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NY Coin Show - as usual, bourse spoiled by dealers leaving too early

Dealers have been complaining for several years about shows that run Thursday through Sunday, because they need the Sunday to travel home. Historically, most dealers would pack up and leave ANA after the Saturday bourse, and Sunday would be empty. There was a fuss about this a couple of years ago. If there is one venue in the country that needs a regular show, it is NYC. The last major show here was ANA 2002. So a couple of professionals decided to get together and put on the "New York Invitational Coin Show." As an additional venue for auction houses that needed to get more material out on the auction block, this was a good thing. ANR, R.M. Smythe, Heritage and David Lawrence all took advantage of the opportunity to host auctions. There was also a bourse, with dealer setup & "early bird" professional review on Thursday afternoon, and retail bourse hours Friday and Saturday.

As it happened, the only times I could get there were Thursday afternoon or Saturday afternoon. Thursday afternoon I paid the $100 early bird fee and went in at 2:00PM. Nobody had set up yet. Dealers and wholesalers were looking through each other's boxes of coins in the usual fashion, but there were very few display cases set up for open browsing. So I knew I would have to come back on Saturday.

Many retail dealers complain that the auctions are siphoning off all their business. Dealers all say that auctions shouldn't be everything. But what do they do about it? I'll tell you what they do: they don't take the bourse floor seriously. They all pack up and leave early.

The New York show wisely did NOT include Sunday hours, thus giving dealers time to get home. So what did the dealers do? Most of them left early Saturday. By the time I got there Saturday afternoon at 1:00 PM, checkbook in hand, ready to BUY COINS, most dealers were gone. This is part of the reason that the bourse floor is declining as an important retail venue. The more dealers do this, the fewer buyers will bother showing up. It is particularly annoying that Saturdays aren't taken more seriously. I understand why Sundays are bad, but guess what, some of us actually do have jobs during the week. It isn't always possible to leave work on a Thursday or Friday to get to a coin show. Saturday is the ideal time for most of us folks out in the real world.

I would like to extend my personal gratitude to the dealers who stayed the whole day on Saturday. Dedicated dealers like Julian Leidman and Bob Hughes (and others) stayed the course. To the rest who were nowhere to be seen Saturday afternoon, including all the big names, I thumb my nose and give you all a Bronx cheer. I happily conducted business with several dealers Saturday afternoon, but undoubtedly would have been able to spend much more if anyone had bothered to stick around. Come on people, you didn't want Sundays, so the show organizers ended it on Saturday. Couldn't you stay on Saturday to give the public a chance to visit?

Best,
Sunnywood




Comments

  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,162 ✭✭✭✭✭
    image

    It's been a horrific auction and show schedule this year. But you've got a good point!
  • stmanstman Posts: 11,352 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i> I thumb my nose and give you all a Bronx cheer. >>



    image Being born in the Bronx I can appreciate that statement. Well, we all knew when the shows stopped scheduling on Sunday due to no dealer attendance, what you state above of dealers not being there on Saturday was inevitable. So now a collector basically has one day on Friday to attend a show. Like you mention on dealer day, they really just walk around with boxes.

    Perhaps in this market the dealers don't care. After all, they have the Internet. See what technology has done? I just wonder if this market changes, will there be a different attitude.

    BTW, to all the dealers being soooo tired from all the auctions and shows.....imageimage

    I bet Miss Legend would like to respond to this post!!!!! HEH
    Please... Save The Stories, Just Answer My Questions, And Tell Me How Much!!!!!
  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,162 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I'll respond for her. There were three auctions at this little show... B&M, Lawrence and ANR. Paying clients expect personal attendance at each. Two hour commute from New Jersey, set up, lobby leech, wholesale, retail and attend auction. Two hour commute back to New Jersey. Four 16 hour days after working 6 months averaging 6 days per week not including travel days to and from shows ... with no vacation. Sunday to write the description for the newps and get started on listing them so everyone can see them on Monday. Half a day on Saturday seems like the least to take.

    And yet it would be considered quite rude if she had the same attitude back at you as you just had for dealers. Amazing.

