My Copper Penny Retirement

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  • čas přidán 19. 08. 2012
  • Hyper Inflation is Coming! Protect Yourself with Pennies?? Check out coppers current value at www.coinflation.com. I also have a land sales site at www.landsforless.com if you are interested in some land.
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Komentáře • 2,1K

  • @jeffreytdr5786
    @jeffreytdr5786 Před 2 lety +11

    My time machine broke and I didn't have enough power to get back far enough, my good friend you're on the right track I hope these last 9 years haven't treated you too badly

  • @Emperor9992001
    @Emperor9992001 Před 8 lety +54

    Gold is the money of kings, Silver is the money of the citizenry, Debt is the money of slaves.

  • @jakejones6056
    @jakejones6056 Před 8 lety +27

    I'm just imagining him with Kramer's voice.."Pennies!! It's ALL ABOUT Pennies, Jerry!!"

  • @breotan
    @breotan Před 8 lety +142

    Copper is called the poor man's silver. Why? Because if you invest in copper, you will be poor.

    • @jplattimore
      @jplattimore Před 8 lety +16

      if u bought 5000 in copper pennies 3 years ago and the same in silver, which one kept it's value,,,

    • @SavingSoulsMinistries
      @SavingSoulsMinistries Před 8 lety +10

      +jplattimore *drops mic

    • @Remrie
      @Remrie Před 8 lety +2

      +jplattimore Worst case scenareo if the bank won't take them, is just take a trip to the nearest coinstar, and you only lose 10% of the face value if the melt value tanks. So really there isn't much risk at all. Just a lot of storage space required.

    • @QualityKush
      @QualityKush Před 8 lety

      +breotan ha

    • @jessemix5149
      @jessemix5149 Před 6 lety

      If you have a bunch of rare pennies worth thousands he would make a lot.

  • @HipHopPianist
    @HipHopPianist Před 8 lety +15

    3:32 ''I don't remember exactly what it cost me''
    That's what people say when they know they paid way more than they should of have

  • @darthnihiluz5305
    @darthnihiluz5305 Před 9 lety +74

    People forget to invest in themselves. Time and effort hording metals should not be at the expense of learning new skills or starting a new business.

    • @frannelk
      @frannelk Před 9 lety +2

      YOU ARE TOTALLY RIGHT, charging money for your skills pay more than doing metal collection,............ ..................I'm not saying that it is wrong, as a hobby or micro investment to keep you busy is cool.......................however if you fix computers, plumbing, even gardening, etc in few hours your capital grow a lot, consideration that you only are investing your time.

    • @not8upwthit
      @not8upwthit Před 9 lety +7

      That's part of what is killing us now as we've got a service based economy. We don't make anything, there are no factories their all rust buckets now. The government drove away all those jobs by over regulation and taxes. There won't be anyone that can afford to fix anything, we're a nation of consumers and when that stops what have we got left. There are good reasons our grandparents that survived the depression never trusted banks and hoarded food and water. The lived through the soup lines, my grandmother and her family lived in a huge camping area for years. My grandfather hit the road with his brothers at 15 because there was no food. People have no idea and this one is likely to be much worse.

    • @chadodell4887
      @chadodell4887 Před 9 lety

      You people disappoint me.

    • @not8upwthit
      @not8upwthit Před 9 lety

      That's just it I'm afraid these fools are going to mess things up.

    • @jarrodyoung6279
      @jarrodyoung6279 Před 9 lety

      Not8upwthit I work in a factory. People will always need airconditioners, airconditioners will always need scroll compressors. Oh and my dad has a farm so.

  • @MagnumDB
    @MagnumDB Před 8 lety +200

    3.5 years later... We still have pennies.

    • @AnonCudi
      @AnonCudi Před 8 lety +3

      lol

    • @stustuO7
      @stustuO7 Před 8 lety +7

      +AnonCudi no more in Canada

    • @Sulfen
      @Sulfen Před 8 lety +3

      +MagnumDB Considering that he's doing for retirement, he might still have 15-30 years before retirement. I doubt that he is putting 100% of his money into pennies, and if he is then hopefully his investment pays off otherwise he's screwed.

    • @tjfreckles1995
      @tjfreckles1995 Před 8 lety +6

      +Sulfen I don't know about screwed, pennies are still worth pennies.

    • @Sulfen
      @Sulfen Před 8 lety +3

      +tjfreckles1995 US currency loses value at an annual rate of 3% due to inflation. The past couple of years with Obama as president have been some of the lowest in recent history but they're still high.
      So if he retires in 10 years, he could lose between 15% to 30% in face value on those pennies. Typically you don't want to invest in something that loses value which is why companies don't keep their assets in cash, they spent it on things that will keep its value or grow in value and is liquid enough to turn into cash right away.

  • @andrewgc19881
    @andrewgc19881 Před 8 lety +8

    3:34 "I don't remember exactly how much it cost me" - International symbol for "It costed more than I would admit paying"

  • @i.o.u.4195
    @i.o.u.4195 Před 7 lety +12

    Don't listen to the herd, keep stacking that copper ;-)

  • @Ryan-jx4vh
    @Ryan-jx4vh Před 6 lety +61

    I would give you my 2 cents, but it looks like you don't need it.

  • @thuanpham3178
    @thuanpham3178 Před 8 lety +103

    I think the robber will making more money suing you for back injury then carrying those copper away. Lol

  • @beaufortninja8917
    @beaufortninja8917 Před 8 lety +10

    I do this as a side hobby and it's meant as a very small supplement to my gold and silver stack.

    • @zinknot
      @zinknot Před 2 lety

      It's great because you can basically get them for free.

  • @empire0
    @empire0 Před 9 lety +19

    Fill your basement with pennies to make a few hundred bucks in 50 years.

