $42. Their metallic value is about 7 or 8 cents. Even the zinc pennies are worth nearly face value and were over face value for a few weeks. I have over $50 worth of zinc pennies. Regardless of what happens to the price of zinc, copper and nickel, the coins will retain face value so that means I have $125 in nickels and pennies no matter what.
No, the gave value is decreasing at a rate of 7-15%per year due to inflation.
@@richardpatterson4312 Yes, but the value of his metal is unlikely to decrease at that rate
That's why UK went with steel coins. Their money lost value until the metal content of the coins was worth more than the denominated value.
@@TXLionHeart Base metals lead, zinc, aluminum, copper, tin, and a few more will fluctuate in price, but over time will only increase in value, it is a finite resource that costs more to mine the deeper we have to dig it up, the cost goes up, and if people keeping making more baby's then deaths each year the less of it per person there is to go around.
@@dirkfrazier9779 Yes, unless one of those babies invents a way to mine it cheaper, or finds a cheaper alternative to using that commodity
Thank you for the lesson in copper. I was going to purchase some copper bullion, And came across your video prior to doing so.
As the "Empire of Lies" burns the world to the ground to prevent De-dollarization, copper prices will increase dramatically due to its use in projectiles. Start acquiring Cu as cheaply as you can (Copper cents).
For many years, 10 copper pennies had an equal value to a silver dime. Think about that. Also, a 1-ounce pure copper round requires much more time and effort to produce, resulting in a higher value than industrial copper, that is priced lower because it is sold by the ton, in very large ingots. In 2007, the spot price on copper was a little over $3.00 per pound, today it is a little over $4.00 per pound, even though the money supply is more than 3.5 times greater. Copper demand has been increasing, while production has been decreasing.
I think we sometimes make too much of older pegs. I don’t expect the silver to gold ratio to go under 60 any time soon - for example.
Not true. The slowdown in China has knocked the price all to hell.
@@baldguymoneyofficialth-cam.com/video/jP_t1lo0ZgA/w-d-xo.htmlsi=6u22bGiX18bLDimW
Years ago, I bought 1kg copper bars/ ingots (not coins) as hedge against inflation, it has gone up significantly now.. Although its heavy, its good to keep some to diversify metal investment.
The price of copper bars has gone up about double to triple so i’ve made some profit which is nice :)
Great for you David! If you can get it at spot price and can store it - more power to you!
@@baldguymoneyofficial he never said he bought for around spot ;) And I'm willing to bet he didn't, lol. Those who whine or wait on the sidelines because of a small premium for handling heavy metals are laughable to me. Keep stacking David!
What's the future of copper mining? We seem to be entering an age of scarcity. Is it possible even base metals are going to jump?
Hi Chris - it is certainly possible for base metals to increase in price. In fact, I expect them to! That said, copper rounds are not the way to invest in base metals because of the massive markup.
Yes,electrification of cars,wind turbines,etc..is going to turn copper a non precious metal,into a precious metal on the market,because of lack of mining in time for the different things we need.
i am a new investor and i have bought some copper bars for there beaty. i have bought some gold dollars. i,m mainly into silver. your videos are awesome.. this is a hobby for me and an investment in my daughters future
Very nice! Thanks for sharing your story.
You're exactly right, right up until hyperinflation hits, then all of a sudden copper is going to be a lot more interesting
We shall see.
I have started buying silver and gold in the past year. I also picked up a couple 1 kilo copper bars JUUUUUUST in case something unforeseen happens with copper in the future. You just never know. 🧐 Love your videos, btw.
Thanks Ryan! Wishing you success ahead.
I never huts to have a few bars of copper
Thank you this was very insightful. I stack silver primarily but do have some copper because of the available designs and the beauty of this red metal.
..I've always collected copper..but not coins..wire and piping..never steal it but find bits at work cleaning houses..the only coins I save are the copper 2p and 1 p ..
I definitely agree there’s no point in buying copper rounds, coins, or bars unless you’re doing it just to have a few cool pieces. However I do have a stash of pre-82 pennies. It costs me nothing other than sifting through my pocket change and tossing them in a ziploc bag. If pennies are ever discontinued at some point, hey, I’ll have some bulk copper to scrap which in turn I can buy more silver with. If that never happens, well I just have some big bags of pennies. Love all your videos!
