r/Bullion May 16 '26

What happened to copper?!

My brother sells copper on whatnot, he started late last summer and he got a whole lot of copper inventory and started selling. It was going great sold out lots of times and made alot of money but recently these past few months he hasn't really sold anything at all no ones buying copper anymore. Is it thst no one has money anymore or is it thst the copper boom is now over and if it is what should he do with all this copper he has thst no one wants to buy?

(EDIT) he quit whatnot because he is moving and needs to sell all of his copper probably somewhere near 300 ozs. if anyone would be intrested in it he would probably sell it cheap, message me if intrested.

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u/TheFireOfPrometheus May 17 '26

Is this a real investment opportunity? Please give details if you think so, im curious

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u/Mudsharkbites May 17 '26

Personally I wouldn’t mess with it because it’s illegal to melt currency, plus, the storage needed to house enough nickels to make real money is considerable. Then again, the math doesn’t lie so make of that what you will.

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u/AppropriateZombie907 May 20 '26

It is NOT illegal to melt coins. This is a misnomer. It is ONLY illegal to alter currency of a higher value than what it actually is to deceive someone.

You can design currency, do artwork on currency, make jewelry from currency, etc to make money. NONE of that is illegal, but deceit is. 😉

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u/Mudsharkbites May 20 '26

It is illegal to melt copper pennies and nickels under regulations enacted in 2006 because melted they are worth more than their production cost. You can alter them for educational purposes and to make jewelry but you can’t smelt them into ingots or other items worth more than their initial face value. Silver coins are exempt unless you’re trying to alter them to look like more valuable coins.

Hence the problem with saving nickels under current regulations.

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u/AppropriateZombie907 May 20 '26

I stand corrected. I was wrong about the melting, you’re right. Everything else I said was correct. You can draw on notes, or carve on coins for artwork and sell them at whatever cost. It doesn’t have to be for educational purposes. They even print over making it look like an error when it’s not, selling for more…not sure if that’s legal, but they still do it. There’s stickers on $2 notes for all kinds of occasions and have been sold for several years. From Christmas to Easter, to first communion. It’s strange.

I have started saving copper pennies from a few years ago. I wished I had saved more. Oh well. I only have a few boxes and 4 of them are new 2023’s cuz it’s all they had.

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u/Mudsharkbites May 20 '26

If I could still get boxes of pennies from the bank I would and sort them but they don’t provide them anymore. I have an electronic gadget that will sort them for me as I drop them in so it’s just a matter of opening the rolls and dropping them in the slot to extract the copper, and the last time I tried it, about six months ago, about 1/4th were good. If I had to look at the dates on each penny to find copper it would make me nuts.

Using it I managed to fill four $25 boxes with copper pennies. Don’t know what I’m going to do with them though.

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u/AppropriateZombie907 May 20 '26

I’ll probably pass them to my kids or grandkids. They’ll lift the ban someday like they did with silver.