    • @not8upwthit
      @not8upwthit Před 9 lety

      Lol what will matter is the purchasing power. I'm in my 50's and I can remember collecting a few coke bottles and steeling them to 7-11 for 25-50 cents and coming out with bags of candy and a coke. A loaf of bread at 7-11 in those days was like 10 cents and you always pay more there. That's what we've done to our money in just my life time. When the bottom falls out you may well wish like hell you had $50 because prices will collapse. That's a big part of what the Banksters are fighting, they want things to cost a lot. So hang on we're going for a ride...

    • @chadodell4887
      @chadodell4887 Před 9 lety

      try more like 1,000 or more if you fill up your basement.

    • @not8upwthit
      @not8upwthit Před 9 lety

      Selling them to 7-11 lol--- hell just look at a dollar chart over the last 20 years.

    • @BlueToronto
      @BlueToronto Před 3 lety

      Lol, at the very least he could swim around in the pennies like Scrooge McDuck.

  • @noreaster08
    @noreaster08 Před 10 lety +4

    I found on average $6 worth of copper per $25 box. It is kinda relaxing to sort through them. Then a contact at the bank informed me of $100 worth of rolled pre- 1982 pennies they had, a lot of wheaties, where to put them .... lol

  • @evanlambson6850
    @evanlambson6850 Před 8 lety +2

    Nickels are easier to store and no sorting necessary. If you want to do the work and get a sorter then pennies are a better return albeit you have to do the work and sort. My sorter didn't work and I returned it and returned all my pennies. Went to a nickle hording with the $100 boxes from the credit union. Nickels may change composition so I would get some now before they decide to change composition, at that time they will probability be driven out quickly then you would need to sort as well. Also with the current war on cash, this is a good way to have cash as the gov's of the world start X'ing cash and make all transactions taxable, trackable esp if/when neg interest rates start up. Get cash, may as well get something that is valuable not paper if you have the storage space!

  • @Heritagepostfarms
    @Heritagepostfarms Před 8 lety +119

    So how much money do you have? $2000?? Lol. Nice retirement fund bud.

    • @StevenDavidson
      @StevenDavidson Před 8 lety +3

      +Farmer Nate Looks like less than $1000 to me.

    • @Kramlets
      @Kramlets Před 8 lety

      +Farmer Nate It's not like he's retiring next week, I'm sure he has plenty more to save up before he's done.

    • @milootje007
      @milootje007 Před 8 lety +19

      +Farmer Nate
      Minus the investment in that sorting machine, the dollarstore cans, time spent, possible medical costs for copper poisoning and a back hernia. xDDD

    • @PatrickMcManusNY
      @PatrickMcManusNY Před 8 lety +1

      +milo this had me laughing for a while.

    • @DaveGunnoe
      @DaveGunnoe Před 8 lety +4

      +Farmer Nate I counted $1000 in the boxes assuming they're all full. Dude is killin' it.

  • @karmah88
    @karmah88 Před 8 lety +7

    "daddy we're hungry, can we buy some food"
    "no damn it i need to buy more tubs to store all of our money in"

  • @ashwadhwani
    @ashwadhwani Před 9 lety +6

    One good thing about copper pennies is that they can be exchanges in as small a unit you like unlike an ounce of silver coin which you would have to trade as a whole and costs way much more. Pennies are already fractionalized to the max ;)

    • @zinknot
      @zinknot Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, It's a perfect barter currency for small things, specially when copper costs more and the copper pennies are harder to find. Plus there is the collector value.

  • @emilphoryew9436
    @emilphoryew9436 Před 7 lety +2

    Best part of investing in 95% copper cents is #1: you don't have to worry if they're real or fake coins. No one will bother to counterfeit these due to low value & #2: It's hard to have them stolen as the weight prevents them from being easily lifted. Lastly it's a no risk investment costing 1 cent a piece. If in a cash crunch you need to turn them in it's a bit of effort but fully liquid at a bank or sorting machine.

  • @NayokeHenji
    @NayokeHenji Před 2 lety +2

    I use copper to supplement silver and gold stacks, and also as an emergency barter item since it is small denomination and also has real metal value not just face value.

    • @zinknot
      @zinknot Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly! The collector value will be higher than the metal value and they are perfect for bartering.

  • @jasiahcisco8710
    @jasiahcisco8710 Před 8 lety +10

    Even if things don't work out and we don't lose pennies, he has saved up a lot of money that he would normally be spending.

    • @zero11010
      @zero11010 Před 8 lety

      +Jasiah Cisco Yeah. Way to find a way to save money that earns no interest. I hate free money too. It really pisses me off when I start out with one sum of money, and after a bit of time without putting more money in I have more.

    • @zero11010
      @zero11010 Před 8 lety

      Cody Kehrer Kinda depends on how you store it. Financially successful people don't put millions of dollars in a bank earning 0.025% interest per year as a way to make more money. There are lots of ways to place money into a fairly secure location that will earn you more interest than you will get with that money in a checking or savings account. The more potential for earning interest the less secure (as with stocks and such).
      Storing money at home is dumb.
      Dumb really is the best word for it. It lacks insight/understanding/information.

    • @zero11010
      @zero11010 Před 8 lety

      Cody Kehrer From a quick google search:
      www.cbsnews.com/news/higher-yield-10-smart-ways-to-earn-more-on-your-money/

  • @seeamerica1
    @seeamerica1 Před 7 lety +3

    Looking through the pennies for errors & double die pennies could make your investment even better! Also if you go to the bakery dept at your grocery you can get small empty icing containers usually for free; tell them you need them for gardening.

  • @kellybowman538
    @kellybowman538 Před 8 lety +1

    Wow that was quick. Thanks for the info.

  • @bondjam3sbond176
    @bondjam3sbond176 Před 8 lety +1

    Nice video. Thanks for sharing your ideas

  • @scstarman
    @scstarman Před 3 lety +3

    Smart man. I hope you have held on to these copper pennies all these years. The price of copper is almost $10 a pound right now if melted into ingots. I know it's illegal to melt pennies into ingots but three rolls of pennies equals a pound. That's all I'm saying.

    • @nslouka90
      @nslouka90 Před 2 lety

      It’s illegal if you go around telling everyone you melted pennies for the metal content.

