The U.S. Penny is worth 1.04¢!
Published October 24, 2006 |
After monitoring this calculation for a long time, I’m happy to announce this new and unusual arbitrage.
Pennies are composed of 97.6% zinc and 2.4% copper, with a total weight of 2.5 grams. After several years of rapid appreciation, copper prices have been stagnant for about 6 months, but zinc has been rising toward $4,000 per metric ton (or about 4/10 of a cent per gram). That places the value of the zinc at 0.994¢, and the value of the copper at 0.045¢, bringing to total cost of the raw metals to 1.04¢.
So if you collect pennies, melt them down, separate and purify the metals, then sell the metal on the public exchange, you make 4%. This is a new phenomenon, and may not last. I would expect to hear an announcement that the penny will be modified, replacing zinc with aluminum. This would bring the value of the metals down to less than 7/10 of a cent, and gives the government another couple years before they are forced to drop the penny as a unit of currency.
The new aluminum pennies will still be clad in copper, but will feel much lighter. You heard it here first.
Labels: Commodities, Freakonomics, Investment
Comments:
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Comment by
Posted 7:35 PM
Dear Dan:
Thank you for the news on the penny, very interesting.
Although not connected we are brethren at LINKEDIN.
I am writing to ask if you know 2 guys/gals who are adept at riding herd on deal teams in the smaller middle market $15 MIL to $25 Mil?
Can we chat?
Tony
617-924-0074
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