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#1
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I got 2001-D Golden Dollar Mint Bag from my bank!
After weeks of waiting, I finally got my first (and hopefully not last)
bag of 2001-D Golden Dollars from one of my banks. Here is the procedu Tell bank about phone message on local Federal Reserve cash services info line that says that Mint Bags of 2000 Golden Dollars are available as of January 10, 2005 and that all financial institutions can now special order them using the online form on the Fed website. Listen as bank teller tells me that "we can't order Golden Dollars". Slowly repeat exactly what was stated above. Hand teller a copy of the fax form with the Fed info line telephone number circled. Tell teller to call their regional bank cash vault and talk to a human (instead of the automated ordering system). Have them explain to the human EXACTLY what was stated above and provide them with a copy of the form and the Fed telephone number so they can verify that it's true. Wait anywhere from a day to a week for confirmation from the bank teller that the bank cash vault folks now understand that they can indeed order mint bags of Golden Dollars. Also find out if they actually WILL order some and when they might arrive at the bank branch. Now for the fun part. One bank's regional cash vault made them jump through additional hoops. The branch could indeed get the bag, BUT they had to call the cash vault and not use the autromated system (in other words they had to get a human on the phone) the day before their regular delivery of coin/cash and they had to get the bag added to the order over the phone. I'm still waiting for a different bank to have a bag show up. It has been on it's way for 2 weeks... By the way, the mint bag had a big rummer stamped code near the bottom that read: D290JAN302001. I assumed it was indeed Denver 2001 Golden Dollars from the marking and so I opened the bag and put on my cotton gloves and pulled a bunch out. VERY nice condition. Somehow they are superior to the 2002 GDs that I overpayed for directly from the mint. And I repeat that I have no plans to buy the 2005 GD bags at the new smaller size and higher price. I'm betting that the supply is finally getting low enough that they may actually have to make more GDs for distribution to the banking system this year. I'll have to make some phone calls to see if anyone knows what the inventory level is at the Mint and the Federal Reserve system. When it drops too low at the Fed, they order more - either shipped between Fed districts or from the mint. -Fred Shecter |
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#2
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shreadvector wrote:
After weeks of waiting, I finally got my first (and hopefully not last) bag of 2001-D Golden Dollars from one of my banks. Way to go Fred! You da man!! Here is the procedu Tell bank about phone message on local Federal Reserve cash services info line that says that Mint Bags of 2000 Golden Dollars are available as of January 10, 2005 and that all financial institutions can now special order them using the online form on the Fed website. snip Did they actually say "2000" on the cash services info line? I gotta go to work on this myself. Lately my regular jab keeps me too durn busy for this kind of fun. --Dave |
#3
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In article .com,
shreadvector wrote: After weeks of waiting, I finally got my first (and hopefully not last) bag of 2001-D Golden Dollars from one of my banks. Congratulations! But what will you do with your time now that you don't have to roll up Apollo XI dollars and write RARE FROM THE 1900S on them with your Sharpie? ;-) If I were to try this, should I go to a commercial bank? Would they be more likely to be able to work with the Fed to get these bags than my local savings bank? Paul -- Paul Anderson OpenVMS Engineering Hewlett-Packard Company |
#4
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2000 as in quantity in the bag, not as in the year stamped onto the
coin. They are mint bags containing 2000 Golden Dollar coins. I'll answer the other message as well. I'm still getting 2 normal boxes a week and sorting them out. The Apollo XI dollars get re-rolled and I don't need to write on them with the Sharpie since I've got a rubber stamp that says: RARE APOLLO XI DOLLAR COINS FROM THE 1900's I pile them up and deposit them at a bank or banks 50 to 100 miles away where they use a bank cash vault out of San Diego instead of LA or Orange County. I assume that they will stay in that local area or gravitate south over the border since the trolly system uses dollar coins. Commercial banks would be the best starting point, BUT some credit unions and saving banks might have a pro-customer attitude and actually order them for you. Of course, you have to check with your local Federal Reserve district cash services folks to see if they ahve any mint bags in stock and available to financial institutions who order them. They're on the web. Good luck. |
#5
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shreadvector wrote:
