Elias spent his nights studying strike doubling and mint marks. He learned that a tiny "S" or a slightly rotated die could turn a pocket-change penny into a month’s rent. He practiced the art of the "raw" buy—purchasing uncertified coins from estate sales where the sellers saw only old metal, while he saw unpolished gems.
(e.g., silver bullion, error coins, vintage gold) Goal (e.g., side hustle, full-time trading) buying and selling coins for profit
If you share these details, I can draft a specific business plan or a more technical guide for you. Elias spent his nights studying strike doubling and
He started small. His first win was a 1950-D Jefferson Nickel he’d pulled from a bargain bin for fifty cents. He sold it on an online auction for twenty dollars an hour later. That tiny spark of profit became a flame. He sold it on an online auction for
He didn't spend the money. He reinvested every cent into a "Double Die" Lincoln cent and a handful of silver Morgans. He learned that the "flip" wasn't just about the buy; it was about the timing. He watched silver spot prices like a hawk, selling his bullion when the market spiked and buying rare numismatics when it dipped.
Two weeks later, the plastic slab returned with a "VF-20" grade. Elias sold it for $2,800.
The copper-scented air of "Miller’s Rare Finds" felt like a second home to Elias. He wasn't a collector who sought beauty; he was a hunter who sought the "gap"—the space between a coin’s price and its true value.