    Nonetheless, I think that arrangements should have been made to be there longer on Saturday. I agree with Sunnywood that for many people that's the only day they can attend a show.
  • stmanstman Posts: 11,352 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Touch touchy, I even put a image in my post but I guess that don't mean anything. I haven't had a vacation in years.... but you don't see me being grumpy.image
    Please... Save The Stories, Just Answer My Questions, And Tell Me How Much!!!!!
  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,162 ✭✭✭✭✭
  • FatManFatMan Posts: 8,977
    Here's the dirty little secret about coin shows.........most dealers attend the shows only to trade between each other. They allow the public to come because that way they can get the local coin clubs to handle all the setup and organization and all they have to do is pay a very small fee. Most dealers will only tolerate the public if no other dealer is at the table. Heck, yesterday while at a show I could not believe how many times dealers simply turned away from me as soon as another dealer stepped up to the table.image
  • DHeathDHeath Posts: 8,472 ✭✭✭
    Wouldn't the solution be to limit the auctions to Saturday after 5:00 or Sunday. image
    Developing theory is what we are meant to do as academic researchers
    and it sets us apart from practitioners and consultants. Gregor
  • FatManFatMan Posts: 8,977


    << <i>Wouldn't the solution be to limit the auctions to Saturday after 5:00 or Sunday. image >>

    An exceptional idea.image
  • RYKRYK Posts: 35,797 ✭✭✭✭✭
    ...most dealers attend the shows only to trade between each other.

    No kidding, and it is not a secret. Some dealers will tell you this if you ask. I think this is true for the larger, national shows more than the smaller, regional/local shows. When I go to a show, I go to look at coins, to sell coins, to visit with other collectors and dealers that I know, see exhibits, attend classes, view auction lots, but not to buy coins.
  • SunnywoodSunnywood Posts: 2,683
    Well, I go to a show TO BUY COINS. I want to look through display cases full of inventory, find coins that I like AND BUY THEM.

    TDN, I totally understand the grueling schedule. If everyone wants to leave Saturday at noon, THEN MAKE THE BOURSE HOURS FINISH AT NOON. Whatever the advertised hours are, show up for them !! If you can't, don't exhibit !!!

    Next the shows will advertise that they are done Saturday at noon, and the dealers will pack up and leave Friday night !!!

    I made an extra trip into NYC, paid admission, and took up my Saturday afternoon - just to look at a bunch of empty tables.

    I don't want to hear the dealers complaining that the auctions are siphoning off their business anymore. Maybe I should just go and buy directly at all the auctions like I used to. I built much greater sets that way when I represented MYSELF. Only problem is, it's hard to find the time these days. Let's face it, a huge chunk of dealer inventory comes from the auctions, mainly through professionals who buy up lots and then walk them around to all the dealers at these convenient wholesale bourses at which the lowly public is barely tolerated.

    Best,
    Sunnywood
  • BarryBarry Posts: 10,100 ✭✭✭
    I made similar comments in this thread. I arrived at the show about 10:15 and believe Legend was packing up at that time. My only purchase was from Julian Leidman.

    The sponsors might as well make it a Friday only show.

    TDN - 2 hour commute? I don't think so, unless it's the height of rush hour and there was a major accident. I live twice the distance and it took me about 90 minutes.

    DHeath - great idea about the auctions!
  • ScarsdaleCoinScarsdaleCoin Posts: 5,223 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Thought I would take a moment to plug....WCCC
    Westcheter County Coin Club

    1st EVER!

    Coin Night....

    thats right....just a few hours on a weeknight.....

    Dealers....no table charge...
    Collectors....no entry fee

    just small fun bourse....

    more details coming....but it will be held I believe 3rd Wed in October
    Westchester County.....
    Jon Lerner - Scarsdale Coin - www.CoinHelp.com
  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,162 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Don't get me wrong - I feel strongly that dealers should be able to leave late Saturday to catch flights back home that night so they can have Sunday off before the grind starts again ... but I agree that there's little sense in leaving early Saturday morning. The Saturday public bourse floor needs to be protected so the collector will continue to turn out.
  • RYKRYK Posts: 35,797 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Well, I go to a show TO BUY COINS. I want to look through display cases full of inventory, find coins that I like AND BUY THEM.

    I did not intend to imply that I did not want to buy coins. My behavior has evolved to adapt to the nature of coin shows in 2004. The coin show has become a trade show for the dealers where the public is practically shunned. The same dealers who will gladly sell you great products and give you superb service from their home base barely want to look at you when they are at the big show. I am going to the ANA next month. I will bring a few checks, a few coins to show around, a coin or two to sell, will visit with some friends, sit in on a lecture, view the exhibits and auction, but I really do not expect to buy anything. It's just the reality of coin shows in 2004.
  • DaveGDaveG Posts: 3,535
    Actually, all us "real" NYC area collectors go to Parsippany (first Sunday of the month) or White Plains (four times a year) or the GSNA annual show in May to buy coins from dealers who go to shows to sell coins to collectors!

    Actually, as far as ANA goes, I found that at last year's show that dealers were more than happy to sell coins to me when I went on the first day.