2000 as in quantity in the bag, not as in the year stamped onto the coin. They are mint bags containing 2000 Golden Dollar coins. D'oh! I should have seen that. Thanks Fred! --Dave |
#6
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On 3 Feb 2005 05:31:47 -0800, "shreadvector"
wrote: After weeks of waiting, I finally got my first (and hopefully not last) bag of 2001-D Golden Dollars from one of my banks. Here is the procedu Tell bank about phone message on local Federal Reserve cash services info line that says that Mint Bags of 2000 Golden Dollars are available as of January 10, 2005 and that all financial institutions can now special order them using the online form on the Fed website. Listen as bank teller tells me that "we can't order Golden Dollars". Slowly repeat exactly what was stated above. Hand teller a copy of the fax form with the Fed info line telephone number circled. Tell teller to call their regional bank cash vault and talk to a human (instead of the automated ordering system). Have them explain to the human EXACTLY what was stated above and provide them with a copy of the form and the Fed telephone number so they can verify that it's true. Wait anywhere from a day to a week for confirmation from the bank teller that the bank cash vault folks now understand that they can indeed order mint bags of Golden Dollars. Also find out if they actually WILL order some and when they might arrive at the bank branch. Now for the fun part. One bank's regional cash vault made them jump through additional hoops. The branch could indeed get the bag, BUT they had to call the cash vault and not use the autromated system (in other words they had to get a human on the phone) the day before their regular delivery of coin/cash and they had to get the bag added to the order over the phone. I'm still waiting for a different bank to have a bag show up. It has been on it's way for 2 weeks... By the way, the mint bag had a big rummer stamped code near the bottom that read: D290JAN302001. I assumed it was indeed Denver 2001 Golden Dollars from the marking and so I opened the bag and put on my cotton gloves and pulled a bunch out. VERY nice condition. Somehow they are superior to the 2002 GDs that I overpayed for directly from the mint. And I repeat that I have no plans to buy the 2005 GD bags at the new smaller size and higher price. I'm betting that the supply is finally getting low enough that they may actually have to make more GDs for distribution to the banking system this year. I'll have to make some phone calls to see if anyone knows what the inventory level is at the Mint and the Federal Reserve system. When it drops too low at the Fed, they order more - either shipped between Fed districts or from the mint. -Fred Shecter Please fill in the blanks, Fred. The phone number for the L A area B of A vault teller to use to confirm and get forms. I delved into the on-line info of the SF FRB and found the very disconcerting statement that the small bags are commingled (2,000 coins) while the large (40,000) are not. There is some misinformation at the FRB site, such as their implication that IGWT appeared on the one cent coinage in 1864. The correct year would be 1909. Anyway, I would love to help my little branch of B of A to procure the 2001 D Sacagawea Dollars. Any help will be appreciated. Aram. |
#7
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http://www.frbsf.org/fiservices/cash...s/faxsouth.pdf
Telephone number is on form. For Questions Call (888) 339-3506, Option 3. I called again just now. The message gives you additional options for commemorative quarters, nickels and Golden Dollars. You can also stay on the line and talk to a person, BUT they remind you that the number is supposed to be for financial institutions only. SO, listen to the messages and then hang up and give the info to your bank. I found that handing them a copy of the above form with the phone number highlighted or circled is a big help. Let's flood LA with GDs. Actually, I suspect that it's already being flooded by the self-service car wash folks, the USPS vending machines, commuter rail, etc. Las Vegas monorail didn't hurt either. -Fred Shecter |
#8
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I talked to one of the Cash Services people live at the Denver branch
Fed Reserve bank. It was a nice lady named Debbie who has been part of the real operations for years. She said that their branch has no special program for new golden dollars in any form. Furthermore, they have not ordered any from the Mint in years, not since they first came out (she thinks). She said we can get all the comingled dollars we want through local banks, but no guaranteed new lots. Fred, it would appear that the new golden dollar bag program is a local initiative confined to the west coast 12th Federal Reserve District, or possibly even just the San Francisco branch. You lucky dog you! Possibly your district has a favorable consumption vs. supply situation. Perhaps they have enlightend directors who actually want to *promote* the dollar coin (gasp!!). It sure isn't the US Mint or the national FRB leadership. One good note for the rest