Thanks for commenting Chris - sorry I am only getting to your comment now. Wishing you a great day!
I have a question. What about the idea of an economic collapse or a banking failure? Then copper Oz or 5 G bars might be good to have in a barter scenario
hi! Thanks for your question and please allow me to respectfully disagree, and I will explain why. Copper is first and foremost an industrial metal - what industry will someone be engaged in that will want to trade you anything for copper knowing that they will have difficulty passing it on? Let's say you have food - and there is a shortage - will you accept copper as payment? Or will you prefer to accept gold and silver? I simply don't see copper fulfilling that role over gold and silver. I hope that explains it.
@@baldguymoneyofficial I see your point.
Before the Colonies broke off from the England, it was actually illegal for gold from England to be sent to the new world by order of the king. The daily coinage used in the Colonies as well as Canada was silver and copper coin. Now that is not to say that English gold did not make it over to the new world, but it was illegal contraband. It was the shortage of coin that started the printing of paper money as far back as the 1600's in Massachusetts. Yep, fiat money.
I have a few copper .45 ACP Bullets.
Being that I work construction, I collect copper wire.
I’m currently on a job that I’ve collected over 1,000 pounds.
I have the space to store it and the patience to hold it.
Most likely, I’ll wait till my boys are old enough to be able to strip the insulation and go scrap it.
But I agree, copper definitely takes up a lot of space and weighs a lot. Silver is almost as bad.
Great video!
Thanks Greg! Glad you enjoyed it.
Same here but saving for my retirement. I'm also saving copper pennies and nickles. Picking change mostly but pick up rolls now and then. Being a self owned contractor I deal in cash as much as possible too. More change. Haven't bought silver in several years. Not since I broke the stock market.
The value of copper cents is not in the copper value but in the collectors value. The wheat cents have already been horded. Next is the copper cents.
That's fair.
I do appreciate your videos. Cheers🥃
Thanks Chris! I always appreciate seeing you in the comments and the kind words you've shared in the 2is1 Discord. I hope you have an awesome day!
When I cash in my change I only cash in the quarters and dimes. I keep the Pennies(pre 1982) and nickels.
Agreed BGM copper is not worth consideration unless the copper includes some black powder and a primer. Ammo in the USA was the new gold. A 25 cent bullet turned into $1. It was starting to ease but now inflation is halting the drop in price
I agree that Copper is not for investing.
But it is technically a store of wealth, albeit not very efficient.
I like having various bars and rounds for fun. Especially since I don't plan on buying kilo bars of Silver, let alone Gold, but for fairly cheap I can have 5lb copper ingots
I agree but I'm not sure if you made the distinction that unlike gold and silver, copper rounds come in avoirdupois ounces, not troy ounces. That makes the current sell price around .80 cents per round at the time I'm posting this. Apmex currently charges $3.00 per round to buy but you can easily find half that price from other dealers. To your point then, you'd be buying copper at $1.50 that's actually only worth .80 cents. Now, if only we could find a good crystal ball...
You can buy pure industrial copper at or near spot. Why mess around with the bullion?
I have recently bought some 1 oz copper coins from SD Bullion as they were on sale. Not for investment, and not for collecting. I'm making some capacitive touch sensor light switches mixed wood from my property and embed these coins (or bars in the future). This makes for some very pretty contraptions. Might make a vid on how to build them. Yeah,. the premiums on these coins are insane, but $1.49 after adding all the other electronic components is just a drop in the bucket. Pennies were not as nice for such a project.
Copper coins are beautiful though and that's the appeal. If cash goes away like many expect it to, I expect the coper coins to be worth way more than 2.00 each. If I can get a loaf of bread for a copper coin, I'll be happy.
I will be releasing a new video that touches on this topic today.
I’ve got 55 lbs of pre 1990 pennies. But most are pre 1982. My 96 year old mother collected them throughout their 68 years of marriage. I like looking through them and wondering how many places it’s been too!
I collect copper wire and sell for scrap and it has been very profitable
That's great! I am not saying you can't make money on copper - I am just saying the rounds that dealers sell online are a ripoff!
