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Liberty Dollar Seller Looking Forward To Big Ebay Payday Walt Thiessen A Ron Paul Gold Dollar being auctioned on Ebay has so far been bid up to $1800 and may fetch as much as $3000 by the time the auction closes on Wednesday evening. John Dean of Austin, TX is a Liberty Dollar owner who is preparing to reap the rewards of having invested in hard money. As of Nov. 15th, no more Silver Liberties will be produced by Liberty Services, formerly known as NORFED, Inc., who were raided by the US Government. All their dies, metals, money, computers and records were confiscated by the FBI with a total combined value in the tens of millions of dollars. Dean realized that his latest, paid order for some copper Ron Paul coins was also confiscated and would likely have to be written off as a total loss. Said Dean:
Dean is off to a good start. He placed some of his coins up for auction on Ebay. So far, he has two gold Liberty coins listed that have been bid up to $1,800 each with two-and-a-half days remaining in the auctions. He says he's already seen someone else who put up a Liberty Dollar gold coin in a one-day auction. He says, "I didn't check it this morning, but as of last night it was selling for $3,000."
(Article continues below) When he originally bought the gold coins, the price was "spot plus 14%, and at that time I believe gold was selling under $700, so I was paying about $750 a coin. Considering how bad the stock market has been lately, it's nice to see some black ink." I asked Dean why he mentioned the Ron Paul campaign in his auction as one of his motivations for selling the coin. He replied:
Dean hadn't been using Liberty Dollar currency for very long. Previously, he had actually seen Liberty Dollars being used for currency in his home town of Austin, TX, which apparently is a popular place for using Liberty Dollars. He says:
Dean had successfully transacted business using Liberty Dollars with a convenience store, a hardware store, restaurants, and even his local tax return preparer! He said:
Dean was a Liberty associate, which gave him a discount compared to face value, roughly one half the difference between the face value and the price NORFED charged the RCOs. The price they charged to RCOs was the spot price plus their costs of minting the coins. I asked Dean to predict where his auction prices were going to end up, but he said, "I don't like to make predictions. I just like to let the market make that decision for me." Dean said he read the entire warrant for the raid on NORFED, and he says it was worded very vaguely. It starts off very nasty, saying that these are horrible criminals engaging in fraud and money laundering, and then it just started explaining the whole business as we've sketched in this article. He says:
I came away from this interview with a strong impression of just how viable hard currency is, even in a marketplace governed by fear manufactured by the Federal government. Regardless of what happens with the NORFED case, I don't think we have seen the last of hard currency being used in transactions in this country, particularly with the hidden inflation that the government continues to pretend doesn't exist. Even if the government were to decide to make ownership of hard metals illegal again (as they have done in the past), it's likely that the net result would only be to drive the price of hard currency so high that Federal Reserve Notes would suffer as an unintended consequence. One thing is certain. Those who invested in Liberty Dollars from NORFED are poised to reap huge rewards, particularly since it seems likely at this point that they are no longer going to be minted. That makes them collector's items, and collectible gold, silver, and platinum tend to sell at many times the intrinsic value of a precious metal coin, with the final value tending to be based on how many or few of those coins are in circulation. By raiding NORFED, the Feds are trying to punish that company for conducting transactions which clearly have enriched their customers many times over as a result of that raid.
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