of us. I agree with Fred's comments about the reserves. If San Francisco is supplying solid 2001-D bags, that's a fair indicator that the western supply of 2000-D's is starting to dry out. If so, it won't be much longer before real production begins. I think about 2006. Yippee! Mintages: Philly Denver 2000 767,140,000 518,916,000 2001 62,468,000 70,939,500 2002-2004 -- Collector quantities only -- Note. The national annual drawdown was about 63 million, back in 1999 before the golden dollar promotion had ever started. http://web.archive.org/web/200308081...n.org/time.htm --Dave "Yay Jim" shreadvector wrote: After weeks of waiting, I finally got my first (and hopefully not last) bag of 2001-D Golden Dollars from one of my banks. Here is the procedu Tell bank about phone message on local Federal Reserve cash services info line that says that Mint Bags of 2000 Golden Dollars are available as of January 10, 2005 and that all financial institutions can now special order them using the online form on the Fed website. Listen as bank teller tells me that "we can't order Golden Dollars". Slowly repeat exactly what was stated above. Hand teller a copy of the fax form with the Fed info line telephone number circled. Tell teller to call their regional bank cash vault and talk to a human (instead of the automated ordering system). Have them explain to the human EXACTLY what was stated above and provide them with a copy of the form and the Fed telephone number so they can verify that it's true. Wait anywhere from a day to a week for confirmation from the bank teller that the bank cash vault folks now understand that they can indeed order mint bags of Golden Dollars. Also find out if they actually WILL order some and when they might arrive at the bank branch. Now for the fun part. One bank's regional cash vault made them jump through additional hoops. The branch could indeed get the bag, BUT they had to call the cash vault and not use the autromated system (in other words they had to get a human on the phone) the day before their regular delivery of coin/cash and they had to get the bag added to the order over the phone. I'm still waiting for a different bank to have a bag show up. It has been on it's way for 2 weeks... By the way, the mint bag had a big rummer stamped code near the bottom that read: D290JAN302001. I assumed it was indeed Denver 2001 Golden Dollars from the marking and so I opened the bag and put on my cotton gloves and pulled a bunch out. VERY nice condition. Somehow they are superior to the 2002 GDs that I overpayed for directly from the mint. And I repeat that I have no plans to buy the 2005 GD bags at the new smaller size and higher price. I'm betting that the supply is finally getting low enough that they may actually have to make more GDs for distribution to the banking system this year. I'll have to make some phone calls to see if anyone knows what the inventory level is at the Mint and the Federal Reserve system. When it drops too low at the Fed, they order more - either shipped between Fed districts or from the mint. -Fred Shecter |
#9
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You have two options:
#1: Do what I do: Buy the comingled. Sort them. Re-roll and pile up the Susies. Drive them south as far as you can (New Mexico?). Deposit them at banks near the border. Suck your city dry. #2: Open a large chain of coin-op car washes and laundromats that use dollar coins (or buy up a local vending machine operator). |
#10
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I just picked up my normal weekly two boxes of comingled dollar coins.
I popped open both boxes and all are the same machine wrapper as used on only some of last weeks rolls - a very pale printing job on the white paper. This week looks to have a decnet number of 2001-D mixed in and fewer Susies than in the past. I will know more after I sort them out and re-roll them later today or tomorrow morning. This could be beginning to follow similar pattern of the Susies as they dried up in the late 90's. Every other box in those days was completely uncirculated and eventually we got the 1999-P SBAs followed in very late 1999 and January 2000 with boxes of uncirculated 1999-D. That was then followed by the comingled circulated Susies and a few GDs as they started to arrive at Wal-mart and get re-circulated. Eventually we got nothing but Bumblebee rolls after the Federal Reserve instituted a program to ship nothing but new Golden Dollar coins for about a year and a half. Since that ended it's been all comingled circulated coins, but they seem to be getting used enough to spread them out into many machines and pockets and cash registers, so they needed more to fill bank orders. I sent an e-mail to Coin World suggesting an article similar to their article in 2002 that documented the inventories and draw-down rate of dollar coins. Without Jim Benfiled they'll have to go directly to the Fed and Mint to get that data (unless a contact at a congressional office has that info). I'll report my rough count on what I find in the boxes sometime tomorrow (I hope). -Fred Shecter |
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