I think that I would make a further distinction between base metals (Al, Fe, Pb and others) and semi-precious metals such as Cu, Ni and Sn. These do typically have higher value than other non-precious metals, and in the case of Cu and Ni have a long history of monetary usage.
Whenever I've CRHed boxes/cases of pennies I keep aside 1981 and earlier and have them (with Memorials and Wheaties in separate containers of course!) in containers! Sure it's only a micro-investment at best but as long as get the pennies at face value I can't lose, right?
It reminds me of a true story I read out of the book think and grow rich by Nepolian Hill. This is a true Story. Called six feet from the gold vein. About a man who owned a gold mine. He knew there was gold in that mine. And every day he would work that mine and toil, trying to find that gold vein. But the more he worked and toiled. The more he thought about it. The more he wanted to quit. Then one day he told himself that there is nothing here. I'm going to sell this mine..so he sold the worthless mine just to get rid of it. The new owner got to work right away. He even brought in a mining technition. And found out when the former owner quit he was only six feet from the gold vein. The new owner hit the gold vein and became a millionaire. This former owner gave up too soon when he was only six feet from the gold vein. This could be compared to our lives. Where is that gold vein. That' eighty pounds of pennies you have in your safe might contain an actual gold vein of wealth in there somewhere. I have heard of men. Way back in the 1920 era and beyond. Who had oil Wells on their land. Even before the Automobile or Airplane was invented. Oil at that time was not really worth much..but they held on to the oil Wells saying some day this is going to pay off. People would laugh at them and tell them how rediculous they were..but the day came when oil became a valuable commody and they became millionaires. And people used to laugh at them..I will be 66 years young on November 8 2022. I remember a lot of things from the 1960 era. Things these young whipper snappers will never know. When I die slot of information will go to the grave with me. The only thing I could tell you, is keep going..never give up no matter what. Quitters never win, and winners never quit. Isn't that so Lish?
Penny's and nickels are good for holding some value and weight down a safe. A layer or 4 of nickels and Penny's do weight down a bit.
I have a few copper rounds but I only got them because they have cool designs on them. And they are great fidget items. Not to mention they can be used kind of as a worry stone or something like that. Maybe even a good luck charm. 2 of my rounds are 2nd amendment related. And I have a do not tread on me round. And my last one has a cool dragon on it. But again I got them for the designs not to resell them.
That is a very similar story to the UK's pennies and two pence coins. I save them only if I get them in change, just for fun. Seriously, thanks for another great presentation.
When the 2p and 1p in the change is intrinsically worth more than the £note used to purchase an item. A mild passive income stream, perhaps. Our earlier copper coins are 97% copper. Also worth separating early 10p and 5p coins as they're 75% copper.
th-cam.com/video/jP_t1lo0ZgA/w-d-xo.htmlsi=UrWIZRpR8V_4InuL
Please don't get sucked in to stacking copper in coin or bar form that requires reprocessing into a useful format.
Copper will always be defined as a base metal.
If copper appeals to you, buy it in ready to use form, ie. Electric cables or plumbing tubes.
In this format it needs no processing and you can undercut retail or even wholesale prices.
Also if you buy the appropriate fixing and fittings, you could charge a small premium over those retail and wholesale prices.
I've seen scrap copper refined into bars and ingots using a huge amount of energy resulting in a product that need a further process to make it into something useful.
In short, if I had a secure storage facility I would be into copper direct from wholesale plumbing and electrical suppliers.
Exactly my point - in fact, I have been thinking about doing a follow up to this to show what kind of copper actually makes sense to have and store. What do you think about a follow up like that?
@@baldguymoneyofficial It would be an excellent idea, copper in usable formats can be stored in loft, lock ups and the various types of fixtures and fittings can be purchased in bulk. ALSO, a lot of scrap copper can be found for free, what better way to sell and buy more tubes and cables to add to your stack.
I actually did some research when doing this video to see how cheap I could buy copper wire and cylinders online. I was surprised how easy it is and how cheap it is. I will share those findings if I get some extra time.
I get my copper for free. People throw away good copper wire and pipes.
@@michaelwhisman me too, never go past a skip without a quick once over.
Sorry mate, I don't agree with you. 2 reasons 1, some copper coins are worth a for fortune. So it it wise to save copper coins. 2, Copper at points in time will always go up. You're worried about weight. Grow stronger. That's from the 13 th warrior.