    Check out the Southern Gold Society

  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,162 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I spoke to Laura about this and she was quite apologetic [ image ]. She asked me to post this:

    Sunnywood-you are right! I appologize for leaving a little early (I left at 11:30).

    The problem for Legend was we were stretched too thin. We had to attend ALL of the auctions and have two people at the show. The same time, we had too much going on in the office (our biz does NOT stop when we go to a show). We had no more people to send in.

    Due to all the recent travel in the past 30 days: Baltimore, Atlanta, Chicago, I simply ran out of gas Friday night at the auction. I still am dealing w/pnuemonia from Chicago. I practically fell asleep at the table today! Thats my pathetic excuse.

    I do totally agree that if a show is scheduled to run until Sat afternoon, we should stay.

    Its really the show promoters fault. They should be more mindful of what the dealers schedules are.

    And no, not all the dealers go to shows to just trade dealer to dealer-thast a myth! Only the big wholesale companies do-and most of them don't deal with the public anyway.

  • marcmoishmarcmoish Posts: 6,278 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I totally connect with you image.......here are my thoughts - I paid $100 too on Thursday - and guess what? Total waste of time and money forget the effort to get to the City. The bourse was small squarish disected in squares every two sets of table with way too many aisles. I was dizzy before I even started. Dealers tables? wares? FURGEDABOUIT , nadda, either tables were still closed, no wares or those dealers that had stuff were mostly obnoxious, doing buisness between themselves or tables covered with gizmos like cases, papers, pizza and niknaks. Amazing I had my best conversation with the security guard at the door.

    Nope, I've had it - taht's it for major coin shows for me. All I can say dealers you guys are fools. ALl because I may look young we're buying and more than you can imagine. Your loss. I'm sticking to the few dealers that I have excellent rapport with and that's it for me. No need to get wound up Sunny, (Barry I know you were p----d too).

    Laura was not in yet so I have nothing bad to say about her image

    Great being around those Jung coins though I admit shees image



    Marc
  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,303 ✭✭✭✭✭
    The times that I do go to shows to sell coins (and this includes setting up at smaller shows), 98% of the material sells to dealers.
    I have no problem selling decent coins to other dealers but it is a foregone conclusion that private individuals will not be buying coins from me. I've never quite understood that. But have no problem with selling to dealers at wholesale levels and being able to buy from them at similar levels if needed. I price my coins essentially at wholesale to collectors but what I usually get is just tire-kicking. It doesn't really matter who buys the coins as long as they sell when I want them too. It's easier to sell to dealers, plain and simple. They recognize exactly what they want and go for it. They either pass or play. I think many of the more sophisticated collectors behave as dealers any ways.

    So my point? Why bother hanging around Sunday or even Saturday if 95% of the business is done by Friday? Sunnywood, you may an exception, and I'm sure quite selective at what you will buy. It's often easier just to peruse 800 auction lots to find the half dozen or so coins to hopefully buy. The bourse at a large show is becoming an antiquated notion imo.

    roadrunner
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • marcmoishmarcmoish Posts: 6,278 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Dave,

    You can't compare Parsippany to this show in terms of quslity high end stuff but I admit Westchester is the next best thing image



    Marc
  • EVillageProwlerEVillageProwler Posts: 5,856 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I don't know exactly how I feel about what happened. Several folks made some good points. I still remember my neophyte collector days, and sympathy reaches out to all good-natured ones. Yet, I also now understand much better the rigors of being f/t in the retail biz.

    So, what do we all do? I'm a big believer in the capitalist system, and letting natural market forces decide matters. Maybe the Internet is allowing the dealers to adopt a new method of doing business. Maybe there is simply too much activity. Maybe what we need is a system of positive incentives for bourse dealers and bourse collectors tocome together.

    One thing I do know is that nothing will get worked out nicely if either or both side adopt an attitude of not caring for the concerns of the other side.

    EVP

    How does one get a hater to stop hating?

    I can be reached at evillageprowler@gmail.com

  • orevilleoreville Posts: 11,961 ✭✭✭✭✭
    My understanding is that the sponsored offered dealers a free dinner Saturday night as an incentive to stay the full day Saturday.

    Quite frankly, I do like the idea of ending the shows around 3 pm on a Saturday. No later, This gives dealers a chance to catch flights home or have dinner with their families Saturday nights.

    The Saturday shows would then be similar to Sunday only shows in which they end fairly early Sunday afternoons.

    Back in the 1960's and 1970's I do not recall shows staring so early on Thursdays. I thought they beagn on Fridays (even then not that often). Most shows were weekend shows since most collectors and even many dealers had to work during the week. Please refresh my memory.

