Are we as stupid as we pretend to be?
shirohniichan
Posts: 4,992 ✭✭✭
I find it funny that there are many threads about how we want dealers to treat us with respect as knowledgable collectors, yet we also want them to assume we know nothing about coin prices. We go to a show with our Gray Sheets in hand and loupes around our necks. We don't want dealers explaining the difference between a T1 and T2 SBA because we know more about them than the dealers do. When we want to sell something, however, all our knowledge flies out the door and we pretend to be dumb. "Mr. Dealer, I want you to buy this coin from me, but I have no idea what it's worth. But, please don't treat me like an idiot-- I'm an expert collector."
Why is this?
[Edited to correct spelling]
Why is this?
[Edited to correct spelling]
Obscurum per obscurius
0
Comments
peacockcoins
Probably!
Good one, Dog!
Obscurum per obscurius
I promise I'm not pretending.
You go to a show and ask the dealer how much he wants for his coin,
when you go to the show and the dealer ask how much you want for you coin, he's wrong?
Here is my take as a dealer, who ever has the coin sets the price, not trends not gray sheet not cu price guide. If it's my coin I set the price. If you have the coin and I want it I have to meet your price or pass..
It is just the way I see it. I don't mean to offend anyone just a rule I follow.
EXACTLY!
Obscurum per obscurius
</FONT>
most of the time I'm even stupider than I pretend. but its when I buying not selling. I think its only a dollar why should I have to pay so much.
I hate it when you see my post before I can edit the spelling.
Always looking for nice type coins
my local dealer
I see no problem with asking a Dealer, if he's interested in a coin I'm selling, what his "best offer" is in person.
It seems to work in print.
peacockcoins
When you go to the dealer you expect that dealer to give you a price for a coin you would like to purchase. Same goes for the reverse. If you are not a collector and have inheritted some coins you would like to sell and you don't do your homework, don't expect to get the max price.
I'm certain that dealers get people like this looking for a "free" appraisal all the time.
Scenario 1:
Collector: How much for this coin?
Dealer: I don't know, what will you give me?
Collector: Well, YOU'RE the dealer (read seller), you tell ME!
Dealer: What's it worth to you?
Collector (sotto voce as he walks away): What a jerk.
Scenario 2:
Collector: Are you buying?
Dealer: Sure, what have you got?
Collector: Here they are.
Dealer: What are you looking to get?
Collector: What'll you give me?
Dealer: Well, YOU'RE the seller (read dealer) you tell ME!
Collector (sotto voce as he walks away with his coins): What a jerk.
How would you like scenario #1 happen to you as a collector attempting to make a purchase? Scenario #2 is pretty much how I've seen it work. Scenario #1 would not happen, but illustrates that while the collector expects the dealer to give him a price, scenario #2 shows that he (the collector) should not be held to the same standard.
Bottom line...Know your material and have the same consideration for the dealer as you would expect from him.
Just my two-cents (U.S.)
Cheers,
Bob
WNC Coins, LLC
1987-C Hendersonville Road
Asheville, NC 28803
wnccoins.com
Shiro, I never go to a show with a loupe and graysheet. I am usually accompanied by a large entourage that includes personal trainer, agent, financial advisor, bodyguard, and a couple of female hangers-on.
I never talk to a dealer personally, I have one of my people do that for me. For instance I tell Mr. Bombay (bodyguard) "Ask this person what he wants for that Carver." Mr. Bombay then says "Mr. Clank wants to know what you want for that Carver?" If the price is too high Mr. Bombay "tightens" the dealer's tie for him until he sees the unreasonable attitude he has assumed.
Do I pretend to be stupid? Absolutely not. I have people who do that for me.
Mr. Clank
Stupid sellers speak for themselves (no flaming necessary).
Clankeye, I like your style. I can imagine Mr. Bombay approaching your mark... er, potential client, saying, "Nice table youz got heah-- it'd be a shame if somet'in' was to happen to it."
Obscurum per obscurius
Don't be scared to speak up and and offer a number. Then the absolute worst thing that could happen is that one party makes a counteroffer or says "No, thank you."
Neil
Carl
Camelot
What is so hard about this? Why do so many people automatically assume buyers are trying to rip them off? If you say you want $50 for your coin and the buyer accepts, why do you assume that he's cheating you? The whole attitude of mistrust of others and self-righteousness gets a bit tiresome after a while.
Obscurum per obscurius
The seller writes on a piece of paper the minimum that he/she will accept. The buyer writes the max he/she will pay on their paper. The two exchange papers with the agreement that if the prices overlap, the buyer will buy and the seller will sell at the mid price. If they do not overlap, no sale.
