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Replies: 17 / Views: 3,223 |
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Valued Member
United States
81 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4416 Posts |
Sad as this is, it isn't as bad as many of the ill-described and counterfeit ebay items that have sold. It's not cheap to market coins on TV, and such marketing does provide jobs, etc. Also, consider that many of the folks who buy the telemarketer's wares are willing to pay for the convenience and privacy of shopping at home. Personally, I prefer coin shows above all other avenues for purchase. I attended a show this weekend and bought over two dozen Civil War tokens, no culls, Fine to AU, for $10, each. Got an 1897-S and a 1904-O Morgan in AU for $30, each, and an 1808 Bust Half in VG, cleaned but not harshly, with a minor rim ding for $57. These were purchased from three different dealers who know me as a repeat customer. Not much downside at these prices.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1721 Posts |
Must buy one, must buy one, must buy one.....
Love the presentation box, love the presentation box, love the presentation box.....
My credit card number is, my credit card number is, my credit card number is.....
Redrum, redrum, redrum.....
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3453 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
386 Posts |
You made some nice purchases, ExoGuy. I'd love to see the Civil War tokens. Funny thing about this post is that I purchased an 1885-O Morgan on Friday. PCGS, MS64, $80.00 at my local coin shop.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2480 Posts |
Newbie question. I'm confused about prices, PCGS charts, etc, undoubtedly complicated by my lack of knowledge of Morgan grading.
When I go the the PCGS charts and look for the 1885-O in MS64, three variations are present, with a range for each. The range for the 1885-O in MS64 is $92-$450.
OK, I get that the coin being sold must be the lowest of these and that the TV customer is paying for his/her ignorance.
On the other end of the spectrum, blackjack paid $80 for the 'same' coin last week. @Blackjack, which variety did you buy? Where does it fit on the PCGS table?
My question is who, if anyone, ever pays the prices listed on PCGS? Is there some average discount that knowledgeable buyers typically get? I'm sure it's a complicated answer and likely varies depending on type of coin, whether just one coin is being purchased, etc.
I appreciate any enlightenment on the pricing/purchasing issue, especially as it related to selling. I'm helping to sort and estimate the value of my family's jumbled collection because Mom wants to sell.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
919 Posts |
The guide does not take the actual coin into account. I just paid more than the guide price for an MS67 1945 CAC certified Walking Liberty half. The coin is the best I have ever seen for this year and mint mark. In some cases people think they got a steal because they pay under guide prices. Maybe the coin is boderline and doesn't deserve what the guide shows. Maybe they over paid for a lesser coin. Some coins at the top of the grade should and do sell for more. In the end it is what you feel you should pay. I have had two almost identical Morgans in my hand both graded MS64. One worth a lot more then the other to me and so I pay more. Just my thoughts on the subject.
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New Member
United States
20 Posts |
Its so purty and shiny, I must have 4 of them.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
6384 Posts |
Quote: When I go the the PCGS charts and look for the 1885-O in MS64, three variations are present, with a range for each. The ranges are for coins with normal mint-state surface (MS), proof-like reflective surface (PL), and deep-mirror reflective surface (DMPL). PL and DMPL coins were struck from freshly-polished dies and are prized by many collectors. Reflective quality is measured by using the coin as a mirror to read text at a distance from the coin surface. If you can read the letters at 4" distance the coin qualifies as PL. If you can read letters 8" away it's DMPL. Basically, the deeper the mirrors, the higher the price. A true deep-mirror Morgan dollar is a beautiful thing and is usually priced accordingly.
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Valued Member
 United States
81 Posts |
Of course their is a price for convenience, when I stop at the gas station for a gallon of milk I'm well aware I will pay 50 cents or so more. But over a hundred dollars above market value is not a price for convience its predatory.
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Valued Member
United States
366 Posts |
Unfortunately people watch the television shows and buy such over-priced items everyday. I suppose the good news is it's at least a MS64 Morgan dollar that might have a value at that level some day vs. the modern clad coinage being hyped are rare and valuable. Never buy from a television show!
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
14454 Posts |
to bad that's a stock picture because the coin in the picture looks a lot better than the grade. These types of shows always have prayed on the uneducated or elderly persons that do not know what the coins are actually worth or have a way around know how to use the internet to find coins. They put the coins in fancy packaging (about just like the US Mint does to sell their products) and call them rare with presentation case and they make a fortune doing so. Companies have done this type of thing for years and it used to be in the back of magazines you would see it, now they have switched to the airways to reach a broader audience. Usually the elderly believe everything that is said on these types of shows because in their generation most people didn't try to get over on others especially if they were on a television show or commercial. Sure the snake oil salesmen have been around for centuries but they were few and far between and the customers had to be in the same area to get taken by them. With these tv shows they can reach millions of people sitting in their own homes where they seem to feel the safest
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Valued Member
 United States
81 Posts |
youre right on all points bryan..especially the stock/altered? photo..I think they put a PR coin in an MS 64 slab for that picture now that I look at closer! it just gets worse!
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Valued Member
United States
439 Posts |
I was watching this the other night on HSN. It is a total ripoff. They advertise proof sets and show all deep cameo coins. You know you aren't getting a single cameo coin. The prices are really high too. They sell a ton of this stuff though. I always check the prices on ebay just to see the how the pricing is. It's never even close. I can understand how people get taken in though..
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
14454 Posts |
Quote: I can understand how people get taken in though..
Yes they hire some of the best salesmen I have ever seen. They can just about make an experienced buyer think they are getting the deal of the century when in fact they are paying 3x what they should be
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1510 Posts |
rule #2
never buy from TV
Retired USAF 1983-2003
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Replies: 17 / Views: 3,223 |