The term "ballistic roll" is a meaningless phrase invented by a private company that took ordinary Presidential dollar coins, packaged them in plastic, and sold them at inflated prices by means of hyped advertising. Presidential dollars are brass, not gold, so they're NOT precious metal coins or anything special.
The only positive note is that the coins are uncirculated so they might bring about $1.25 to $1.50 on the open market. But that's far less than their cost from the company that packaged them.
The value of gold coins can be determined in two different ways--the melt-down value and the coin value. The melt-down value is the value of the pure gold in the coins, which is determined by the weight. The face value of the coins can be found on a collector's website.
Older American gold coins are a great asset to hold. Quantitative Easing may be diminishing the value of the dollar, but gold retains its value. The Coins section of the About website gives indications of values of old gold coins.
There are several factors that determine the value of gold coins. One factor is how much gold is in the coin. Gold is valued by weight, so the more gold the coin has, the higher the value will be. Also, the age of the gold coin. Older, rarer coins will be worth more.
Yes. Especially modern bullion coins. Out of all of the coins, pre-1933 US coins historically have lost less of their value due to small fluctuation in the gold price because they sell for a large premium over the gold content in them, especially for some of the older and smaller coins. Coins like modern British Sovereigns, US Gold Eagles and Canadian Maple Leafs are all traded at a small premium over the spot price of gold, usually around $20 so their value is simply the price of all the gold in them plus around $20. Some older common European gold coins have similar price trends.
Gold and silver coins
Antiques and gold and coins.
That is the value just for the gold in the coin, not as a coin.
None of the gold colored dollar coins made from 2000 to date have any gold in them. Only a few error coins and collectors coins have more than face value.
No, for silver coins as the value of silver changes the value of the coin changes. The same is true for gold coins.
Gold plated coins are novelty coins with no collectible value and are not made by the US Mint.
The value changes constantly with the price of gold. If you have a collectors coin then the value may be more than the "spot" price of gold. Generally gold coins are worth a little more than the "spot" price anyway. One good place to keep up on the value would be www.coininfo.com
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