I won’t stop you from stacking copper.
@@baldguymoneyofficial Thank you for your kind reply!
What about barter as a use for copper pennies in the apocalyptic future?
The first question would have to be - what are the odds our lives will look like Mad Max vs. 1984. I would say there is a higher chance of a 1984-style world vs. Mad Max. The second question is - why would base metals be used as currency since they have usually only been used when backed by an organized government structure in history. I am not trying to say your concerns are unfounded - but we have to stay realistic. Humans are organizing now more than ever because of technology - that technology is not going away. Many TH-camrs like to fantasize about the end of the world and make a lot of money talking about it. As a prepper - I prep for realistic emergencies - and base metals do not have a place in that prep.
Im n old school coin collector i keep all the change i recv 4 that rainy day n 2 sort thru... dad taught me 2 do it i sorted his change for him it a cool hobby that can pay
I’m sorry but i think ur wrong copper is the 2nd best conductor of electricity new cars will have 4 times more copper in them plus the change station and since sliver will run out about 2035 -2050 copper will be the next best thing I just got a 6 kg bar of copper off someone in my town for $180 I know of people that are willing to pay 6 times that price I’ve watched a lot of your other videos and I think ur spot on with most of them but it’s good to hear both sides of a ‘investment’
Hi Tony - thank you for commenting. I want to be careful in my reply because I don't want you to get the impression that I am trying to put you down or criticize you - I am not! I also want to thank you for commenting.
What I will say about investing and your recent copper purchase is this:
1. If you found this video in a search to confirm that your most recent purchase of copper was a good purchase - then I am sorry you had to find this after the fact. Luckily $180 probably won't change your life so I would say you just bought a $180 lesson in investing.
2. The worst thing you can do in investing is use your emotion - especially when it is based on factually incorrect information like "silver will run out by 2050". The fact is that supply will certainly become crunched over the next 5 years due to growing demand but mines won't be depleted until closer to 2240 according to many estimates - so unless you intend on living for another 220 years I don't think you'll live to see this.
3. The last point I want to make is that 1kg of copper costs about $10 - so your 6kg bar that you just paid $180 for is only really worth $60. In making that purchase I would try to apply a little logic and ask myself "would I pay $70 for a 1 oz. silver Eagle?" or "would I pay $5700 for a 1 oz. gold eagle?" - if the answer to those questions is no, than I think you should reconsider buying more copper for 3X the spot price no matter what you believe the future of copper is. The reason is because you can likely find it way cheaper - and I would personally avoid doing business with the person who sold you the copper ever again.
I know this may all sound a bit harsh - but I put a lot of time into preparing this response not as a way to embarrass you, but to help educate you. What you do with your money is your own business. I just hope you will consider this if you read it. Thank you!
@@baldguymoneyofficial $10 for a kg of copper please let me know where I could buy 1 kg of copper I’ve never even seen it that low that most copper coins are about $5-10 per oz in new zealand where I live and I think there is 33 oz in a kg
I just checked on eBay 1 kg of copper gos for about $70-$100
Hi Tony - thanks for responding. The point of this video was to point out to people that copper bullion was an invention by bullion dealers to make money. Please use google to find industrial suppliers of copper. They can even be found on Alibaba. These types of sellers sell much closer to the real price.
I sincerely care about every person that decides to click on my videos - I hate seeing people be the victim of scams or bad deals. If you believe in copper then please look to buy from industrial suppliers and store it. Buying copper bullion is not a good deal.
And if you ask goggle when we will run of sliver u will see it’s not that far away
There are copper pennies and believe it or not "zinc" pennies worth way more than silver coins and bullion put together...plus copper is a healing metal and will be used for blockchain technology, new energy, and electric cars
There are some positive points to copper that will drive price increases in the future - I just wouldn't stack it. Thanks for watching DeMarco.
@@baldguymoneyofficial I agree & your welcome sir 🤝
Can you do a video on goldbacks. I heard 28 states are accepting gold and silver as currency
Here you go: th-cam.com/video/Bg7aZenYLqo/w-d-xo.html
Keep a handful of pre 1982 Pennie’s for SHTF purposes
Copper is usually measured in regular OZ due to its base metal status. Not an expert myself, but 1 coin of 1.99$ should even be a worse deal..
