45 years of Proof Sets on SAH last night
jrinck
Posts: 1,321 ✭✭
I'm a card guy, and the only coins I collect are the proof sets beginning with 1999.
Anyway, Shop-at-Home was running a deal last night offering the last 45 U.S. Proof Sets (1958-2002) for $1000.00, or roughly $22.00 per set.
I would never buy anything from SAH, but couldn't help wonder why they could offer all those sets for what seems like a very low price.
What's the catch?
Anyway, Shop-at-Home was running a deal last night offering the last 45 U.S. Proof Sets (1958-2002) for $1000.00, or roughly $22.00 per set.
I would never buy anything from SAH, but couldn't help wonder why they could offer all those sets for what seems like a very low price.
What's the catch?
0
Comments
They bought every unsold loser set, from every loser dealer.
Just so they could sell to their admiring public. Bear
Camelot
store stock and picked over sets and that the sellers picked them over too. But,
there isn't a lot of profit to be made in the typical 98% of coins in these sets, so
lots of nice coins will be left. Also the kind of buyer these guys attract will be more
discriminating than most when it comes to coin and packaging problems, so it's a
safe bet that they also have to remove a lot of inferior sets. Gems? Not likely, but
the average quality is probably comparable to what you'd get from the mint or a
dealer. The problem is price. These RETAIL at a little over $600.
2 Cam-Slams!
1 Russ POTD!
Jeremy
2 Cam-Slams!
1 Russ POTD!
I have no idea as to the value of the earlier sets, although it does surprise me to hear that a '71 set would go for only $5.50.
And from the sounds of things, the Mint's quality control was probably pretty lacking in the old days, and the plastic pouch sets probably allow for the coins to get banged up quite a bit.
And I always wondered about the '98 set, and somewhat predicted to myself that it would one day be highly prized. Since everyone wants the '99 for the quarters, the '98 would get lost in the shuffle... that is until everybody realized that nobody else bought a '98 and thus a demand would surface.
one of the biggest drivers of the modern market.