    • @scstarman
      @scstarman Před 2 lety +2

      @@nslouka90 You sound like a Karen.
      I never condoned what the man was doing. I was only trying to point out to those making fun of him (for hording copper pennies) that his economic policy was very sound.
      Besides, with all the graft and corruption so prevalent in our coutry today, do you really thing anyone even cares about some guy melting down a few pounds of old pennies to salvage the copper.
      Speeding on the interstate is illegal too. But when kept within reason, the cops won't do a thing.
      Besides all of that, we will soon be a cashless society. What will the govt. do with all that change when it's turned in?
      Melt it down.

  • @JerryDLTN
    @JerryDLTN Před 8 lety +3

    Copper price in August 2012 = ~$3.40 per pound.
    Copper price on December 2015 = $2.08 per pound.
    Copper down 38.8% since 8/20/2012 to 12/15/2015
    Dow 30 Index up 33.57% since 8/20/2012 to 12/15/2015

  • @stelity
    @stelity Před 6 lety +1

    Good point about the weight of the bucket. You should use a hand truck to move it, but even after being able to move it, transporting the copper to the factory to sell it would require a truck rental. As an investment, it probably isn't worth the time spent exchanging+sorting the pennies, opportunity cost of storing it, and then the hassle to transport it to sell it. As a hobby, it sounds pretty fun.

  • @freddyfredrickson
    @freddyfredrickson Před 8 lety +30

    LOL he picks up a handful of sorted zinc pennies and put it into his sorter machine and it puts half of them into the copper penny bucket. 3:38

    • @lokirfromrorikstead359
      @lokirfromrorikstead359 Před 8 lety +6

      He also picked some up from the copper one

    • @MotiveFilms
      @MotiveFilms Před 8 lety +8

      +Chris Newman (Fat Libertarian Dude) I thought the same thing. I'm pretty sure you hear him drop the "copper" ones, before he puts his hand in the "zinc" bucket. It all seems super legit. He probably bought the "copper" sorter from someone wearing a tinfoil helmet.

    • @clintorison1602
      @clintorison1602 Před 8 lety +9

      You do have ears and the ability to process sensory input correct? Then how the bloody hell did you miss that he had half a handful of pennies he had picked up on the copper side that can be heard rather clearly crashing down atop the pennies in the other bin just as he begins to thrust his hand into the zinc pennies on camera, so there would be some of each in the handful he tossed into the machine. As one would quite obviously expect that anyone would do, as opposed to throwing a handful of one or the other type of already sorted coins in the _sorting_ machine if the entire point was to demonstrate the machine _sorting_, which, as you note, it did.
      Logic is your friend...

    • @woolleybeart
      @woolleybeart Před 5 lety

      Damn he lost $0.50.

  • @richardsandwell2285
    @richardsandwell2285 Před 8 lety +4

    In the UK, our new pennies are made of steel coated with copper, so at least here a magnet would sort them out.

  • @lucky43113
    @lucky43113 Před 10 lety +4

    i think the reward might be low on copper but with pennies theres really no risk so if you have a place to put it i guess its not a bad idea

    • @zinknot
      @zinknot Před 2 lety

      Copper is a very important metal. But I'm glad so many people share your opinion and leave copper for me.

  • @choochoo5122
    @choochoo5122 Před 8 lety

    I saving coins on amazon then got interested in mineral content vs. numismatic value esp.in coins . there are actually formulaes and jargan involved again in regard to coinage. face or melt as opposed to numismatic value etc.hey thx 4 some valuable insight about the most humble denomination of our currencies namely the little copper penny. you are a cool dude thx agan I just subbed

  • @cultureofcurrency
    @cultureofcurrency Před 4 lety +1

    Goodness that is a LOT! You have an impressive set up.

  • @jonahjameson831
    @jonahjameson831 Před 8 lety +213

    has the regret set in yet or are you still riding that penny high?

    • @willlaflam
      @willlaflam Před 8 lety +1

      lmao!

    • @zee339
      @zee339 Před 8 lety +1

      +Jonah Jameson penny high, lol

    • @jrasset7
      @jrasset7 Před 8 lety +4

      Copper prices suck but they'll go back up....
      WAY up.
      I can't do this.
      But he'll be alright.

    • @zee339
      @zee339 Před 8 lety +1

      Jason Rasset on what are you basing this bull run on copper?

    • @jrasset7
      @jrasset7 Před 8 lety +1

      +zee339
      Likely a number of factors.
      Now, I don't really know, I'm just guessing.
      As China and India continues to industrialise , more copper will be needed.
      I feel the price of all metals are also artificially low due to influences in manufacturing such as the silver users association.
      Copper, specifically though is in industry, housing, many applications and as the currency expands with global growth, demand will as well.

  • @matteedstrom
    @matteedstrom Před 9 lety +15

    It is illegal to destroy or smelt money, as it is a property of the gouverment of the state.
    You can face jail time for smelting copper coins into copper bars!

    • @macprepper
      @macprepper  Před 9 lety +4

      Yes, for now. Nations in Europe and Canada have discontinued pennies and eventually the United states will also, at which time it will become legal. It costs 1.8 cents to produce a penny. The U.S. lost 105 million last year just producing pennies and Nickels (9.4 cent production cost) at a loss. Government efficiency at its best. BTW I did a search and couldn't find a case where anyone has been arrested for melting pennies. It looks like an unenforced law.

    • @matteedstrom
      @matteedstrom Před 9 lety +3

      Not likelly, they will take them back and scrap them, Not allowing random people to do that.
      Leaving ammounts of copper to a recycler, and they will have to take youre information like names and numbers to keep track of stolen copper.

    • @not8upwthit
      @not8upwthit Před 9 lety

      Not to worry I've heard they are proposing making all coins out of steel lol. Isn't that sad we used to be a very wealthy country with silver coins and dollars that could be turned in for gold. Today our coins are like arcade tokens and our dollars just pieces of paper. Very sad

    • @matteedstrom
      @matteedstrom Před 9 lety +1

      ***** Actually you are misstaken there!
      Even as a Swede i know it is illegal in USA to melt coins, but it is a new law pending, to make it legal.

