The U.S. Treasury Department stopped producing pennies. What does this mean for collectors and the value of the penny? Here's ...
The small copper coin that has jingled in our pockets for over two centuries is about to become history. With the final penny ...
The U.S. Treasury Department announced that it has stopped producing pennies, ending more than 230 years of minting the 1-cent coin.
While the penny is no longer being produced, the grimy, circular piece of copper and zinc is getting the last laugh. Less ...
To commemorate the occasion, the United States Mint has partnered with Stack’s Bowers Galleries to auction off 232 sets of ...
It's about time. The U.S. Mint made its last penny on Thursday. Too bad that 328 billion of them were minted before that.
Even though the U.S. Mint has stopped producing new pennies, the ones already in your home, car, or junk drawer are still very much real money.
Business owners now struggle to round prices up or down as the newly discontinued one cent coin becomes rarer.
The combination of “copper” and “penny” might not seem like the best formula for valuable coins considering that you can find higher denominations in gold and silver. But finding the right copper coin ...
Spoiler alert: Your pennies may not be worth much more than the aforementioned freebies. That is, of course, dependent on a ...
It is time to break out the change jars and go treasure hunting folks.