    A Collectors Universe poster since 1997!
  • stmanstman Posts: 11,352 ✭✭✭✭✭
    SOS different day.
    Please... Save The Stories, Just Answer My Questions, And Tell Me How Much!!!!!
  • was the same crap during the boom of 89.
    i wanted to buy coins,leave the house at 6 am for a 90 minute drive,get to the show and stand around till 9
    waiting for the dealers to show,then try to haul arse over the bourse and look for my stuff before the dealers started packing up at 11 !
    and this was on Saturdays.
    image
  • DHeathDHeath Posts: 8,472 ✭✭✭
    Laura, TDN, EVP, and Roadrunner, I certainly understand your position, and imagine you achieve better short-term results directing your efforts elsewhere. I would like to ask any of you who will respond if you believe the shows represent an opportunity to acquire new clients, and to spend some time with your current customers in a venue that's mutually inconvienient? I realize it may not be the best selling opportunity, but is it a good PR opportunity for your firm?
    Developing theory is what we are meant to do as academic researchers
    and it sets us apart from practitioners and consultants. Gregor
  • ms70ms70 Posts: 13,954 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I think the ANA should drop the hammer again on shows that they are involved in running. Many dealers cried when they socked that dealer
    about a year ago with the fine for leaving early. Now they want to leave early when the shows end on Saturday? It's time to fine. I think
    dealers forget that their products go to and come from collectors. There would be no dealer to dealer transactions if there weren't collectors
    in the loop at some point.

    Great transactions with oih82w8, JasonGaming, Moose1913.

  • stmanstman Posts: 11,352 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Eventually it will all be blamed on the collectors for dealers leaving the shows early. Collectors are simply not going to keep taking days off work, traveling long distances to a show only to find no dealers present. Then hearing them say basically too bad I was tired and that's the way it is. Then said dealers will have yet another justification for not being there. Perhaps it doesn't matter now to some, but you better believe eventually it will take effect. This is not meant to have a bad attitude toward dealers, I have some very good relationships with some major dealers. But as some may be laughing all the way to the bank now, it might not be that way forever.

    I hear all these major deals going on for multiple million dollars all the time. One would think they could afford to hire a couple people to mind the store while away for shows. It won't happen IMO because to me the bottom line is they JUST DON"T WANT TO BE THEREimage Sorry I don't feel sorry for the ones that say they are too tired and it's too hectic. We all have chosen our path. And yes, I am self employed and haven't had a vacation in years. Who's fault is that? MINE!!! not everybody else in the business.
    Please... Save The Stories, Just Answer My Questions, And Tell Me How Much!!!!!
  • The public blames the sponsors ...
    The sponsers blame the dealers ..
    The dealers blame the sponsors, the public, hectic schedule, the full moon and anything and everything else ..

    The "DEALERS" know going in the hours of the bourse floor ...
    The "DEALERS" know how many auctions are going on during that specific weekend ..

    The "PUBLIC" expects the dealers to be there during the bourse hours and days stated in the advertisements the sponsers pay good money to run to get the public there.

    The poor dealers .. sniff, sniff ... If anyone has problems with the hours .. Don't Go ...
    The poor dealers ... No vacation ... Bring your family .. I'm sure in a place like NY there are plenty they can do while your
    busy ...
    The poor dealers ... Want to be home Saturday night with their families ... get into a different proffession ..
    The poor dealers ... Complain there isn't a lot of fresh new material out there ... How do they know. They are too busy
    packing and leaving when it's the best time for the public to possible bring in their coins
    The poor dealers ... Are spread too thin ... Again, Don't go. Just send someone for the auctions if you want

    Sponsors set the hours that the dealers agree to ... So be there
    Sponsers advetise to get the public to the bourse floor .. So be there

    The sponsors should take note of who packs up and leaves early. The next event the sponsors put on they should refuse the dealers that left early. Should the sponsors want to sell the early departees space possibly they should charge 10 times the normal table fees for the offending dealers .. If the dealers don't want to pay the excessive fees, (It gives them one more thing to b**ch about) You don't need them anyway, they are just going to leave early anyway ...
  • cosmicdebriscosmicdebris Posts: 12,332 ✭✭✭
    I too was disappointed by the empty tables. I got there at 10 Saturday and walked around for awhile found legends table empty and figured they slept late. But like Laura said they were packing in their cases around 11:30 never setting up at all for Saturday.
    Bill

    image

    09/07/2006
  • MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,253 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Dealers leave shows early because the bourse slows down. Period. If the shows were shorter, the bourse would stay lively and more dealers would stay through the end. So the REAL reason most dealers leave shows early is that the shows are too long.