    • @matteedstrom
      @matteedstrom Před 9 lety

      ***** Stop assuming stuff, look it up before you post

  • @SwampNiggaVideos
    @SwampNiggaVideos Před 2 lety +2

    oh its hitting big fella. Hope you kept up your stack!

  • @mattlangstraaat3508
    @mattlangstraaat3508 Před 7 lety

    congrats.. u were right.. very cool of u to share, wish i would have listened

  • @scottc346
    @scottc346 Před 8 lety +43

    You are better off "investing" in ammunition. If the shit does really hit the fan bullets will be one of the best commodities there is. Plus you can defend your horde until the very end.

    • @justadbeer
      @justadbeer Před 8 lety +7

      +Sarah Mcgee Actually, he is correct. People made a killing these past few years in the US selling ammo to all the crazies waiting for the end of the world and zombie apocalypse. I watched idiots pay 10, 20, even 30 times the face value of a lousy box of .22 shells.

    • @scottc346
      @scottc346 Před 8 lety +11

      Sarah, let me guess, you're an overly emotional woman who things feelings are facts right? If things got really bad, what do you "feel" you would be able to trade better copper or bullets? Ignorant EuroTrash.

    • @jonahcottrell2879
      @jonahcottrell2879 Před 8 lety

      +Sarah Mcgee obviously you don't no fuck all about anything people are selling ~$18 22lr bullet cases for ~$60-$90 because there's way more supply than demand and that's current day standards

    • @jonahcottrell2879
      @jonahcottrell2879 Před 8 lety

      +MonkeyBoyShit more demand than supply lol

    • @Chickenlegs41
      @Chickenlegs41 Před 8 lety +3

      +justadbeer Serious. You saw people paying 30X for a box of 22's? Seriously, I walked into the local hardware, plopped down $10 and walked out w/ a box of shells. Walmart, of course didn't have jack. But the local hardware store always had them. Methinks this so-called shortage was largely a created one. You know the small minded people moaning that the gov'ment is going to take our guns away.

  • @dinkydogg5038
    @dinkydogg5038 Před 7 lety +11

    a penny will be worth more then a paper dollar if SHTF is all my man is tryin to tell you..

    • @Lisa-qs1xd
      @Lisa-qs1xd Před 3 lety +1

      Today copper at $3.96 ( actually saw $4.03 somewhere per lb)..
      $100 worth of pre 82 pennies worth about $268....

  • @scstarman
    @scstarman Před 3 lety +2

    Copper ingots are selling right now (March 3, 2020) on ebay for $6 to $10 per pound. That fact changes the economics of this practice immensely. His $25 worth of pennies converted to 16 pounds of ingots will now sell easily for $100 dollars and, depending on the quality of the ingots, may sell for as much as $160. ALL DAY LONG.

  • @Ramiromasters
    @Ramiromasters Před 8 lety

    A good way to calculate the value of metals and look at the periodic table of elements. The quantity of an element goes exponentially higher with each number of protons.
    But for simplicity you can say that for every 1 piece of Gold there is 100 pieces of silver, and for every Silver there is 100 pieces of Copper.

  • @leehodge2415
    @leehodge2415 Před 7 lety +13

    the boxes are empty

  • @robertg305
    @robertg305 Před 4 lety +11

    How you holding up during the coronavirus!?

    • @AlexSGabor
      @AlexSGabor Před 3 lety

      Jacob Horvath Been 8 years of #nocopper #coins in #canada #copperkills #saveyourcopper #coppercoins #snapchange

    • @JDBajaBlast
      @JDBajaBlast Před 3 lety

      @@AlexSGabor this year was supposed to be the last year of the one cent coin in America but covid happened I hope with this fake coin shortage they get rid of them

  • @dannyp2058
    @dannyp2058 Před 7 lety

    yeah good idea over here in the UK I've noticed all the pre 1992 one and two pennie coins are disappearing quickly and a way to go over them quickly if doing it by hand to find the copper ones is get a magnet and all non copper ones will stick to that

  • @CarcassGrater
    @CarcassGrater Před 8 lety +2

    oh god I'm not sure how I ended up here on youtube but this reminds me of my grandmother's copper pennies collection - she has dedicated OUR (grand children) room to her damn extra retirement but who knows what if they're actually for us O_O

  • @PigInATuxedo
    @PigInATuxedo Před 8 lety +175

    Hello! I am from 3 years in the future. And let me tell you, you are wrong!

    • @papagoose8067
      @papagoose8067 Před 8 lety +13

      +PigInATuxedo Hello I am from 3 years and 1 day in the future. And let me tell you, you are wrong!

    • @justinb4510
      @justinb4510 Před 8 lety +14

      +PigInATuxedo Hello! I am from 3 years, 4 months, 2 weeks and 0 days in the future. And let me tell you, man am I ripped.

    • @PigInATuxedo
      @PigInATuxedo Před 8 lety +6

      Justin Bates Hello Justin I am from 3 years 4 months 2 weeks and 1 day in the future and I am not ripped. Tell me your secrets Justin.

    • @jancloddlafront9185
      @jancloddlafront9185 Před 8 lety

      +PigInATuxedo
      Me too

    • @regressmenot
      @regressmenot Před 8 lety +1

      +PigInATuxedo
      Hahaha!
      Me thinks you're right.

  • @JohnnyRockva
    @JohnnyRockva Před 11 lety +3

    a man after my own heart...I do the same thing. I know some day we will reap the rewards from doing this! keep stacking bro!

  • @joebirdwell5071
    @joebirdwell5071 Před 8 lety +1

    After shooting yesterday I was picking up the brass shell casings. I am not sure of the purity of the copper. Would it be worth keeping or selling back to the reloaders?

  • @trackpackgt877
    @trackpackgt877 Před 4 lety

    Dude very interesting point! Great video

  • @giverofzerophux9051
    @giverofzerophux9051 Před 8 lety +90

    quick question.. isn't it illegal to smelt pennies for the copper?

