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Replies: 68 / Views: 9,840 |
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Valued Member
Australia
66 Posts |
To make the most, it is worth narrowing down your focus so that you gain in-depth knowledge, rather than trying to cover everything. Choose one country to focus on, then research which coins have low mintage, errors, etc. Check out more forums, keep an eye on prices on ebay, and look at websites dedicated to the country you are interested in. For a starting point, you might want to go to https://worldcoinsinfo.com/world/ru...e-coins.html and get an idea of what different countries coins are worth. If selling on ebay, with a free account your listings are limited, so go through and End Listing on your low value coins to replace them with higher value ones. If you plan to do a lot of selling through ebay, get the Basic Seller Account (monthly subscription) so that you get 600 listings per month + reduced final value fees.
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Pillar of the Community
 Russian Federation
1557 Posts |
In general, I sold several of my lots, but the problem is that not all of them reach the buyer, this is especially acute with buyers from Canada and the United States. I send by simple letter without registration and for me it costs about $ 1. This is very little, but I have to return the money to the buyer in the event of a claim. And this is true.
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Valued Member
United States
345 Posts |
As a "collector", I don't seek the buy/sell process, as my main goal. What has transpired, is that people in my life have learned of my passion for coins and they start asking questions. Ultimately, a "couple of handfuls" of people I know, have asked if I would look at and appraise their coin collections. (mostly inherited). Thus far, I haven't run into any "substantial" collections, mostly accumulations of 90% junk and an assortment of special pieces/gold (no TPG coins thus far). Giving appraisal along with the "usual" methods of liquidation and the costs associated, has been a great way to be of service to friends/family while getting to "play" with coins. Around 50% of the appraisals have resulted in me buying the collection, at less than retail. This allows me to sell the pieces I don't want in my collection and then buy the goodies I do want (slabbed/graded coins) ... the other half get a very detailed/documented appraisal and know exactly what they have. Fun stuff !!!
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
5404 Posts |
Hate to rain on your parade but the way you are approaching trying to profit in coins ,,, never going to work . The way I see it you are in a very bad part of the world to sell coins from . Totally under capitalized is certainly an issue as well . But good luck!! To be a successful coin dealer is a very tough way to make an easy living .
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
625 Posts |
Slerk, buy new coloured $2 Australian coins, hang on to them for a couple of years ,then sell back to the Aussies that missed out, to triple your money, easy as.   Buying older coins that have already gone up in value may still make you money down the track but you will have to sit on them for a lot longer. 
Edited by crab eater 01/01/2023 04:19 am
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
625 Posts |
Here is a good example of easy money. 2022 $2 Honey Bee Royal Australian Mint roll, Head/Tail collector roll. Issue price@$100  Last sale on ebay was on 25/01/2023 @ $275 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3848 Posts |
Quote: To make the most, it is worth narrowing down your focus so that you gain in-depth knowledge, rather than trying to cover everything. I've heard this from several sources, and have a hard time comprehending the benefits. With a specialty, you are just narrowing down your market. How does specialty inventory benefit a dealer?
Suffering from bust half fever. Want to learn how to attribute early half dollars by die variety? Click Here: http://goccf.com/t/434955Shoot me a PM if you are looking to sell bust halves.
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
5404 Posts |
It doesn't, the broader your knowledge and the depth of your inventory coupled with the size of your bank roll leads to success .
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Pillar of the Community
United States
756 Posts |
im a specialist coin dealer so maybe I can offer some insight into specialization. i focus on US Large Cents. its the majority of my inventory. i dont have a store front. there arent enough dedicated large cent collectors in my state to make that profitable. I do shows and travel to larger events. I sell online. I sell to personal contacts. the hotel bar at the convention is one of the best places to sell coins. the local coin shows are good buying opportunities. all of the shops and dealers know I exist and that I will buy their better dates and rare varieties. they bring them to me. they also bring me the ones they cant identify. I was involved in the discovery the 13th known 1793 S-15 (sometimes called the aristocrat of large cents) because a dealer brought it to us. he couldn't identify it and didnt know what he had. everybody made money on that deal. the type set collectors come to me to fill their holes. I have the best selection of large cents. if I dont have it I know where to get it. the narrow focus allows me to spend time on fun stuff. I like to help the kids at the coin shows and use that time to promote numismatics to novice collectors. specializing allows me to work collaboratively with the other dealers. they have specialties too. some like type. some like toner Morgans. they all like something. I like to view them as coworkers collaborating to help the collectors build their collections. generalists cant ever be the best at what they do. there is too much to know. having a narrow focus is the only way to be the best in a category. specialization offers opportunities. the ANA (americas congressionally chartered coin club) has me teaching classes on large cents. people pay more than $1,000 a head to come and learn about these coins from me. if thats not a captive audience I dont know what is. narrow focus has treated me well.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3848 Posts |
Thanks Pacificoin and Carrscoins for the responses.
