| Author |
Replies: 17 / Views: 2,842 |
Page 2 of 2
|
|
|
|
Valued Member
United States
456 Posts |
Based on a preliminary search, they made two sets of this series. One is a 20 Ruble (silver), and the other is a 1 Ruble (copper/nickel). It appears the copper/nickel set is also missing the stones on the coins. For the silver set, it looks like there are two different COAs. One from Poland (the minting country), and one from Belarus. It sounds like the Belarus COAs make the set much more valuable.
I don't know much about the series, but it appears the people collecting them are also looking for the COAs as part of the high cost for the series.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
456 Posts |
Sorry if I gave you information you already knew. Thanks for introducing me to this series, I have never seen it before. It's an interesting idea to use oxidized sterling silver coins. The designs are great with great details too.
Personally, I would pass on these coins without the COA and wait for others to come along. It's not that I'd be necessarily worried about them being authentic, but the value on a collectible series like this seems to depend on having the certificates with them.
|
|
Valued Member
 Canada
89 Posts |
Don't be sorry at all! You actually found more info that I did and I've been looking at these for some time. The coins are so beautiful. I wish I had come across them earlier. Maybe I would've been able to buy a few with the COA :( Hmm...maybe I'll get just one.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
456 Posts |
I'm not sure where you are looking, but there are some on ebay at about the same price range that include COAs. Also, just so you know, it looks like these are right around 0.84 oz of silver, and not a full ounce, as they weigh 28.28 g and are sterling: (28.28*0.925/31.1 = 0.84 ounce silver).
|
|
Pillar of the Community
Japan
666 Posts |
I'm wondering whether that would be a deal-breaker for most.>>>
particularly this coin - dealbreaker, but I'd buy (and do buy) chinese coins that are more overpriced and being sold sometimes without COAs
Edited by bekiz 01/15/2013 02:06 am
|
|
Valued Member
 Canada
89 Posts |
SDCrow, I see a few on ebay that come with the COA but they're not the signs I want....unless my search wasn't thorough enough. I'll try again. Yea the silver content is the other thing. I wish it wasn't sterling.
Bekiz, the chinese ones are nice but the premiums are high :S
|
|
Valued Member
United States
456 Posts |
Yeah, I only saw a few that were silver that are currently listed.
|
|
Pillar of the Community
Japan
666 Posts |
he chinese ones are nice but the premiums are high :S >>> agree though the price is more justifiable than the coin you're talking about
|
|
Pillar of the Community
Canada
1528 Posts |
It is all depend. If you are going to keep it and not likely resaling it, the COA is a bit less important. As for me, I don't care about COA if I buy Bullion coins but if I am buying Numismatic coins, I wants the COA even if it is just a generic one. there's always a chance for me to sale the coin back out and I don't want a situation in which I have a tough time reselling it if I don't hve the C.O.A. Especially if I am trying to sell it locally and not ebay.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
148 Posts |
Are you buying it to flip or are you buying it for yourself because you like it? If it's the former then yes not having the certificate would be a deal breaker. If it's the latter then who the heck cares? You're buying the coin not the paper. People display their coins, not the paper that comes along with them.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
456 Posts |
I agree with Lostwords and Berk if you are buying it just for yourself and never plan to sell. I was assuming you would plan on selling at some point down the road. The COA is just a piece of paper, but some collectors like to have the original packaging, COA, etc. as part of their collection as well. Keep us posted with what you decide. I'd love to see a pic of these coins if you decide to get them.
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
3789 Posts |
Hi gang
yea I agree with everyone else.... if you like the coin and don't plan on selling, then get it. However, make sure you get a discount for the lack of COA.
As I discovered in collecting the Somalian elephant coins and others that come with a COA,,, some dealers when purchasing from the wholesaler bought just the coin,, others bought the coin and COA,,, and yet others bought the packaging, coin and COA.
Therefore, there are 3 different price levels you should be aware of. So if it turns out that particular set or coin was only issued with a COA and no sort of display case or packaging then I would make sure you get the going price for that coin WITHOUT the COA.
I ran into this similar thing in buying coins from private mints... some sold the coin with the COA, others just the coin because some people want to just buy high premium silver coins for stacking etc.
|
|
Valued Member
 Canada
89 Posts |
Thanks for everyone's input! I don't plan on reselling but there's always the possibility that I would. I'm one of those people who like to have everything that's included in the original packaging. If a coin came in a presentation case and the case had a sleeve, I would want the sleeve as well lol. But I guess not having all the other stuff is okay too as long as I have the coin that I really want :) I'll definitely post pics if I decide to get them
yup7676, that's really interesting!! I never knew they could do that. So when a dealer doesn't purchase the COA, box, etc., what happens to the original packaging? I'm not sure how the minting/packaging process works but I imagine that the final product from the mint would all be the same so if a coin comes in a box and has a COA, they all would. If a dealer only purchases the coins, what happens to everything else? Are the COAs tossed out by the wholesaler? Or maybe I got it wrong?
Edited by sw3dish ch3f 01/15/2013 7:52 pm
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
3789 Posts |
hey there SW
well, I talked to a few dealers when I went hunting for the somalia elephants, and the Rwanda African coins and also there's another African series, such as the Gabon elephant and they all purchase on different lots and their perceived market outlook for these coins.
So as an example- The african wildlife coins done by the german mint for Rwanda, dealers had their choice to buy from the mints wholesaler either a- the coin itself b- the coin along with COA c- the coin, COA and packaging/display package. (BTW I am talking about the proof Rwanda wildlife coins)
My communication with dealers was most purchased just the COA and coin. This I found to be true with the Rwanda 2013 Cheetah proof coin. When I checked most dealers only sold the COA and proof coin, I found a few dealers who offered a display case with COA and coin but it wasn't the original, it was after market.
Same thing happened when I went to buy the 2012 striped jackal coin from Niger. Several dealers offered the whole ball of wax, box, COA and coin. But others only offered a COA and the coin.
So basically its up to the dealer to decide which package he will buy because they are sold separately. I think I mentioned this but one dealer in Europe told me that these proof Rwanda coins had interested from investors who wanted to buy them to stack. Another dealer told me his market had collectors who were interested in the entire package.
Also, all the dealers had a common thread as to how they chose what package- the outlay of cash versus what their customer base would support. You have to keep in mind that these dealers have to put out a certain percentage from the mint for their pre-orders and we are talking thousands to tens of thousands.
Which makes collecting these type coins from private mints interesting and fun to a certain extent. Its like this major hunt where you have to piece everything together. I spent a week hunting down Somalian elephants, weeks hunting down who had what in the Rwanda series....
So I mean those coins, even without a COA and high prem you will be, IF you had to sell, which hopefully you dont have to and can keep growing your collection, you will still be ok because someone out there is going to be relieved to find this coin lol.
Anyways I hope that helps. I say, again, if you arent in need of flipping, grab em. They are neat looking coins!
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
4008 Posts |
Quote: Yea the silver content is the other thing. I wish it wasn't sterling. Nothing wrong with sterling but it would have been really cool if they had made these coins bigger so that a full Troy oz. of silver was in them.
|
|
Page 2 of 2
|
Replies: 17 / Views: 2,842 |
Page 2 of 2
|