They are beautiful coins indeed! Just picked up my first two, a 2020 and a 2021 for 75$. Hardly ever see them for sale here in Sweden so very happy with that!
Hi Eddie. Good video. Very informative. One small correction. The eagle on the obverse of the Libertad and on all Mexican coin obverses is the state seal, not a coat of arms. A coat of arms includes a shield and a family crest. Coats of arms belong to individuals. The US has a state seal. It does have a shield, but no family crest. Yesterday was a big day for me and my Libertad collection. I have a collection of all 1oz coins in all the finishes. Yes like the Mexican Mint and Banco de Mexico I call them coins. That is as of yesterday. I finally picked up the 1oz antiqued 2019 coin. I am anxiously awaiting this year's proof and reverse proof. We will see if they put out an antique coin this year. I have been collecting libertads for over 30 years. The last year and a half have been challenging due to the low mintages, delays, and recent popularity. Libertads make a beautiful collection. They are challenging and recently very expensive. I would encourage any collector to chose Libertads.
Wow that's interesting and awesome. Thanks for the information. Hey where do you find all the different options for the Libertads? I've only seen the BU types and recently seen a reverse proof and oh my gosh, I think it's the most eye appealing coin I've ever seen and REALLY want to get one.
💯 i love the beauty of the Libertad coin. I'm definitely interested in a few of them . Love the reverse proof heck they originals are solid coin.. Thx. For sharing . 💯 2 your channel . New subscribers.
I like to collect the 5 oz libertads because of the montage is more easily visible on a larger diameter coin. I live in South Korea and usually import them from LPM in Hong Kong.
Love the Libertad! My favorite coins as you know... Great collection you have as well! Seems like their popularity is getting crazy and soon it may be super hard to just get any...
I'm a fan of the 1999 with the full size Mexican coat of arms with an eagle facing left perched on a cactus and clutching a snake in its beak. Coins issued from 1982 to 2010 are almost impossible to find in high grades. For that entire period back in 2019, there were at that point only 30 MS-70 coins in the NGC census and none prior to 1993. Plus, MS-67 is the highest grade through 1982 of coins graded by NGC. Reverse Proofs (one, two, and five ounces), which came in at low mintages of 1,000 in 2019 for example, and of all sizes of the Antique finish coins (in the same three sizes), which are also 1,000 each. 2020 had low mintages of proofs and fractionals I see. The ones to seek out also are the top 10 LOW Mintage: 1998 67,000, 1999 95,000, 1997 100,000, 2007 200,000, 1996 300,000, 2006 300,000, 2020 300,000, 2000 340,000, 1994 400,000, 2014 429,200.
Hey Eddie, new sub here. Where do you find the reverse proof Libertads? I've only seen the BU options. I only recently seen a RP Libertad in a video and man I think it has to be the most eye appealing coin I've ever seen.
You are not correct. The coin has it's value as a libertad, not only for silver. Multple banks sell them and they also buy them. You can go to a bank and sell it to them, whenever you want. And they will give you the LIBERTAD price for "Buy" at the moment. Not the silver value, but the libertad value, which is higher than it's silver content.
S.E.E., the Mexican Silver Libertad (1 onza) is a round. If the coin does not show a monetary denomination, it’s a round. You saying that it’s backed by the Mexican Government for its silver content, which allows for an argument to the contrary, is absolutely ridiculous. Every entity pays for silver and gold content - that’s what makes them precious metals. Continue to fool yourself- however, stop trying to gaslight viewers who stumble Upon your channel. They are rounds; and, that’s okay and enough for stacking. Stop with the upselling, please. Brag on the beauty they possess. On that, we agree.
@@hotheadedjoelhaha not to my knowledge. If it's a coin produced by a government mint, they usually make it legal tender. That's my point. Unless I am missing the monetary marking on the Mexican coin; then it's a Round.