I've got a question for the brain trust… my stack of silver and gold isn't very large and I typically pick up bars or rounds every couple weeks off Reddit and the prices are usually a hair over spot. I had some time to kill today so I stopped in at a jewelry store that also says they're a coin shop. I inquired about silver and she brings a tray out with maybe 20oz on it and mentioned she's had these pieces for a while. Beaten up and ugly rounds and bars, nothing special. She said $39/oz. I offered to buy the whole tray for $35/oz (going price on Reddit for nice silver) and she said how could I do that with spot being $33?? I went up to $36 and she wouldn't budge so I thanked her for her time and left.
This is more of a curiosity and has my accounting brain swirling… if she's had this silver for a while, that implies her cost of goods is probably somewhere quite a bit less than where spot is right now. So why does it matter to her where spot is if she can make good margin on my offer of $35 or $36? And that she couldn't dare let go of the silver for less than $39 with spot at $33?
Like usual I'm probably missing something or uneducated on the subject. Hell she probably just doesn't want to sell it unless it's a ridiculous premium. Is there any other reason she just can't let it go for south of $39 that I may be missing? Once again, I'm just trying to learn something, I'm not upset or anything.
Quick edit… I'm not trying to assume I know how to run a coin shop. That's just the highest I've seen for ordinary .999 silver and she acted like I was threatening her dog.