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Who do you want to make HAPPY - The Dealer or the Collector

I have read many posts here lately about the grades the grading services issue and appreciate these posts. I will say that I have found many observations with no solutions to those observations.

The bottom line is who does one want to make happy - The Dealer or the Collector?

I remember what a dealer said at the 1999 FUN Show. He said, “If you want to make the dealers happy, then the grading service will make more 70 material. If you want to make the collectors happy, then the grading service will make less 70 material.”

The grading service is in the middle. Like a parent who makes the decision for their two children who have different demands.

As for me, I prefer to make the collector happy.

What about you?

Todd
Todd Abbey
800.954.0270

Comments

  • Collector.

    Without him/her there is no need for a dealer.

    Really grading services shouldn't give a wit who they make happy. Set some standards and judge every coin against those standards. How hard is that?
    Are you selling something I need for my 20th Century Type Set? Please take a look and let me know....
    My Set List
  • Welcome cscoins! I agree with what you said %100.
  • nwcsnwcs Posts: 13,386 ✭✭✭
    That is true. If the services would grade as consistently as they can against their published standards then it's as close as possible to making everyone happy because it takes the service out of the equation.
  • dorkkarldorkkarl Posts: 12,691 ✭✭✭
    neither. i selfishly care only about making myself happy when it comes to coins. that's why it's a hobby.

    K S
  • RKKayRKKay Posts: 3,017 ✭✭✭
    The hobby is about the love of coins, their beauty, their history and the excitement of finding something the collector wants. Ultimately, that is what it is about, not a few (or a bunch) extra bucks the dealer can make. It's the dealer's livelihood, but it is also a business that should come down to where it started for all of us as children. At the same time, there will be some coins that, by their extreme rarity or desireability, may bring a small premium, but never should it bring a windfall. In other words, it shouldn't bring an amount disproportionate to its value as opposed to a dealer who somehow stumbles upon a valuable coin for very little (which may be a whole other issue, depending upon how that coin was acquired).

    Edited to add: Oops. Just noticed my lengthy diatribe had nothing to do with the original topic. Sorry.
  • ANACONDAANACONDA Posts: 4,692
    I think the mindset of the grading companies should be imbued with a feeling of responsibility, not just to one but both.....and not with an eye towards the distinction of collector or dealers but one with regard to the person who owns the coin and all persons who could own the coin next.

    They should sit as impartial arbitrators of quality, and all that that entails.....not just the technical aspects but also the non-technical aspects.

    snake

  • Interesting, I have not heard from those, would were able to share their opinions on prior posts. Perhaps they are not able to make any observations here. Why is that?

    Todd
    Todd Abbey
    800.954.0270
  • dorkkarldorkkarl Posts: 12,691 ✭✭✭
    cameocc, i don't understand.

    K S
  • BearBear Posts: 18,953 ✭✭✭
    A reputable grading company, to a major degree ,should maintain an arms length

    relationship with both collectors and dealers. However in a real world bussines sense,

    a company such as PCGS must always take into account the feelings, comments,and

    recommendations of all aspects of the coin industry, while maintaining its own objectivity.

    Instead of who do you want to make happy, the comment should really read "Keep all

    parties of the industry satisfied with the reliability , stability and dependability of the services provided

    by the 3rd party grading company." Being happy implies gaining some benefit or advantage beyond

    ones expectations. Bear
    There once was a place called
    Camelotimage
  • Dorkkarl - cameocc, i don't understand.

    I have stress today and may be a little grumpy. What I am trying to say that legend seems to post numerous posts about PCGS and their grading practices. Yet, I haven’t heard from them respond to this thread.

    I just find it curious.

    Todd
    Todd Abbey
    800.954.0270
  • fishcookerfishcooker Posts: 3,446 ✭✭
    I think the best chance for happy dealers comes when collectors are happy.
  • keetskeets Posts: 25,351 ✭✭✭✭✭
    hello todd

    when i joined the forum about a year ago, my initial post was in a thread which concerned...........grading by PCGS. i maintained at that time that the services had the advantage of knowing more about grading than we all did and i stick to that opinion. the only comment which has ever made sense contrary to that is that there are certain individual dealers/collectors who know more about a series in particular than a grading company or professional grader may know in general.

    with that said, i feel that often a submitter wants a grade for there coin that they realistically know it will not receive and some of the posting you refer to may be an expression of the resulting disappointment. standard fluctuations not withstanding, the pros at PCGS just look at more coins than any of us.

    heck, i hear so much about the "10 second rule" that i assume the following to be true; 1 coin in 10 second, 6 coins in a minute, 360 coins in an hour, 2880 coins in a day, 14400 coins in a week and a whopping 748,800 coins per year for 1 grader at PCGS!!! if we cut that in half for bathroom breaks, smoke breaks, lunch breaks and sanity checks, it still comes out in the neighborhood of 375,000 coins viewed a year which is a few more than i reckon any of us look at.

    perhaps the "10 second rule" needs to be re-figured!! or perhaps it's just easier to realize that a professional grader's opinion is more accurate and based on more than just the particular coin being graded. in short, as experience grows, subjective opinion changes. with coin grading as with all things. just my take on why we think grading standards shift.

    al h.image
  • ahah Posts: 161 ✭✭✭
    Maybe both can be happy-happy? No! Yes!
  • BaleyBaley Posts: 22,663 ✭✭✭✭✭
    i dont even understand the title of this thread. i dont want to make anyone happy.

    whether they are happy or not is entirely up to them.


    if it refers to pcgs or third party graders in general, what does happy have to do with anything?
    what do you mean by the dealers quote,