Nobody tips their hand first.
>>Here is my take as a dealer, who ever has the coin sets the price, not trends not gray sheet not cu price guide. If it's my coin I set the price. If you have the coin and I want it I have to meet your price or pass..
that's right...no one ever made any money from a price guide except the publisher of the guide...
as a seller figure out how much you want for the coin(s) and hold firm...
if a dealer passes...go to another one...until you get your price...
if you get your price don't second-guess yourself like,"could i have gotten more?"
being wishy-washy whether buyer or seller can be an expensive habit...
Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.-Albert Einstein
Occasionally, any one of a few different dealers will come up to our table with a neat coin and say "I have no idea what this is worth, what can I get for it?" I love it when that happens ...... I then say, "surely you must have some idea what it's worth" and the dealer might say "no, not really". At that point, if, for instance, it's a coin that I think is worth $5000 I'll say something like "would you sell it for $2000?" The dealer quickly says "no, that's too low", to which I'll reply "ok, we've now established that you know it's worth/you want something in excess of $2000".
I'll continue with this little game, gradually (or maybe even quickly) upping the number until the dealer eventually quotes me a price, after being forced to admit that he did indeed have some idea as to what his coin was worth. The same guys seem to do the same thing over and over again and I call them on it each time. I can play stupid too. It's just that I prefer not to.
I don't sell many coins, but the last time I did, it was a MS 64 BN PCGS Classic Half Cent and I sold it at Long Beach. I know the copper guys, so I asked their opinions re what they'd pay, why and what they thought it would go for on E-Bay. In my mind, I then decided to offer it at a price in the middle of all of these numbers to various dealers. One accepted, the coin was his, and the following week, he sold it.
Don't be embarassed to tell a dealer what you want for the coin. Typically, they want to hear from you first. They'll either accept your number or not.
"Seu cabra da peste,
"Sou Mangueira......."
Then there is the "great latitude, etiquette and respect" one must show all dealers. How many threads have there been about how we low-life collectors are supposed to treat dealers on the bourse. It is not impossible nor impropable to infer that if you were to ask for the retail cost of the coin you intend to sell, you're going to get laughed off the bourse. Of course this is an exaggeration, but, many of us are victims of this whole mentality.
So to cut the crap we ask the dealer what he will pay, particularly when the affair is set up (in the case of those with signs indicating what they will buy) for the collector to ask what the dealer will pay.
The dealers business is buying and selling, and in the buying part, he knows what he is willing to spend. Why should the collector have to fish around for his offer. I will admit that I ask for what I felt was satisfactory money and two separate dealers offered more. That is two out of who knows how many other transactions.
Most of the time, what I want is never paid, even if the dealer has to shave of just a couple of dollars. To me, it is more efficient for the dealer to make the offer, and I can accept or decline. I mean, they are essentially running the show (business), how ever you would like to put it.
If you don't want to get low-balled, why not just say what you want for the coin?
You don't have to kowtow to dealers, just treat them as fellow humans and not leeches. If you think the guy's going to try to rip you off, DON'T DEAL WITH HIM! If you do, you'll always feel like you've been taken advantage of, even if he pays you over going buy prices.
Most of the time, what I want is never paid, even if the dealer has to shave of just a couple of dollars. To me, it is more efficient for the dealer to make the offer, and I can accept or decline. I mean, they are essentially running the show (business), how ever you would like to put it.
That's true-- but only you know what will make you happy.
What drives me crazy are the so-called sellers who don't know what they want for a coin. They're not pretending-- they really don't know. They'll ask, "What will you give me for this?", but they're never satisfied with what you quote them, even if it were 200% of Trends. They seem not to know what they have, but they're sure it's worth all the money plus a little extra. They know what ordinary coins in that grade go for, but their coins are always special in some way only they understand.
When a dealer says, "I don't know what this one is worth-- what'll you offer me for it?" on some coin I collect, I politely tell them to think about it and let me know when they have an idea. It's not my job to guess for them. I follow up when I see them again to see if they've come up with a price. If it's something I'm seriously interested in, I'll point them to prices realized from recent auctions or some other pricing tool. If they never make up their mind I let them keep the coins.
Obscurum per obscurius
Now, if the dealer says how much do you want? (the coins are worth wholesale $200.) and the guy replies $50., should the dealer buy them for $50. or should he possibly do a more honorable thing?
Joe.
If it were some uninformed person asking how much his coins were worth, I'd do as my favorite dealer does-- tell him what he buys the coins for and what he sells them for.
If someone comes in and says, "I need $50 for these," what should the dealer do?
Obscurum per obscurius