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This might be your Last Chance with NGC

braddickbraddick Posts: 23,975 ✭✭✭✭✭
I've heard rumblings that NGC will be/is tightening up ever so slightly on their grading. Not a full point or two, mind you- but what may have been a 'gift 65' (64.9) will now be in the tighter holder (64).
If that is the case I think within six months or so you'll begin to see prices of NGC coins gaining ground and inching closer to PCGS coins (same grade/same make). In some series, that's happening already.

I've also heard that NGC is going to be making more of an effort to get the "bad" coins off the market as they become available to them.

-I like what I'm hearing, because coupled with the above, NGC will be consistent with their execution.

Fact or fiction? Rumor and speculation, or is what I'm hearing tapped into some kind of reality (I trust the two Dealers I heard this from- but also know they're not the endall of inside information!)?

peacockcoins

Comments

  • mdwoodsmdwoods Posts: 5,546 ✭✭✭
    You are probably right. I suspect that is why Rick M. is now with them. They will have to change the appearance of the slab somehow to show that the coin is a Rick M. era coin. mdwoods
    National Register Of Big Trees

    We'll use our hands and hearts and if we must we'll use our heads.
  • BillJonesBillJones Posts: 33,968 ✭✭✭✭✭
    If you check out sections of the "blind bid" Blue Sheet, you will find that NGC coins have been catching up to and in some cases going ahead of their PCGS counterparts. The differences in coin quality have not been huge over the past year, and I've seen it in the pieces that I have sold to other dealers. Guys who used to be total PCGS people are now quite open to buying NGC products and paying premium prices for them. Yes, over "ask."
    Retired dealer and avid collector of U.S. type coins, 19th century presidential campaign medalets and selected medals. In recent years I have been working on a set of British coins - at least one coin from each king or queen who issued pieces that are collectible. I am also collecting at least one coin for each Roman emperor from Julius Caesar to ... ?


  • << <i>Not a full point or two, mind you- but what may have been a 'gift 65' (64.9) will now be in the tighter holder (64). >>



    NGC should have done this from the beginning and not give gift grades. I commend PCGS for not giving in to the grading escalation and not giving gift grades. If the coin deserves the grade then so be it, but they should not be giving a grade as a gift or an "almost there MS-65."

    Cameron Kiefer
  • Now if only they would let me submit my coins without joining a club, going to my dealer or jumping through hoops
    at amazon or wherever.

    Scott M
    Scott M

    Everything is linear if plotted log-log with a fat magic marker
  • coinguy1coinguy1 Posts: 13,484 ✭✭✭
    Cameron, you said "NGC should have done this from the beginning and not give gift grades. I commend PCGS for not giving in to the grading escalation and not giving gift grades. If the coin deserves the grade then so be it, but they should not be giving a grade as a gift or an "almost there MS-65"

    PCGS does the same thing, believe me. For some reason though, when PCGS does it, it's not considered the crime that it is when NGC does it.

    With all the coins that those two companies grade, it is a fact of life that many will be undergraded and many will be overgraded. I'm not complaining, just pointing out that they are imperfect. The coins that are graded conservatively get cracked out and resubmitted (often, repeatedly). The ones that are liberally graded either go into the hands of the unsuspecting or float around at shows and/or in auctions for months or even years.


  • << <i>when PCGS does it, it's not considered the crime that it is when NGC does it. >>



    Considered by who? The members of this forum or the coin community as a whole?

    Cameron Kiefer
  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,162 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Mark: That is the basis of the whole problem. The PQ coins, and even solid for the grade coins, are repeatedly submitted until they become the lowend higher grade coins. The quality of coins in holders is steadily sliding down the slippery slope and not much can be done about it. I go to shows and auctions and just shake my head at much of the coins in all holders.

    That's why old time collections with nice for the grade coins go for absolutely insane prices. Compared to the slop that prevails, they are undergraded.
  • What about the old time collections like "Benson" that are recently graded and sell for insane prices?

