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few years older and those 2c might be worth something in copper
Zincolns are moneyfew years older and those 2c might be worth something in copper
Talk about getting stoned!
Good question!
Another trading house has been stung after buying a cargo supposedly containing nickel that turned out to be full of near-worthless rubble.
The latest example, detailed in lawsuits in London and Singapore, is separate from the $600 million alleged fraud against Trafigura Group that shocked the trading industry earlier this year, but it involves several of the same companies.
The revelation that the problem of non-existent nickel is more widespread will be another blow to confidence in the scandal-prone metals trading industry.
The Trafigura case has spawned several lawsuits, while in March the London Metal Exchange discovered that 54 tons of "nickel" held at a warehouse in Rotterdam and owned by JPMorgan Chase & Co. was actually just bags of stones. ...
just fill 5gal buckets n seal them off with a lid....let your family tote them out when your dead....just put them on a strudy floor area....thats my plan.....problem is i dont do much retail anymore to get changeYou guys might laugh, but for the past thirty years or so, I have been saving all my change in heavy glass liquor bottles. I think they're a half gallon each - mostly Bacardi bottles. Some Jose Cuervo. I always have two in rotation - one for pennies and another for nickels, dimes, and quarters. I fill them and store them in the basement and start another. I have dozens of them. No idea what to do with them.
A few years ago, we were having an inclement weather day so I dumped one of them out onto the dining room table. I separated them and stacked them neatly and added it up. If I recall, it was a little over $430. But it took forever! I think I'm at the point of needing one of those coin sorters.
...true...i used a furniture dolly on one half full ...I'm not sure I could lift a five gallon bucket filled with nickels, dimes, and quarters.
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