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 Posted 06/18/2013  3:00 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SA4H to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Thank you DNA for your great insight.

I hope other understand my point better, after reading your list of pricing and explaination....
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DNA's Avatar
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2734 Posts
 Posted 06/19/2013  9:52 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add DNA to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Overall quality of the striking for individual years has some effect on classic coins' MS67 populations, but not as much as the "saved-from-circulation-when-new" rate.

Possibly the best example to prove this: The 1884-S Morgan dollar. Generally well-struck. Common-date priced up to VF grades.

Time to check NumisMedia again.

1884-CC, MS66 = $940
(actually, this is an excellent price for a coin where 85% of the mintage was never circulated, and later sold by the GSA to collectors)

1884-S, MS66 = $406,250

Several years of common-in-circulated-grades "O" Morgans beat this price in MS66, but strike quality factors there. If 1884-S Morgans had been saved in large quantities when new, there would be a higher percentage of MS66 examples than for those New Orleans coins.

And the 1901 Philadelphia Morgan is $456,250 in MS66...
Edited by DNA
06/19/2013 10:11 pm
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