    • @macprepper
      @macprepper  Před 8 lety +12

      Yes, while it is a current currency you cannot melt it. once it's no longer produced like the pennies no longer made in Canada other countries then we can legally Melt it

    • @macprepper
      @macprepper  Před 8 lety

      Yes, while it is a current currency you cannot melt it. once it's no longer produced like the pennies no longer made in Canada other countries then we can legally Melt it

    • @BlueSpades7
      @BlueSpades7 Před 8 lety +9

      +macprepper So even if your smelt the copper directly from the penny, how would anybody know the difference, if not just know that it came from a US penny?

    • @aptarmbps
      @aptarmbps Před 8 lety +16

      just do it when youre a lone

    • @ForBreadAndFish
      @ForBreadAndFish Před 8 lety +10

      +macprepper That's based on an unconstitutional mandate forced through congress in 2007. It is 100% constitutional to melt currency.

  • @sidharthafocus
    @sidharthafocus Před 10 lety +3

    Copper is at a low point on it's chart currently so this sounds like a good plan, Also at a cocktail party you can talk about a one metric tonne of bullion, (err copper penny bullion...)

  • @missinginbc
    @missinginbc Před 7 lety +1

    Copper is a good investment. As soon as they stopped making copper pennies in Canada, I knew copper was going up.

  • @Legna1826
    @Legna1826 Před 2 lety +1

    Yeah, my penny hoarding time is now. Wish I had started hoarding when you made this video. Hope you still have your stash.😁

  • @pureforce56
    @pureforce56 Před 8 lety +36

    Male version of the cat lady

  • @MrCuteanimalvideos
    @MrCuteanimalvideos Před 9 lety +15

    "Stock market hasn't done so well"...no no no correction YOU (or your money manager) haven't done so well. So stop blaming the stock market for YOUR poor mistakes.

    • @anthonydaniel9932
      @anthonydaniel9932 Před 9 lety +2

      John L. he could do like our government and invest in something that will lose money - the difference is instead of having to take a loss our government just prints more money and raises taxes. wish it worked that way for me

    • @MrCuteanimalvideos
      @MrCuteanimalvideos Před 9 lety

      anthony daniel What are we going to do about it? Might as well try to make some money. We don't have the power to stand up to the government nor do I want too. I like my freedom too much.

  • @dahoser1eh
    @dahoser1eh Před 8 lety

    Are those boxes of pennies in rolls or loose? just curious if you bought them in that box form already sorted pre 1982's

  • @TheWeaselWhisp
    @TheWeaselWhisp Před 7 lety

    i had a similar thought with exchanging cash to foreign currency & then back again if it goes up etc

  • @brandonrippeonphoto
    @brandonrippeonphoto Před 8 lety +5

    Invest in what ever this guy is smoking cause thats some powerful shit

  • @supernewuser
    @supernewuser Před 9 lety +4

    If you took a handful of the zinc pennies out of the zinc bucket, why did your sorter put 95% of them back into the copper bucket?

    • @coltenmeyer2775
      @coltenmeyer2775 Před 9 lety +1

      Thank you i noticed the same exact thing, it was bothering me.

    • @michaelwright8890
      @michaelwright8890 Před 9 lety +1

      Colten Meyer he probably has not pulled out the zinc ones and uses the zinc bucket for when he starts but it may just not work!

    • @coltenmeyer2775
      @coltenmeyer2775 Před 9 lety

      Ahahahah maybe it defintiley seems sketchy :p

    • @dogeking3432
      @dogeking3432 Před 9 lety +1

      He grabbed a handful from the copper bucket with his left hand because his right hand was holding the camera, and instead of putting them in the coin loader, he took them to the zinc bucket and tried to grab a bigger fistful to pick up some zinc pennies into his handful, (but that's super inefficient because he dropped some copper pennies into the zinc pile that he isn't going to resort). Then he added the combined handful to the machine.

  • @terryrussel523
    @terryrussel523 Před 8 lety +1

    My great grandad lived to be 98 years old, born in the 1880's. He raised and educated three kids, lost two good women to illnesses easily cured today, built three successful businesses without a college degree and minimal state and non-existent federal government regulations. He witnessed a lot of changes in the world; good and bad, wondrous and sad !
    He told us as children about the radical (and illegal) Executive Order President FDR executed shortly after his first election. He took the U.S. off the Gold Standard just for starters. That's one of the things that made the economy worse during the Depression. Government Interference in our economy was rampant and WW2 saw politicians grabbing MORE powers they were never supposed to have.
    (That payroll deduction system was supposed to STOP when the war ended.
    They Promised !!!! As a result people were slower to realize how much the government was demanding because they were no longer writing that tax check TO the IRS !)
    Things have gone slowly but surely down hill across the board under overreaching Federal stupidity ever since.
    G. Granddad explained what the gold and precious metal coinage system really means. He gave us pre-1965 silver quarters, saying, in effect, that the value of the silver in that coin alone would buy a gallon of gasoline at his service station that day. (Back then it was indeed 25 cents a gallon. Diesel was 6 cents a gallon.) If, in the future, he warned, that became no longer true, THEN it will be time to make sure everyone has a copy of the original Founding Documents and then promptly burn down everything inside that beltway surrounding the District of Corruption and start over.
    The feds have been printing up Monopoly money and so have many other governments all over the world for the last 8 years. Others have been hording gold, silver, platinum, ect. Some are doing both !
    This Will NOT End Well, and there is plenty of History to back that statement up.

  • @richardsandwell2285
    @richardsandwell2285 Před 8 lety +1

    Copper price is fairly low at the moment, so its a good time to buy. Copper is a finite resource and is always going to be valuable for the electrical uses alone. So long term its only going to sky rocket in price.

  • @jasonmckain3812
    @jasonmckain3812 Před 9 lety +7

    If those are NEW pennies their 90% zinc. Pennies BEFORE 1982 are solid copper.