I agree with you on paying for copper. 1oz for $1.99 is a waste of money but I disagree on the Pennies I definitely see the pre 1982 Pennies going up in value in the future.
I’m like you. I love to collect American coins regardless of value. It makes wonder where they have been and who might have held them at one time.
Love finding a wheat penny or an amazing indian head.
I agree with you not on collecting copper bullion or coins, but how about buying copper index funds? Some analysts talked about copper being an important metal for conducting electricity for green energy and electric cars, so the demand is rising. Could you make a video about metal index funds? Also would like to know of metal index funds based in US$. If US$ is on the edge from collapse, would copper index funds or metal index funds based in US$ wipe out any gains in these types of funds when the US$ collapses? Enquiring mind wants to know.
Hey Cave Man - you got the idea of this video 100%. I am not poopooing copper per se - I am just saying that buying these "bullion" coins and bars is a total rip off. I was thinking about doing a follow up to this video - give me some time and I will put something together. Something in the direction of "Alternatives to Stacking Copper Bullion". Cheers!
I purchased a few fun pieces but copper adds up quick. Plus the weight makes it tough to exchange.
Thanks for watching and commenting.
Could you do a similar episode on titanium? Your thoughts on stacking titanium? Thanks
That’s a pretty niche topic. Are there many titanium stackers?
What about copper rounds as a means of barter in a shtf scenario? Seems like a good idea from that perspective.
Copper is mainly an industrial metal. That means only a very narrow group of people would even need it, and it would be great to get it in round format (better wires or pipes). I would never buy copper rounds. I prefer to spend that money on silver.
I am glad you addressed this. I don't understand the desire to stack and store copper rounds......Too little opportunity and way, way too much storage space required. My time is worth more than that.
Silver - next time I will ask you to prepare the script for my video because that is exactly it, and you said in less words :) Hope you enjoyed the video.
@@baldguymoneyofficial I always enjoy your videos. You are a straight shooter with no agenda other than providing accurate, well-researched information.....
I see Copper as having an entirely different wealth storage density capacity rather than the distinction between precious and base or industrial metals. Gold, Silver, Nickel, and Copper are all monetary metals with 3 of them having truly ancient pedigrees. However, although they are all 4 monetary metals, they don't all possess the same wealth storage density capacities. The monetary metals correspond to large, medium, small, and smallest purchasing power amounts. As such, if one is concerned about accruing a large amount of wealth, the focus should be on Gold. Silver should be secondary, due to its increased bulk, though its being under-priced relative to Gold is a reason to own a disproportionate amount, which can later be traded back into Gold. Nickel and Copper are also money, but their much smaller purchasing power amounts mean that they should only be collected and stacked in a passive manner, for the sake of diversification. I believe a good ratio for metals is something like (Gold 1 : Silver 25 : Nickel 500 : Copper 2,500). This isn't the ratio that they should be kept in your stack, but I think it's closer to their more natural monetary ratio. In terms of a monetary metals stack, I would recommend 85% Gold, 10% Silver, 3% Nickel, and 2% Copper in a perfect world. The last thing I would say is that NONE OF THESE are investments. They are money. They also have other purposes and uses to which they can and are put, but at the end of the day, in terms of their nature ontologically and teleolocially, they are money. The distinction between higher and lower levels of wealth storage density capacity is the real distinction. It really isn't precious vs. base.
Thank you for the thought provoking comment. Although I don't agree with everything you wrote it did make me think and I appreciate you adding to the discussion as such here in the comments! Diverse points of view are always welcome here and help people make decisions about how to view things and how to invest / save their money. Thank you so much!
Good comment.
What do you think of strategic metals? E.g., bismuth, tellurium, and the lanthenoid metals?
I wouldn't own any of them physically.
@@baldguymoneyofficial Why not?
Because the big companies that need them won’t call me up and offer me money for them. They have contracts with mining companies. It’s not the same as gold and silver.
Collecting copper pennies is a good idea for a couple of reasons. People of all ages need something to do other than sit in front of the TV or computer. many people have a lot of time on their hands and you your self said these pennies are worth about 2 1/2 cents each. Just remember, doing anything other than crime and drugs are always worth doing in life. T.
