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What Makes A Penny Rare?

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turbozack's Avatar
United States
38 Posts
 Posted 11/02/2012  12:28 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add turbozack to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
I need some help understanding what makes a penny rare? Is there a small symbol to look out for, or is there a letter or a number? Can someone please tell me?
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svslav's Avatar
United States
2605 Posts
 Posted 11/02/2012  12:42 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add svslav to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Which penny are you talking about?

Is it about a cent (US, Canadian, Australian, etc.)that many nickname "penny", or British (Empire / Commonwealth) one? Decimal, predecimal? Which era? Milled, hammered?
Too many parameters of freedom. You need to be more specific to get a competent answer.
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John1's Avatar
United States
56855 Posts
 Posted 11/02/2012  12:43 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add John1 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Need more info. Basically what makes any coin rare is supply and demand.
John1
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austrokiwi's Avatar
2087 Posts
 Posted 11/04/2012  10:53 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add austrokiwi to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
LOL what makes any coin Rare? When one peruses ebay every second coin appears to be described as rare. Take a new Zealand coin for example....the 1935 3 pence. It a coin that NZ collectors will hunt for and is regarded as a key coin and the majority of collectors would describe it as rare . In 2004 I was horrified when speaking( in person) to a NZ dealer, that dealer stated in his opinion that particular coin was as "common as muck" I recall words to the effect that if you want one and are prepared to pay you will find one in a week. I never forgot that statement and realized later how accurate it was. Although it is regarded as rare ( mintage aprox 55000) it is reasonably obtainable. In comparison other NZ coins are made of unobtainium; such as the 2000 fantasy $50.00 coin from the Chatham islands. { It was an issue that breached NZ monetary law and the dies and nearly all existent coins were seized approximately 10-20 coins remain in private hands..}Try finding one I suspect you will have to hunt for several years to find one. Rare also doesn't mean expensive....I have a counter-marked Austrian 25 Schillings...as one of a maximum of 5 its rare but I doubt anyone would pay me more than US$30.00 for it.
Edited by austrokiwi
11/04/2012 10:55 am
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Sap's Avatar
Australia
16842 Posts
 Posted 11/04/2012  8:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
First off, since you've posted this in the World Coins section, I assume you're talking about actual pennies like they use in Britain or like they used to use in Australia, and not the nickname for US and Canadian one cent coins.

Second, one must ask what you mean by "rare". As austrokiwi said, "RARE!" is a word bandied about on ebay by sellers so much it has virtually lost it's meaning. The "rarity" of a coin, in the true meaning of the word, is an indication of how easy it is to acquire one. If there are dozens of sellers on ebay selling hundreds of examples of a certain coin, then that coin can't really be all that "rare".

The only factors that contribute to rarity are the original number produced and the proportion of that number that still survive and are available. Rarity is not directly proportional to value; the value of any object is determined by both supply and demand, and "rarity" only addresses the supply side of the equation. If you have a coin that's extremely rare but nobody else wants one, it's not going to be valuable.

In other words, while most valuable coins are indeed rare, not every rare coin is valuable.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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