    Cameron Kiefer
  • mdwoodsmdwoods Posts: 5,546 ✭✭✭
    I should have mentioned earlier that my opinion is based on modern coins, and by modern, I mean clad era coinage. I believe strongly that PCGS has been tougher by nearly a full point in this arena. mdwoods
    National Register Of Big Trees

    We'll use our hands and hearts and if we must we'll use our heads.
  • coinguy1coinguy1 Posts: 13,484 ✭✭✭
    Cameron, you asked

    "<< when PCGS does it, it's not considered the crime that it is when NGC does it. >>

    Considered by who? The members of this forum or the coin community as a whole?"

    The answer is both. image

    TDN - sadly, I must concur with your observation. And, there is nothing I can think of that will change the situation on a permanent basis, at least. Sure, tighter grading allows some opportunities to acquire nice, accurately graded coins. But, before long, those coins are either off the market in the resubmission stashes of sharp collectors or dealers or in higher grade holders. Over time, the vast majority of rare coins get max'd out grade-wise, to the point where they're not too desirable at those grades.
  • This kinda goes along with a question I asked in the Registry Forum...I hate to spend thousands of dollars on a rare coin only to find a grading service protecting the population. I'm not a professional grader so its hard to question their motives or their work.

    I have seen two coins graded side by side and the lower graded coin is much much nicer under the glass and in eye appeal in my opinion. I don't want favors, just consistency.
  • Both NGC and PCGS have published grading guides. What I would like to see is, them both abide by those grading guides. I DON'T want to see a battle of the grading companies to see who can have the nicest "65's" or "66's" in their slabs. I don't want to see anymore of my 66's in 65 slabs.

    I want them to play by the rules that they have in print.
    J.C.
    *******************************************************************************

    imageimageSee ya on the other side, Dudes. image
  • Well, all this seems to apply mostly for moderns, as a lot of the classic series are much closer between the two major services. In double eagles, they were never that far apart to begin with, and lately (over the last 6-9 mos.), I have seen more and more NGC coins selling at premiums (though again that also depends on the series, NGC in my opinion is weaker on type 1 and 2 libs, roughly equal on type 3, and superior on Saints, where PCGS has horrible inconsistency, especially between AU-58 and MS-62).
  • Hmmm....well since I have 2 submissions pending at NGC right now, that sounds about right...LOL.

    Greg
  • I think the brilliant advertising and promotion of PCGS is what makes whatever their coin grade is more acceptable than NGC. Like it or not the perception is PCGS is the number one company. Pcgs has the biggest market exposure. Does PCGS certify a coin that is really what grade it merits. Yes. Some that don`t yes. NGC coin,s some deserve the grade and some do not. Both have their strengths and weaknesses. There will always be a number one and number two. The good thing is that the percieved number two will strive to be number one. Then the number one will improve to keep its position. Guess what? This is great. We benefit the most from competition.
  • The rise in NGC slabs was inevitable.

    The disparity in price between the Big 2 had gotten way out of hand. Until this year I had never bought an NGC slab in 35+ yrs. The price difference was too much too many times and I dove in, now own 3 NGC and should 3x that by year end.

    As for the "rumours" they are just that. I love these unsubstansiated claims. Read below:

    I heard on the bourse floor that ACG will buy back all their slabs MS60 and above and will tighten grading by 3pts. Honest!
  • dragondragon Posts: 4,548 ✭✭
    braddick,

    As far as Morgans go, NGC has already tightened up CONSIDERABLY in the past 12-18 months and they now grade them on par with PCGS IMO, which means NGC has actually tightened up more than PCGS has.

    As far as NGC taking all their 'bad' coins off the market, that can and will never happen. Consevatively, NGC has probably over 75 million in grossly overgraded Morgans and generic gold out in the marketplace in their holders which were all graded in the mid 90's. NGC cannot even put a dent in taking all that low end dredge off the market in their holders.