Ok. I’ll give you that. I like exercising - health is wealth!
I will be checking out pimbex prices and products. High premium for fractional gold has kept me from buying.
Thank you.
You are very welcome.
I save my aluminum cans. Some states offer.05 a can.
Michigan offers 10!
I remember few years back thinking why not so i picked several 1oz rounds at a Dollar each.
That must have been many years back.
Thanks for your advice. I have a question: From where do you buy gold & silver. . . . . .?
Hi - it's not advice. Just my point of view. I think most viewers here buy from Apmex.
Local coin dealers/shops in your area ?
Strip scrap wire and melt and cast in 1 ‐ 2,2 pound blocks polish and shine, and they sell on e-bay for $15-25 .many times the value. There is always a way to skin a cat.
Well, how much is one pound of skinned cat?
I don't invest in copper bullion since here in the US you can still find copper pennies and buy copper cents for significantly lower price. Just recently I bought 70 lbs of copper cents for $180. This comes out to being about $2.60 a pound. Copper price right now is $4.50 a pound.
Hi everyone. Don’t buy copper bullion BUT collect copper wire where ever you can. People selling 1kg bars for £18-20 even £30 on eBay is just a waste of money, BUT find scrap copper wire and strip it. I have just over 90kg in stripped copper wire from electrical equipment, circuit boards, microwave etc. if it’s free it’s worth it. Good luck.
YES!!!! Exactly my point. Not that I buy copper wire - or industrial copper pipes or anything like that but these copper rounds are a major rip off!
@@baldguymoneyofficial Indeed mate. Great video to add. The rounds and small bars have a kinda interest in just collecting them and I have a few copper rounds and they are pretty but what you have said is important. There is a German company selling these 1kg bars that serial numbers on and made to look like silver and gold. They call them investment bars😂. We both know copper will never reach £30,40,50 or dollars per kg. Good work mate.
For anyone on a budget, forget copper rounds and fractional pervious metals. Meaning don't but 1/50th oz of gold. Even if it is just $5 a week you can save that is ok. Save up your money, go somewhere reputable and buy 1oz silver piece. Verify the place is reputable. Again verify the place is reputable. Right now 1oz pieces of .999 silver are just under $30. So in a month and a half at $5 per week you can start stacking.
That's solid - I can agree with that.
To be fair you should have compared larger copper bars and not coins. The premium on an 1 ounce coin for minting and shipping is a couple Dollars. Obviosly this makes no sense for 30 cents worth of material.
If one would want to stack copper, it should obviously not be 1 oz coins. You should have compared 1kg bars etc.
I am not even saying that copper is a good invenstment. I personally view it as worthless bulk we have way too much of. But your examples still are not the fair and interesting ones.
That beeing said, I really REALLY love your channel and your fact-driven approach to things. It is this high expectancy that made me call this out.
Please keep making interesting videos though! (:
Can we agree on some historical math and get your reflections?
In the 1920s I could trade 2,000 Lincoln pennies with 2.95g of copper each for one $20 gold double eagle with 30.09g of gold. So 5,909g of copper could be traded for 30.09g of gold; a ratio of 196:1.
If you run the numbers on Roman History you get 494:1:
In the Roman system, 1 gold aureus = 25 of the silver denarius = 400 of the copper as. The aureus weighed 8.09 grams of gold, the denarius weighed 3.9 grams of silver under Augustus, and the as weighed about 10 grams of copper under Augustus.
But today I get a ratio of over 6,000:1 assuming about 1 cent for a gram of copper and $1,955 for 31.1 grams (toz) of gold.
My conclusion is that when copper is recognized as money it is far more valuable than when reduced to an industrial metal alone. So if it is recognized as money again it will be more valuable again…..
Hi Business Account - thanks for a great and thought provoking comment. For the most part your math is correct as it refers to the history of valuing copper in the use of currency. There is one small correction to be made however and that is an As during the reign of Augustus would have been made of bronze.
Now, in assessing the value of copper I think total discovered amount is a very important metric to take into consideration so here is a bit more math for you: To date 2.8 Billion metric tons of copper have been discovered. There are about 35 000 ounces in a metric ton. In contrast, about 3 billion ounces of silver have been discovered. Would be thrilled to know what your thoughts are on that. Cheers!
