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Help In Buying Peace Dollar

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edteach's Avatar
United States
62 Posts
 Posted 11/18/2014  08:56 am Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add edteach to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
I am looking to buy a few Peace dollars to add to my collection. I have been a stacker of silver bullion and decided to start buying US silver historic coins. I ran across a guy at the flea market who had a bunch he was selling for around 23 each in ef condition ungraded. one of my questions is should I look for a graded coin if I can pick one up in MS62 or 61 for around 30 dollars like I see them going for on ebay? The cost of grading is around that alone. Does it make the coin worth more? I was thinking of having the double eagle I bought from one of the forum members graded if it will make it more valuable, so if I buy a Peace dollar for 22 and pay 30 to have it graded I am better off bidding on ebay?
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tpg22's Avatar
United States
919 Posts
 Posted 11/18/2014  09:03 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add tpg22 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
It really does not make sense to grade a $22 EF Peace dollar. The slab will not add any value to that coin. Look for a nice 1923-1925 MS63 Graded coin for about $35-40. I have been seeing the MS64's go for under $60 and even MS65's going for around $100.
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jimbucks's Avatar
United States
4692 Posts
 Posted 11/18/2014  09:04 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jimbucks to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
There is no reason to have Peace dollars (or basically any coins) graded unless the value is $200 and up. Retail is around $24 for common Peace dollars and they are extremely common. There is no added value for a common Peace dollar in a TPG holder in low MS condition, but it may make it easier to sell in the future.


Edited by jimbucks
11/18/2014 09:08 am
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jimbucks's Avatar
United States
4692 Posts
 Posted 11/18/2014  09:19 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jimbucks to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
If you are just picking up a piece or two, then you may want to go for something with some character. That's why I bought this one. Love it or hate it.

Help-In-Buying-Peace-Dollar
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BuckeyeCoinGuy's Avatar
United States
711 Posts
 Posted 11/18/2014  09:30 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BuckeyeCoinGuy to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I view the cost of grading as a sunk cost that only helps the marketability of a coin. It will sell faster, and likely for more with the right label / sticker on it for sure. That money is spent though, it doesn't get capitalized into the coin. To me if you paid $12 to slab a $2 coin, you still have a $2 coin but now with a bulky reminder of your 12 bucks wasted, not a $14 coin. That type of math may work for the government, but in the real world you'd go broke fast grading low $ coins with the hope of profit.

Submitting coins seems to be a bulk only game for moderate priced coins or a very high grade / high $ game. I really think the only way to grade coins through a TPG as a small time collector would be in bulk. I have heard you can get it down to about $12/coin maybe that way. Who knows though, I certainly don't. Buying raw Peace dollars and then paying to have them graded is generally a bad investment. It can be done profitably, but those who do usually see tons of coins and cherry pick out the best or what is under graded to crack out and resubmit. If you are just getting into coins and transitioning some from stacking, it is unlikely you will see enough coins or have the fine grading skills to do that profitably.

If you want them graded, I would buy graded coins if I were you.

If you want low premium coins and the ability to profit with any upswing in metals, go with raw coins with as low of premium as possible and as nice of eye appeal as possible.

Here is a premium calculator I print and take into the LCS when I go. It helps me turn the odd weights into a $/oz price for comparison.

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet...g/edit#gid=0


If you really like Peace dollars and want to collect them, I would recommend buying an assortment of them at various grades for reference. It is more enjoyable than I thought it would be to go over your collection and grade them carefully and to have graded examples to reference. After doing this for a little bit, it is amazing how your eye can just jump to the relevant details or dings on a coin in your area of interest.

As a former coin collecting kid, turned adult stacker, fully transitioned back into coin collecting, I highly recommend the old US gold. Very low premiums even on graded coins compared to the bullion modern stuff.
Edited by BuckeyeCoinGuy
11/18/2014 09:34 am
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