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Subject:
Coins
Category: Business and Money > Finance Asked by: bryan66-ga List Price: $5.00 |
Posted:
12 Jan 2006 02:05 PST
Expires: 11 Feb 2006 02:05 PST Question ID: 432389 |
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There is no answer at this time. |
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Subject:
Re: Coins
From: michaeljones-ga on 12 Jan 2006 06:00 PST |
1) What dollar value amount are you looking to purchase? ($10, $100, $1,000, $10,000, $100,000) 2) Will it be a one-time purchase or a repeating purchase made weekly, monthly, etc? 3) Where are you located? (A U.S. location should be simple enough, just shipping fees for the excessive weight, an overseas delivery will add significantly to the shipping costs) |
Subject:
Re: Coins
From: myoarin-ga on 12 Jan 2006 06:41 PST |
If you are in the US, why not just go to a bank and get the coins by the roll? |
Subject:
Re: Coins
From: markvmd-ga on 12 Jan 2006 13:37 PST |
The US Mint sells them, but not at face value. http://catalog.usmint.gov |
Subject:
Re: Coins
From: bryan66-ga on 12 Jan 2006 22:51 PST |
I would probably be buying $100 worth of coins 4 or 5 times a year. I am located in the United States. |
Subject:
Re: Coins
From: myoarin-ga on 13 Jan 2006 04:35 PST |
Then it should be no problem asking your bank to change bills for rolls of coins. $100 will get you lots of pennies, but dimes and quarters add up pretty quickly; 50 coins to a roll, as I remember. |
Subject:
Re: Coins
From: michaeljones-ga on 13 Jan 2006 14:28 PST |
$70 - 7 rolls of quarters $20 - 4 rolls of dimes $8 - 4 rolls of nickels $2 - 4 rolls of pennies $100 Total. Any bank should be able to supply you with that small amount, or variable equivalent. I can't imagine there being any problem obtaining this amount, you simply cannot use the drive-thru! :) |
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