@@baldguymoneyofficial I know a lot of people like to use the mined totals or discovered totals to imply the "real monetary ratio". I don't think it works and here is why; copper's industrial use is far higher than coppers monetary use. Less so with silver but still more industrial than monetary use. And moving down the spectrum we get to gold with more monetary use than industrial use. So why does it matter? Yes, there is far more copper but also far more non monetary demand for copper. So I think looking at supply without considering demand is flawed. This mix of industrial use and monetary use makes it difficult to know what the true monetary ratio should be. But it's interesting to contrast what we have historically come up with and compare it to what has happened to the values under a fiat system.
Thanks for the info
Hi😂so what do you think about buying silver bars ..is it worth or is it better to just buy coins ? Thanks
Silver bars are fine. I own some myself.
@@baldguymoneyofficial ok thanks
I have 3tons worth of copper its very well worth it. One small room holds it and Cooper will rise to $8pound
Fingers crossed for you. My point is that buying copper bullion rounds is not worth it. Thanks for watching!
I'm behind you they ain't going to see it coming
Stack mostly wheat cents, that can be done at almost face value even now if you do it right now. Get a 20 dollar bill go to your bank and ask for 40 rolls of pennies, pull out the wheats then replace them with trash pennies and take them back to get you 20 dollar bill back, them repeat, you can do that with 100 bucks or whatever you have. Then stack those, then when you have enough of those then cherry pick the good ones and sell the rest to a coin shop, maybe for 2 cents a piece, hell even 1.5 cents a piece, once you have done that over time take the profits and buy an ounce of silver with it, thats called basicly free silver, you can also do this with kennedy halfs at your bank and maybe get a 1964 with 90% silver, or later dates i think up to 67 at 40%, for "free" silver, for sure way less than spot
At the end of the day copper has more value and holds its value better than paper fiat monopoly money. Collect copper, it's use is valuable in industrial and tech industries and the demand for it's use in those industries are increasing. I looked at copper price whole history and it holds its value and is actually higher in value today. Also, in empty homes there has always been a problem of people going into these houses and stealing the copper piping. Who steals anything of no value? Stealing is not right, don't do that, but I am stating this that the demand and use for this base metal is there and copper has it's importance, or God would have not created it. And yes, when bartering with gold and silver we do use copper and nickel to make change. If someone wanted to barter with me in the real world and I had an egg or a cup of water, I'd trade them for a one ounce copper coin.
Is investing in copper bullion worth it.
Nope.
what about the global copper shortage?
The price of copper will almost certainly go up - I don't doubt that. This video is to say that stacking these copper products is a rip off or waste of time. Much better ways to make money and avoid paying 700% more than something is actually worth today. Just want to make that clear.
Why does a kg bar cost 100$ and contains only 25$ worth of copper ?
That's called a rip off.
I wouldnt consider collecting coins or buying bullion, but as someone who rips houses down regularly, I do save all the copper wire I come across and clean it. It costs nothing but my time occasionally and may pay off in the future!?
I have been working on getting a literal ton of these coins. I might be almost to that point. I feel they would make the perfect trade units based on the copper content kind of like silver 90% change. I also save all the nickels too. I incorporate copper in my overall metals portfolio. It could be the first line of defense for trade instead of burning through my silver.
I’m not sure about copper trade. Who would accept it and why? Copper is an industrial metal. What industry would someone need to be involved in that it would be valuable for them to accept?
@@baldguymoneyofficial I am thinking copper will follow the trends that silver did. Silver used to circulate in change and copper use in change is winding down just like silver. Soon they will remove the copper content of nickels dimes and quarters.
Copper is following the trend. I consider copper a semi precious metal not just an industrial metal. And copper ore grades have been dropping. They were even talking about lower ore grades in 1970s National Geographic magazines.
Then we have all the new demand coming for all the green energy bs. I myself consider copper valuable and I can instantly recognize a copper cent from a zinc one on the street and it really is a good feeling in finding one.
I would accept copper as a unit for trade instead of cash. And especially against using a CBDC.
What about titanium ?
I will answer this question in an upcoming video.
