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Help Please Bulk Sale Of Silver Coins Estimated Value

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New Member
United States
12 Posts
 Posted 05/03/2016  12:29 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add wilsotc to your friends list
Being new to coin valuation I can't be sure I'm correct, but my research indicates at least a $3 average value for these coins. Am I way off?
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Canada
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 Posted 05/03/2016  06:32 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add oriole to your friends list
Melt value per coin is US $1.26 as of this morning.
Rest in Peace
United States
18456 Posts
 Posted 05/03/2016  07:36 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add T-BOP to your friends list
Have you checked for key dates on the Barbers and Mercs ? You don't want to be selling any of them for melt .
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United States
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 Posted 05/03/2016  07:40 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Biedercoins to your friends list
T-BOP I think he's buying.
New Member
United States
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 Posted 05/03/2016  09:37 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add wilsotc to your friends list
The story goes that these were purchased as junk silver in the 70s so I'm guessing any key date coins are removed. They're being sold for roughly their melt value and I have an option to buy so long as I match the bulk purchase offer. There are a smattering of Barber coins in worn shape. There are many hundreds of pounds of coins including quarters and half dollars as well.

Help-Please-Bulk-Sale-Of-Silver-Coins-Estimated-Value

Help-Please-Bulk-Sale-Of-Silver-Coins-Estimated-Value

Bedrock of the Community
United States
10982 Posts
 Posted 05/03/2016  10:04 am  Show Profile   Check BH1964's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add BH1964 to your friends list

Quote:
Being new to coin valuation I can't be sure I'm correct, but my research indicates at least a $3 average value for these coins. Am I way off?


Yes, you are way off. As noted melt value is estimated at $1.26/each.
ANA #R3154474
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United States
1911 Posts
 Posted 05/03/2016  10:33 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Mister Kairu to your friends list
From the looks of it if you can get it for melt price that is a good deal. I buy every week from my lcs junk 90% silver at spot and am able to resell for a small profit online.
New Member
United States
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 Posted 05/03/2016  11:46 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add wilsotc to your friends list
So the concensus is that these coins are completely typical of bulk silver and have no numismatic value.

Thanks for the help everyone
Valued Member
Canada
496 Posts
 Posted 05/03/2016  1:47 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Dennman to your friends list
I'd be happy to come across piles like this.I can only afford pocket change collecting and living in Canada,I don't get that much US coinage.I don't collect for an investment.Just the pure pleasure of haveing a year set is good enough for me.I see lots that would fill out my meager collection.
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United States
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 Posted 05/03/2016  2:32 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add wilsotc to your friends list
Here's a link to more photos if interested:

https://drive.google.com/folderview...&usp=sharing
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1054 Posts
 Posted 05/03/2016  2:48 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add kookoox10 to your friends list
From a retail standpoint, you shouldn't be paying more than 1.75-1.85 a piece for the dimes. Obviously, that value goes down for a bulk lot.
New Member
United States
12 Posts
 Posted 05/03/2016  2:53 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add wilsotc to your friends list
The coin dealer who's offering to buy is offering a bit over 14x face value. So he's getting the dimes for a bit over $1.40. That's only slightly less than I can buy bulk silver anywhere and around $3/oz over spot so I can only assume he considers 1970 junk silver to be more valuable than today's.
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 Posted 05/03/2016  3:48 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Earle42 to your friends list
Another angle to look at is that if these were bought in the 70s, a lot of the varieties modern collectors value were not known back then. There could be some nice double dies, etc, hiding in that pile that would go for more than silver.
How much squash could a Sasquatch squash if a Sasquatch would squash squash?
Download and read: Grading the graders
Costly TPG ineptitude and No FG Kennedy halves
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 Posted 05/03/2016  9:04 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add KenKat to your friends list
I would buy that lot at melt value all day long. The melt value is the minimum that they would ever be worth. If melt is 12.6x face and you can get them at 14x face, I would back up the truck and buy all you can. The WORST coin in that lot is worth what you would be paying for it. Many of the coins you could sell for a premium I think.

BU Roosevelt dimes are going for $2-3 for later dates, $6-8 for 40's and early 50's. Similar range of prices for Mercury dimes - common late dates $2-3, earlier dates are more.

Walker halves - $10 is not unusual at all. Similar prices for Franklin halves.

Barber coinage will carry a premium as well.

I would say just as a guess that the numismatic value of a pile like that is at least twice melt value, possibly 3 times melt value if you find a higher proportion of better dates or mints.

It is a good price for a nice collection of silver in my opinion.

Edited by KenKat
05/03/2016 9:20 pm
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 Posted 05/04/2016  05:24 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Mayflower2020 to your friends list
There is a website called coinapps and you can type in how many of each silver (or gold) coins you have and it multiplies the content by the current value of silver and tells you the exact melt value at any given time. Has each coin by date, and calculates the 90%, 40% Kennedy's and 35% War Nickels.

I would say at any time if you can buy coins for melt then its a good deal. You are buying for melt value which is hard to find, and on top of that, if they missed a key date, or a coin in good condition and you can sell it over melt then you made money.
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