When the coin was minted back in 1943, it was worth exactly one cent. It had no special additional value.
1943 makes it one of the silver war nickels, currently worth about $1.60.
The 1943 coin is about $3 at most. The 1951 coin is about $1 at most.
This is a common date coin, value is 3 to 10 cents for circulated coins
It's made of steel, not silver, and most are worth around 5 cents.
The value of a 1943 Malay one cent coin will change often. Currently, the coin is valued between 30 cents and one dollar.
No. Remember that copper is NOT magnetic. You have a common 1943 steel cent that was copper-plated to make it look like one of the famous and rare 1943 bronze cents that were struck by accident. The fact that it's has been plated means it's an altered coin worth only 1 cent.
For example, a 1943 & a 1943-D coin in MS60 condition are worth: $5.00. A 1943-S coin in the same condition is worth: $15.00.
There's no such coin as a "two cent penny" because a penny is either a 1p British coin, or a 1-cent coin in the US, Canada, and several other countries. If you have a 2-cent piece with a map of Europe on one side and a picture of the Netherlands' queen on the other, it's a common circulation coin worth face value only. If you have anything else, please post a new question with the coin's date.
The one cent Euro coin is worth 0.6452 of an American cent.
A five cent coin from 2005 is worth five cents.
A silver 1829 5 cent coin is worth between £30 and £80