@@baldguymoneyofficial👍
I think copper is getting more ued and more expensive, and is necesary for several industries so in a future, maybe 20 years or more that kilogram of copper that today costs 4 is gonna cost 20
All commodities will rise including copper
Please keep in mind that I am talking about bullion coins in this video. All the best!
Copper is the next silver. May not make sense to buy copper bullion but there's nothing to lose with collecting old copper pennies.
Copper has 97% of the conductivity of silver - so if & when the SHTF & silver goes to its true value - copper will do quite well for its industrial & monetary use. 🚀📈
Yeah, I have my house stacked with copper, basement to ceiling. It’s called plumbing. 😂
Good call!
Thanks for saving me money
What about copper bars?
It's not very concentrated wealth and harder to sell than silver. I would give a hard pass.
Very informative. Thank you sir.
You're very welcome Raymond. Thanks for watching and commenting.
Interesting video. I like the different subjects or topics you discuss.
Thanks - I like to cover diverse topics because they interest me. I know TH-cam prefers specialization - but I couldn't care less. Thanks for watching!
I salvage copper from electronic items as something of a hobby. I have a few kilos of the stuff now, which is worth about 100 euro (I think). I wouldn't buy the bullion coins as the markup is too high, but I can't bare to see copper just thrown into a dump.
I agree coppers bulky and not very valuable but as a machinist I have about 100 oz of copper the reason for that is not for the value of the copper but for its value as a base metal for alloying other metals I also have a small stockpiled of tin, lead and aluminum . In addition pure copper also makes electrical grade wire. But for its value of appreciation it's not worth it.
Yeah - I'm with you 100%. Thanks for watching Robert.
My father n grandfather also collected coins n yeah takes up space too much n hiding all that aint easy i wish it was all gold ...
at this time i agree with overall market valuation silver vs. copper from investment standpoint.however purchasing a few "cool" looking copper rounds as novelty items imo is ok who knows with the current global aggression situation 6/26/2024 perhaps those copper rounds worse case scenario are barter ready for needed goods in another reality.
good info
Thank you!
Great Video
I was recently reading that because of the use of copper in electric cars the copper demand will put reach reserves over the next few years
Could be - I would buy copper futures if that was something I wanted to take advantage of - not physical copper for 700% markup.
I bought one twelve thousand wheat back pennies a couple of years ago for six hundred USD. I'm just going to hold on to them.
I don’t get what you mean??
I bought 10 pound bar of copper to use as door stop
Interesting.
Personally I only buy silver because I like to have the same as the gold ones what is the real investment. Silver still will be more worth in the long run. Honestly the premium is too high on silver in The Netherlands where I reside. Still I would love to have the copper coins as well just like I like to have fake coins. It is a collection... It is good to have fake coins as well so you can spot fakes more easily... 😅
But what if society fails. Wouldn’t it be valuable then?
I’m not sure copper will play a role in that in any way. I would guess that it will not.
Thanks
Hi Tim - thanks for watching!
I only buy copper coins when a new design is on a silver or gold round. When I get it and the stamp looks good, I buy the new round.
Happy collecting! All the best.
Base metal yes. This is a marketing ploy, getting buyers to feel they can afford SOMETHING. On top of that, copper rounds and bars are very pretty... they look like they're valuable! Pure copper IS a beautiful metal, VERY attractive looking. But consider: even if you somehow anticipated copper DOUBLING in value in the near future, and were somehow able to buy it at market value ( .35 cents or so an ounce) rather than super inflated hyped/coin/bar value, the amount you would have to have is unmanageable. Many of us experience storage problems with SILVER. You would have to fill your garage with copper to make a substantial gain. Start PM stacking with silver, and move towards gold if possible.
Agreed!
I use the weight for exercise.
I might buy an ounce or two of copper bullion because I like how the old Indian head pennies look.
I collect Roman coins - I pay way more than the material they are made of is worth - but I love them! Enjoy your coins.
Extremely pure copper (greater than 99.95%), called electrolytic copper, can be made by electrolysis. The high purity is needed because most copper is used to make electrical equipment, and small amounts of impurity metals in copper can seriously reduce its ability to conduct electricity.
Thanks for sharing!
@@baldguymoneyofficial I still think copper bullion itself is a bad investmenT, but some of the companies that make electrolytic copper could have potential.