Went to Lowes today and like every other 9 out of 10 trips I leave pissed off without what I went for, today it was the cause of a "coin shortage" . I go to pay for my items and the clerk tells me there is a coin shortage therefore I can either round up my total or use a card, I immediately asked for a manager .... Manager comes over to explain to me there is a "coin shortage" again I may either round up my total if paying cash or use a card, I explained to her I am in business and deal with a few different banks and there is no coin shortage that I have seen, she goes on to tell me their coin supplier is Loomis and there is a shortage with them, I asked if so, why should their prob cost me $$$, she asked how ..if loomis is playing games with the system and Lowes is either in on the game playing with loomis which I am sure is backed by the fed or simply too lazy to find a different coin supplier or send a manager to a bank, then it is their problem. Why would you round my total up and not down ???? You are providing a lower level of service to me. She said that is how it is I am sorry what else may I do to help you today. I said you can put this stuff back on the shelf I am DONE shopping here. does anyone have any evidence of loomis being instructed to play games with coin circulation with box box retailers ?? This coin shortage is such bullshit
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Pennies switched to zinc in the middle of 1982. It's just a copper coating now.
Nickel and dimes contain metal more valuable than the face value of the coins. If it weren't illegal to melt them down, you could make unlimited money buying nickels for 5¢ and melting them down for 6¢
We have 2 large glass jars. One we dump pennies in and the other gets the "white/silver" coins. I figure no one is dumb enough to steal it bc they are too heavy to run with and would weigh down pockets. LOL Maybe I'll use them to "trade" with the survivors of this coming universal meltdown.
You get busted doing it. Either your bank rats you out or the company that buys raw metal does. In any case, Loomis could be under increased scrutiny.
Regardless, it's pretty shitty that companies are just rounding up cash transactions and expecting customers to eat the cost.