    • @moonanddarkness
      @moonanddarkness Před 9 lety +2

      Yup, that's what i heard too, makes no sense for the government to make a coin denomination with a metal that's worth more than the denomination itself. People used to do what this guy is doing right now.

    • @chadodell4887
      @chadodell4887 Před 9 lety

      Alonso Quintero And it's why they changed it.
      Which is fucking stupid. Why not get the copper back and use it, government is stupid.

    • @moonanddarkness
      @moonanddarkness Před 9 lety +1

      Chad O'Dell
      Probably not worth the investment.

    • @skatershawn410
      @skatershawn410 Před 9 lety

      Did you watch the video? He has a machine that separates the copper one from the Zinc ones.

    • @moonanddarkness
      @moonanddarkness Před 9 lety

      Shawn Huetter
      But that requires employees too. It might as well be that they aren't that smart..... wouldn't be the first time....

  • @magicstix0r
    @magicstix0r Před 9 lety +27

    The hillarious thing: Pennies are mostly zinc, not copper.

    • @macprepper
      @macprepper  Před 9 lety +40

      Only mid 1982 and later are zinc. You must not have watched the video

    • @DinoHunter56
      @DinoHunter56 Před 9 lety +1

      macprepper Yup, you're absolutely right. And pre 1959 is worth even more.

  • @Bill-xx2yh
    @Bill-xx2yh Před 4 lety

    Do the best you can with what you have. That’s all any of us can do. Good luck to you friend. :-)

  • @PrepperMountainSolutions

    Wonder what my 44,000 lbs of telecommunications wire from the late 1970's is worth now! Years ago we got to do demolition on old phone company control centers. I saved thousands of pounds of computer boards, all the wire, terminals and even the copper heat sinks filled a 1 ton truck bed till it hit the axle. Now I know why I saved it all!

  • @kashewz
    @kashewz Před 8 lety +15

    Half of this video you' keep repeating yourself. How many times did you mention inflation, fiat, countries dropping pennies, etc in this one video? A 2 minute video tops being stretched into a 7.5 min video because someone loves hearing themselves talk.

    • @jayc7663
      @jayc7663 Před 8 lety +2

      He states different points. I'd love to see your video. Cheers!

    • @DeathmetalPersian
      @DeathmetalPersian Před 8 lety

      +Jay C (fireflames) no, he really doesn't. this is like 2 minutes of content and 5 minutes of pure redundancy. Not to mention all his points are moot because they are based on the insane whim that the penny will be discontinued completely.

    • @jayc7663
      @jayc7663 Před 8 lety +1

      I'm sure he posted this video for fun and he could care less what the critics have to say, i would love to see you make a response video and state your points.

    • @ericmiedema2124
      @ericmiedema2124 Před 8 lety

      +Kayvon Afshar The penny is discontinued where i live so..... yeah

    • @DeathmetalPersian
      @DeathmetalPersian Před 8 lety

      Jay C i dont think you understand the fact that one doesn't need to make a video to state the simple reality of things.

  • @SergeiTheAnarch
    @SergeiTheAnarch Před 9 lety +8

    I was under the impression that melting US coinage was illegal...

    • @coltenmeyer2775
      @coltenmeyer2775 Před 9 lety

      No.

    • @Gunner3210
      @Gunner3210 Před 9 lety +4

      Shrewd _GC Of course it is. Google 'Section 331 of Title 18'. You can face up to 5 years in federal prison for it.

    • @coltenmeyer2775
      @coltenmeyer2775 Před 9 lety

      Gunner is wrong.

    • @Dtyler171
      @Dtyler171 Před 9 lety

      Shrewd _GC
      It doesn't matter if it is illegal, people will buy them for melt value, whether or not they are going to actually melt them? Who knows? More importantly, who cares?

    • @aztkshorty9138
      @aztkshorty9138 Před 9 lety +2

      Shrewd _GC Actually, you can have a fine of 5000, or 15 years in prison.

  • @zekeisme1
    @zekeisme1 Před 8 lety

    sorter dont work. lol one handful from on bucket went in both jugs. how is that correct? when u pick them up from one jug that is catching the tail-lings?

  • @johanneslindmeier5735
    @johanneslindmeier5735 Před 8 lety +1

    Great for making floors in your home :)

  • @chrisdenney4182
    @chrisdenney4182 Před 7 lety +8

    Smelting them down into bars and sell the on ebay. Some idiot will pay a ridiculous price for them.

    • @Dozerfreitas
      @Dozerfreitas Před 7 lety

      illegal to since 2006 for pennies and nickels

    • @chrisdenney4182
      @chrisdenney4182 Před 7 lety +1

      Dozerfreitas Lol. don't tell anyone. just label them as copper bullion. it's equally worthless

    • @brettoberry6795
      @brettoberry6795 Před 7 lety +1

      Ill eagle is a sick bird. If the metal is melted, where is the evidence of a crime?

    • @cameron6537
      @cameron6537 Před 5 lety

      Imagine the shipping cost

  • @campc1
    @campc1 Před 8 lety +6

    That $900 would do better sitting in a bank and earning more pennies by the month

    • @campc1
      @campc1 Před 8 lety +2

      +Mystery Buyer NOT! In fact, the bank(s), plus other investments, PAY ME hundreds of dollars every year. LMAO, just because they are in possession of my money. Laughing all the way, literally, to the bank.

    • @hellobooom
      @hellobooom Před 7 lety

      exactly, people really understand NOTHING about the current climate and or precious metals.

    • @tubbehht9236
      @tubbehht9236 Před 7 lety

      you mean the bank would use the money, because that is how banks operate and are able to pay you interest, lol

  • @LordByron2752
    @LordByron2752 Před 7 lety

    nice setup by the way.

  • @temujinkhan6326
    @temujinkhan6326 Před 7 lety +1

    Long long long term. This has been talked about when I was a kid.

  • @tonyblack3957
    @tonyblack3957 Před 4 lety +3

    Cart it over to Canada , melt it down,

  • @macprepper
    @macprepper  Před 9 lety +34

    600th comment!!!