    I cannot even tell you how many common date NGC graded MS65, MS66, and MS67 Morgans I've seen in their previous design holders that are just silly overgraded by their standards of today, along with nearly every NGC DMPL dollar graded several years ago. Same goes for a ton of overgraded Saints, $20.00 Libs, $10.00 Libs, etc, etc. There is just no way they can buy all these coins back.

    dragon
  • gmarguligmarguli Posts: 2,225 ✭✭


    << <i>

    << <i>Not a full point or two, mind you- but what may have been a 'gift 65' (64.9) will now be in the tighter holder (64). >>



    NGC should have done this from the beginning and not give gift grades. I commend PCGS for not giving in to the grading escalation and not giving gift grades. If the coin deserves the grade then so be it, but they should not be giving a grade as a gift or an "almost there MS-65." >>



    What about PCGS giving "shaft grades" where low end MS65s are graded as MS64s? NGC is baaaaaadddd for giving so-called gift grades, but PCGS is grrreeeaatttt for being inconsistent hard asses?
  • I guess all those bulk grading fees from the Home Shopping Network (HSN) provides enough excess cash to go in the market and "clean up" some (surely not all!) of those old, low end grading errors! image
  • ElcontadorElcontador Posts: 7,523 ✭✭✭✭✭
    TDN is right on. His comment reminds me of the 1877 Quarter in a 7 holder which has contact marks. You really do have to spend a lot of time looking for an attractive type coin for the grade. Often, when you find one, you may have to sell your first born to get it.
    "Vou invadir o Nordeste,
    "Seu cabra da peste,
    "Sou Mangueira......."
  • Brad Good info, and if true, good for everyone that gets the latest generation of their grading service
    Thanks for the heads up. PCGS take Notice, be a leader, not a follower!

    Bulldog
    Proud to have fought for America, and to be an AMERICAN!

    No good deed will go unpunished.

    Free Money Search
  • SpoolySpooly Posts: 2,108 ✭✭✭
    NGC needs to tighten up their copper grading... this is good news. The market has really beaten up NGC on copper coins for years.

    Example

    1952-S NGC 67 RD

    1952-S PCGS MS67 RD


    When I first started collecting Lincolns I bought 10 NGC MS-67 Lincolns. I sent them to PCGS as cross-overs......... NONE CROSSED! I was pissed! So I cracked them all out and resubmitted them to PCGS raw! ALL of them graded MS-66!

    EAC news letter just had a study about the grading service.... NGC came in the worst for over grading Large cents. PCGS, then ANACS and NGC last. (Note here..... EAC thinks everyone over grades... and has it's own sub-sect grading standards)

    Si vis pacem, para bellum

    In God We Trust.... all others pay in Gold and Silver!
  • gmarguligmarguli Posts: 2,225 ✭✭
    There is a problem with those Lincoln examples. An MS66 is what, a $15 coin? Now why did the NGC sell for 10X that? The PCGS sells for $472.

    Where is the correct price of an MS66, MS67, MS68?

    Isn't it likely that the market values the NGC as an average MS67 and the PCGS as a hard ass MS67 this day?
  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,162 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Greg: EXACTLY!

    Right now, pricing is a total mess. A solidly graded NGC coin is bringing pretty close to sheet, but might be a bit illiquid. A solid for the grade PCGS coin is bringing a slight premium and is a bit more liquid. BUT, the slight majority of NGC coins are selling at a discount and the majority of PCGS coins aren't even on the marketplace because the owners know better than to sell them for anything less than a 75% premium! Same with the PQ NGC coins that won't cross for whatever has been the reason - they aren't on the marketplace either because they won't bring a price commensurate to their quality! So the marketplace is left with the dregs from both companies and the middle for the grade "stuff" that is mostly illiquid because the price sheets aren't keeping up with the market!
  • MorganluverMorganluver Posts: 517 ✭✭✭
    TDN


    Eloquently spoken and a wonderful synopsis...good call.
  • GilbertGilbert Posts: 1,533 ✭✭✭
    It seems to me that would be the logical conclusion of the ex-President of PCGS going to work for NGC.
    Gilbert

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