CarrsCoins, I understand that completely now. I would like to add on and say advertising then would be a key to becoming a specialist. Going to shows like you said is great for that because dealers get to know that you buy nice large cents, and they start selling to you. If you build a customer base, then people come to know you as the guy that sells large cents. I am not entirely sure how to advertise to collectors though.
Suffering from bust half fever. Want to learn how to attribute early half dollars by die variety? Click Here: http://goccf.com/t/434955Shoot me a PM if you are looking to sell bust halves.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
756 Posts |
for something like large cents you are mostly dealing with intermediate to advanced collectors. very few people start collecting coins with a large cent. even fewer jump into varieties early.
since the customers are usually fairly savvy they tend to find you. if you have the coins they want they will track them down. coin collectors love the hunt.
word of mouth is the best advertising you can get but it also takes time. there isn't really a shortcut there. it takes a lifetime to build up a customer base. its a lot of small victories that add up rather than a single big event.
buying things at the right price matters way more than finding a buyer. if you buy it right there will always be someone to sell it to.
being a coin dealer is a lot more work than many collectors realize. its not for everyone. its hours of holdering boring inventory. its driving cross country to events. staying in crappy hotels connected to crappy convention centers. eating crappy convention center food. its grinding out small margins over and over again. the health plan sucks. the money is inconsistent. sometimes you work a 60 hour show and lose money. shipping...so much shipping. outlaying $2k in the hopes of making 20 bucks. because the bankroll matters so much every cent you spend on something else reduces your future profit potential.
all that said I love it. I get to handle coins that I couldnt afford normally. I get to travel the country and experience tons of different places. I get to eat at all sorts of interesting restaurants. I get to randomly sell something while watching a movie. sometimes you cover a week or a months worth of bills by mailing a single package. I always have petty cash. its not for everyone but it works well for me.
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Valued Member
United States
345 Posts |
When finding a "motivated" seller, one MIGHT be able to find a reasonable profit margin. If one finds rare or valuable coins in a "hidden" location (estate sales / garage sales etc.) AND you are willing to pay far under market value ... I'm not ... you may have a LARGE profit margin.
Personally, I love coins ... how they look, how they feel, what they represent AND a certain peace of mind by having them in my possession.
I sell the coins I don't want in my collection, generally low grade / unslabbed versions ... I keep the rest, with pleasure.
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Valued Member
United States
397 Posts |
My personal take is that, yes, you CAN make money from coins. After all, that's why local coin shops exist. They don't exist for our entertainment - they exist as businesses to make money. Given that there's at least one LCS in every town pretty much, I would venture to guess that they make decent money, at least to keep the lights on. That being said, I would imagine that you would need a LOT of coin knowledge and business savvy to run a successful coin shop, whether it's offline or online.
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Valued Member
Australia
77 Posts |
I started doing some selling on ebay mid last year by acquiring stuff from estate sale auctions/ garage sales. If you know how to research you can typically get stuff for under silver melt value (even after ebay fees, buyers premiums, etc) are taken into account. It doesn't make crazy money, but isn't bad if you can pick the right lot to buy, maybe a 40% ROI on a good one, but patience is key as it takes a while to sell everything. Still, I get to learn more about coins, and sometimes keep some of the ones I'm interested in, so win-win as far as I'm concerned.
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Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21788 Posts |
Be a very astute professional coin dealer.
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Replies: 68 / Views: 9,840 |