    • @artistfrank8511
      @artistfrank8511 Před 9 lety +1

      Congratulations! :)

    • @joshbyrnesuk
      @joshbyrnesuk Před 9 lety +3

      It's better to just have a old coin collection.

    • @menkio
      @menkio Před 8 lety +4

      hey man, i kinda feel bad for you.. my professor brought up this video and basically spent 45 minutes pointing out how dumb america is getting... you really should take some college classes, online also has some good free financial classes for free..

    • @kunschner
      @kunschner Před 8 lety +4

      Darrel Oateast Professors aren't too smart themselves.

    • @eik6485
      @eik6485 Před 8 lety +3

      Kunschner Corrections professors are very intelligent rather it's teachers who aren't too educated.

  • @almay580
    @almay580 Před 8 lety

    the mint stopped producing memorials and started producing shield pennies. Would the memorials not increase in value in he future as a collectible, if taken out of circulation?

  • @williamzlatos1272
    @williamzlatos1272 Před 7 lety

    Suggestion to your 5-gallon bucket problem. Before you put the pennies in the bucket, go to a home improvement store and get some of those flower pot stands that roll.

  • @psygn0sis
    @psygn0sis Před 8 lety +6

    Am I the only one who noticed his sorting machine sucks?
    He took pennies the were already sorted into bucket #2 and put it in the machine... (they should have all dropped back in to bucket #2).... it spit most of them in to bucket #1.

    • @genericjonathan4115
      @genericjonathan4115 Před 5 lety +2

      No he also took a handful of copper ones and put them in the machine as well

  • @SoggyCow
    @SoggyCow Před 8 lety +13

    only a dude with a ron paul picture would spend endless months buying pennies and buying an expensive penny sorter, rather than researching a couple weeks for a good company to invest in for a couple years at the stock market. i see why theres so many negative views on this video (idea). xD

    • @PM-vb4od
      @PM-vb4od Před 7 lety

      I guess it's a hobby as well as an investment for some.

    • @hellobooom
      @hellobooom Před 7 lety +3

      The stock market?? for HOW LONG????

    • @MrSims-ky2ne
      @MrSims-ky2ne Před 5 lety

      Soggy cow, you could have a pocket full of hundred dollar bills. If the us dollar crashes a few pre 1982 pennies have more value, unless you need to start a fire in which the paper hundreds then will have a higher value (to you only) you don't get it clown shoes 😂

  • @luischav3z
    @luischav3z Před 8 lety

    Quick question. How much time have you invested in this? How much $$ spent in purchasing buckets and sorting machine?

  • @alynicholls3230
    @alynicholls3230 Před 8 lety

    sorting the copper out in the uk is really easy. since new pennies/coins are steel clad, so a magnet gets out the clads.

  • @masscomnet
    @masscomnet Před 8 lety +5

    I can invest the same amount of cash in equities and make 20 times more than you. This is a terrible idea.

  • @edbear8483
    @edbear8483 Před 8 lety +3

    To save Pennies like this, is called HOARDING!!!!!
    The Secret Service & US Mint would like to have some words with you.

    • @danielbenedict8818
      @danielbenedict8818 Před 4 lety

      ED Bear
      Please share with us what law says someone cannot store pennies, coins or other forms of money. What are the criteria to determine when it is illegal (what items, quantities, $ values, etc.)?
      If as you claim it is illegal to keep more than a certain quantity, then the government should facilitate the “re-circulation” of said items thru post offices, banks, etc. However, the exact opposite is the case ( which is absolutely fine with penny “hoarders”!) - We see on the news regular stories of someone trying to pay their bill in coins, and the payee business or government agency says they don’t want all that change!

  • @jimnance9872
    @jimnance9872 Před 2 lety +2

    9 years later, copper is .27 per ounce (10 pennies) looks like you made a good choice.

  • @user-vb9kd3lg1s
    @user-vb9kd3lg1s Před rokem +1

    Hope you have this today lol your predictions were true

  • @hashglass
    @hashglass Před 10 lety +3

    be worth more than paper money one day

    • @TIB1973
      @TIB1973 Před 10 lety

      Never. Or at least not in our lifetime. Its too abundant and used widely in construction and anything tied to construction can't be too expensive. Also, check with your bank, they have limits on how much change you can turn back in at any given time. also, coinshops don't want common pennies, they have enough, which leaves recyclers who don't pay squat.

    • @danielbenedict8818
      @danielbenedict8818 Před 4 lety

      TIB1973
      recyclers won’t pay for pennies because they cannot legally recycle them!

  • @djdjerojr
    @djdjerojr Před 8 lety +43

    'It's always gonna be worth a penny' , wtf is that? In that case stick with the 100 dollar bills because they'll always be worth 100 dollars? What kind of logic is that?

    • @barroldtrumboma9162
      @barroldtrumboma9162 Před 8 lety +9

      Obviously you dont understand. Hes saying by investing in pennies you wont lose money. It will stay at the value of a penny. But if the government discontinues them. They will he worth 3 cents each because it has no more value as a coin, only its metal.

    • @djdjerojr
      @djdjerojr Před 8 lety +1

      +xLADIES MANx13 I get it but the fact that they will always be worth a penny isn't a reason on it's own.

    • @chameleonedm
      @chameleonedm Před 8 lety +1

      +xLADIES MANx13 Except the fact that the buying power of that penny is reducing, not increasing. On top of that, China has stopped buying so much copper, prices are crashing back down to ~2006 levels. So this was a terrible investment.

    • @eggz01
      @eggz01 Před 8 lety +2

      +Dj Djero It is considering why he's invested in them. It means it's safe. if he got loads of 100 dollars, there's no chance of him making money, but with pennies there will. The fact, though, that a penny is always a penny means he'll never go below what he started with. it's either he profits or not because a penny will always be a penny

    • @djdjerojr
      @djdjerojr Před 8 lety +1

      I understand the overall point he was trying to make but that on itself was not a valid reason, the only reason is the value of the metal.

