I’d be tempted to sell the Kennedy but keep the other 2. If one modern coin gets that high of a grade there is risk that more will come along and make the price go down. Less chance of that with the older ones.
I’d silently consign them to a major auction house and then start threads about them. After 15 pages of bitchery about how the coins fail to meet their ideals of the grade (and tons of free publicity), I’d probably pay off a few posters to rave about the sticker and upgrade potential. I’d consign a couple of months before registry set award deadlines. I would try to reach out to the top five set owners or so in each category. I’d make sure they had auction links.
Comments
I’d be tempted to sell the Kennedy but keep the other 2. If one modern coin gets that high of a grade there is risk that more will come along and make the price go down. Less chance of that with the older ones.
Mr_Spud
I would sell them all through Great Collections.
Those are near perfect grades; registry set folks could bid them up high in the right auction. I'd follow the auction advice from the colonel.
I’d silently consign them to a major auction house and then start threads about them. After 15 pages of bitchery about how the coins fail to meet their ideals of the grade (and tons of free publicity), I’d probably pay off a few posters to rave about the sticker and upgrade potential. I’d consign a couple of months before registry set award deadlines. I would try to reach out to the top five set owners or so in each category. I’d make sure they had auction links.
Right Braddick.
I saw the bumper sticker on the rear bumper of your 365 Daytona Spider.
SELL, MORTIMER, SELL