    "remember what a dealer said at the 1999 FUN Show. He said, “If you want to make the dealers happy, then the grading service will make more 70 material. If you want to make the collectors happy, then the grading service will make less 70 material.”

    i dont get that either, the TPGs dont "make" the coins 70 or not, they either ARE or they are not 70s, the grading company just puts it on the slab or they put 69 or 68 or whatever the coin is.

    when you're dealing with coins that perfect, what's the difference?

    if they're the same price, gimme the 70, im happy
    if the 70 is too much more and I can get a 69 that looks the same, gimme that,
    if, depending on the series/date, the best practical buy is a 64 or a 58 or even a VF-20, then that's the grade to go for, and I'm happy!

    the only ones unhappy are people with unreasonable expectations from the system.

    and i think it is unreasonable to split hairs when looking at coins, and unreasonable to expect objective results when dealing with something so subjective as "eye appeal"

    Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry

  • keetskeets Posts: 25,351 ✭✭✭✭✭
    hey baley

    having said that, are you happy!?!?!?!? image

    al h.image
  • BaleyBaley Posts: 22,663 ✭✭✭✭✭
    hi keets. yes I am: image

    Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry

  • dorkkarldorkkarl Posts: 12,691 ✭✭✭
    i like baley's stance. i couldn't care much less about if other collectors, certainly dealers, are happy or not. all i care about is making myself happy w/ coins!

    now it's great is someone catches on & learns to enjoy coins, & i helped out is some way, but hey, it's a hobby, not a charitable event. you wanna be happy? not my problem. barring that i don't rip someone off, happiness is your problem (you the dealer/collector/whatever).

    K S
  • What Anacaonda said......but in layman's terms: I believe that they should give every coin the 70 it deserves, whether it's a dealer OR a collector. The problem, it SEEMS, is that every coin that SOME dealers (DHRC) submit, get's all the 70's, and collectors get the 69's and lower. If I HAD to have the 70, I would have to go to all the DHRC's of the country to get them. That's the unfair thing. If all the collectors got all the 70's....well then they wouldn't NEED all the DHRC's, now would they? This is the vicious cycle.image
    "LIVE FOR TODAY, BECAUSE THERE MAY BE NO TOMORROW!"- DEANE

  • keetskeets Posts: 25,351 ✭✭✭✭✭
    hey karl

    despite your effort to the contrary, i suspect that you're happy and that makes me happy!!! can anybody out there say Kumbaya............image

    al h.image
  • vam44vam44 Posts: 291


    << <i>What Anacaonda said......but in layman's terms: I believe that they should give every coin the 70 it deserves, whether it's a dealer OR a collector. The problem, it SEEMS, is that every coin that SOME dealers (DHRC) submit, get's all the 70's, and collectors get the 69's and lower. If I HAD to have the 70, I would have to go to all the DHRC's of the country to get them. That's the unfair thing. If all the collectors got all the 70's....well then they wouldn't NEED all the DHRC's, now would they? This is the vicious cycle.image >>



    Homerunhall says he does not submit the coins he sells, he buys them from other dealers who`ve submitted them.
    A dealer once asked me if I noticed any three-legged buffalos on the bourse,to which I replied,"...no,but I saw alot of two-legged jackasses..."
  • BaleyBaley Posts: 22,663 ✭✭✭✭✭
    70's???
    are we talking PCGS MS70's???
    so we're talking modern coins here?
    coins minted in the past 40 years or so?

    what is the oldest MS70 anyone has ever heard of?

    Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry

  • VAM44:

    Was only using "homerunhall" as an EXAMPLE. I have nothing against him/them.image
    "LIVE FOR TODAY, BECAUSE THERE MAY BE NO TOMORROW!"- DEANE

  • vam44vam44 Posts: 291
    I have spent the last 10+ years learning how pcgs/ngc/anacs/pci and to a lesser degree segs and icgs,grade coins.
    Pcgs pretty much is the standard which the others follow and/or are compared to.Pcgs has,according to my observation and every nearly every other classics coin submitter I`ve talked to,tightened their grading standards.This is, to some degree,effecting all the better grading services and those who submit.
    Collectors may think this is a good thing, but down the road, when they or their heirs sell, they might just change their mind.Especially if the grading standards CHANGE again, and the ms-65`s (in 64 holders)that they`ll be selling later,may be real bargains in the eyes of the GREEDY dealersimage,who will be delighted to buy them back at ms-64 prices.

    I prefer consistant standards,which don`t seem to be happening lately.image
    A dealer once asked me if I noticed any three-legged buffalos on the bourse,to which I replied,"...no,but I saw alot of two-legged jackasses..."
  • keetskeets Posts: 25,351 ✭✭✭✭✭
    hey baley

    i know of at least one PR70 brilliant 1964 jefferson. it sold on eBay about two years ago for somewhere around $300, more than i was willing to bid at the time. if i'm not mistaken, the seller was somewhat ahead of his time and had amassed some 70's from the early sixties and was selling them off.

    al h.image
  • BaleyBaley Posts: 22,663 ✭✭✭✭✭
    ok, we have a 1964. lets start a new thread to find out:

    Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry

  • LakesammmanLakesammman Posts: 17,413 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Grade the coins properly, according to established standards, and don't worry if anyone is happy.
    "My friends who see my collection sometimes ask what something costs. I tell them and they are in awe at my stupidity." (Baccaruda, 12/03).I find it hard to believe that he (Trump) rushed to some hotel to meet girls of loose morals, although ours are undoubtedly the best in the world. (Putin 1/17) Gone but not forgotten. IGWT, Speedy, Bear, BigE, HokieFore, John Burns, Russ, TahoeDale, Dahlonega, Astrorat, Stewart Blay, Oldhoopster, Broadstruck, Ricko, Big Moose.

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