  • @personofaperson7814
    @personofaperson7814 Před 8 lety

    that would be a good idea but pennies are now made of zinc with a copper "varnish" but you could do it with pennies made before 1982

  • @theevilovenmit
    @theevilovenmit Před 8 lety

    Have you thought of storing materials that are hard to produce such as silicon boules or tool steel?

  • @aus71383
    @aus71383 Před 8 lety +5

    1 gallon of pennies = 30 pounds
    2/3 of 5 gallons (3.33) = 175 pounds
    ......this doesn't add up! lol

  • @alexnaz9663
    @alexnaz9663 Před 8 lety +4

    So.....those bennie babies didn't pay off?

  • @acman0926
    @acman0926 Před 7 lety

    why when you grab a handful out of the zinc box, then put them in the sorter, did it throw most of them in the copper box?

  • @sandeepshetty1589
    @sandeepshetty1589 Před 7 lety

    you have been so considerate planning your investment...but what is your plan if and when both copper and the dollar falls? have you heard of the term diversification?

  • @macprepper
    @macprepper  Před 8 lety +25

    If you have a large copper penny collection and would be willing to be in a documentary contact Rich at www.dearpennyfilm.com or dearpennyfilm@gmail.com. Looks like it going to be pretty good!

    • @MegaMech
      @MegaMech Před 8 lety

      +macprepper Does a few bins of pennies and a container thingy that dogs eat out of count as large penny collection?

    • @Choconagitana
      @Choconagitana Před 8 lety

      +MegaMech if those bins are full he has over a thousand dollars in pennies sitting there, so yeah I think a "few" bins of pennies counts as a large collection...

    • @Bluelightbandit
      @Bluelightbandit Před 8 lety

      +MegaMech lol

    • @MegaMech
      @MegaMech Před 8 lety

      G Jenkins But its the penny! I haven't seen one in years! Of course people are gonna stock pile them.

    • @MegaMech
      @MegaMech Před 8 lety

      G Jenkins Pennies don't exist in Canada

  • @EngineeringNS
    @EngineeringNS Před 8 lety +5

    But its a crime to melt them down. Don't Get caught.
    *edit* Very interesting plan! Certainly seems foolproof.

    • @KonaBroLP
      @KonaBroLP Před 8 lety

      Pennies are 2.5% copper.

    • @EngineeringNS
      @EngineeringNS Před 8 lety +1

      k0na_bro LP not the old ones.

    • @anthonydelara319
      @anthonydelara319 Před 8 lety +3

      He's saying he would melt them down if they discontinued them

    • @EngineeringNS
      @EngineeringNS Před 8 lety

      Anthony Delara Yeah, After watching the rest of the video, I realized that. It is a good plan.

    • @justadbeer
      @justadbeer Před 8 lety

      +Anthony Delara Melt them down and do what with them? He is obviously hording these for some SHTF scenario. What his plans don't take into consideration is that if that ever really happened, the entire economy would collapse and his copper would be worthless while his food and ammo would be priceless. His time would be better spent scraping for old copper wire (for free) which is +99.5% pure, or for that matter, any type of metal and cashing it in at a yard and buying his prepping supplies (for an event that's never going to happen) or re-invest it in something that he could turnaround fairly quick. Hell, if he used the 2k in pennies to buy .22 shells he could probably make 10k off of it in Hillary's first year in office.

  • @ravemac5008
    @ravemac5008 Před 2 lety

    Copper makes a specific sound so if you are only saving these to make money with just bounce it off of something wood concrete and listen to the sound the copper makes. zinc has a dull sound copper has a ring to it also if you happen to find the 1982 small date copper penny minted in Denver do not melt it lol

  • @joshbrucks
    @joshbrucks Před 7 lety

    you CAN get silver at a discount. go to the bank and exchange some money for 50 cent pieces. if you find ones old enough, they have silver in them. if you dont find silver, just exchange them for more.

  • @MrHeadshot1982
    @MrHeadshot1982 Před 9 lety +4

    most penny are not pour copper

    • @larsentosh9710
      @larsentosh9710 Před 8 lety +1

      bud morse pre- 1982, they're almost completely copper

    • @gmanthatguy
      @gmanthatguy Před 8 lety

      +Jeremy Kelley modern pennies have little to no copper at all

    • @seanmurphy9095
      @seanmurphy9095 Před 8 lety

      +Jeremy Kelley He's stacking copper pennies which is pre 1982 US pennies and pre 1996 canadian pennies. They were 95% copper.

    • @copndonuts
      @copndonuts Před 8 lety

      *pure

  • @klanny22
    @klanny22 Před 9 lety +4

    Isn't this illegal? Melting down currency for your own profit?

    • @coltenmeyer2775
      @coltenmeyer2775 Před 9 lety

      No.

    • @Gunner3210
      @Gunner3210 Před 9 lety +4

      ***** Yes. It is illegal. Google 'Section 331 of Title 18'. You can face up to 5 years in federal prison for it.

    • @Gunner3210
      @Gunner3210 Před 9 lety +3

      Colten Meyer What do you mean, 'no', you fucking moron? There is only one version of the law. It clearly states that melting coins is illegal and carries prison time.

    • @coltenmeyer2775
      @coltenmeyer2775 Před 9 lety

      I was hoping the commenter was gunna be like yes it is and then i was gunna say "whyd you ask then?" I notice alotta people post questions they have the answer to so when you do respond they can tell you your all wrong. And shooting heroin is illegal but people do it all the time, whens the last time you seen johny doing life in prison for melting copper into ingots? Never. Now defacing those coins to make other money is probly highly illegal but for melt theres no possible way to tell if it was pennys and no body would be the wiser. Illegal it may be but impossiable no.

    • @_FrankieV
      @_FrankieV Před 9 lety

      Gunner3210 Congratulations, you know how to use Google.

  • @SJsmixedAdventures
    @SJsmixedAdventures Před 5 lety

    Nice to meet you..

  • @cepuras
    @cepuras Před 8 lety

    Sorry I don't get it.. The sorter, all the boxes, containers, time..? Seems easier to just buy gold?