    For most dealers, the NY show was far too small to justify three days of bourse time. Two days would have been plenty. If the show was instead held only on Friday and Saturday, most table holders would have stayed the duration.

    Andy Lustig

    Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

    Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
  • RYKRYK Posts: 35,797 ✭✭✭✭✭
    As usual, EVP brings up some excellent points. I was somewhat facetious in my earlier post about not buying coins at shows, but my buying habits have evolved to adapt to the realities of business in 2004. If I had to rely on bourse purchases to fill my collection, I would own fewer than 10% of the coins in my collection. Living in the midwest a good distance from any regular or large coin shows, the bourse is an inconvenient place for me to acquire coins. Perhaps, as others have stated, when market conditions change, there will be fewer shows and greater incentive for dealers to stay longer to sell coins, buy coins, make new contacts, etc. The current pace is a grueling one for the dealers, and I sympathize with Laura and the others who are trying to cope with explosion of shows and auctions as best they can.
  • It seems this subject has been aired constantly for the last several years mostly from the viewpoint of collectors. So far I have seen no authentic responses from dealers other than the usual " We need time to get home and get things in order for Monday". This overused copout in my opinion is an attempt by most dealers to avoid offending collectors by stating some more pressing reasons. First and foremost the dealer is a businessman and is guided by sensible business principles. Can anyone seriously explain why a businessman would desert his place of business early if there was still viable business to be done. At any of the shows that still open on Sunday you will still see a small hardcore number of dealers who maintain tables until the last minute. Who are they and why are they still there when all others have long since fled the scene. Why they are the dealers who are still able to make sales.They are mostly dealers who deal in collector coins. ie: Mostly raw coins that sell from $10 - $100. This is a very important segment of our market but is just that , a segment. The dealers who deal in high grade certified coins both rare and common know from experience that with the exception of a few serious collectors that might buy their offerings and can't make the show during the week,most of their business is concluded by Sat. noon. The time and expense to stay another day to maybe get one or two more sales is just not worth it. The second complaint from collectors is the impression that the dealers care more about dealing wholesale with each other than with retail collectors. Again the dealer is first and foremost a businessman. As a dealer,trust me , I'd much rather sell to the public at retail than to other dealers at wholesale. But alas,other dealers make up 80% of my business at a typical show. It seems inconceivable but nevertheless true that dealers will buy more promptly at a better price than the public buyer. While the hesitant buyer is dithering and dickering and takes forever to "pull the trigger", the dealer has already bought up all the "goodies". This is not meant as a scornful criticism of the prudent buyer who wishes to do comparison shopping and explore the bourse before commiting. But the prudent buyer should at least know the true market value for the quality of the coins he is trying to buy. ( The dealer/buyer does.) When he sees a coin and realizes it is head over heels above anything else in it's grade tier he should make the buy before an astute dealer does. So many times have collectors become testy and argumentive,insisting that my prices are way out of line only to have a dealer come up,take a good look and buy it. Many times another dealer and I are close and just cant make a deal but their offer is never insultingly low. It is always based on the dealers knowledge of the true market value and not on an unrealistic sheet price. This is not meant as some other dealer whine so put away your violin and your cheese. I'm just stating some facts that are well known but seldom stated. The above comments hold true for ebay also. The serious buyers bang the buy it now option and get all my best stuff. Not because they are rash and impulsive but because they are in fact knowledgable and confident in their purchase. This is the true secret to successful buying and investing in rare coins for both pleasure and profit. Regards, Dave



    dalias13@hotmail.com
  • SunnywoodSunnywood Posts: 2,683
    First, thank you TDN for communicating Laura's response to the Board. Laura works really hard, and I have often told her to take it easy and not get so consumed & eaten alive by the business. Businesses can do that to you. Really, I do understand her points, and I understand the dealers' perspective. But unless we want to kill off the retail/public aspect of coin shows altogether, there should be a way to have some hours - ESPECIALLY SATURDAY HOURS - where all the wares are on display so that buyers can look at them.

    Second, I am not bashing dealers. I don't agree with those of you who have no sympathy for the dealers' viewpoint. There are a few bad apples in every barrel (rude dealers and rude collectors alike), but most of us are well-intentioned. My worst-ever experience on the bourse floor was actually at the hands of a horribly rude fellow collector, not a dealer, who subsequently took it to these Boards in a vicious personal attack. That's why I didn't post here for a long time. I am into coins for personal enjoyment, not to be attacked and insulted by anyone, collector or dealer !!!

    There are also different kinds of dealers, and a small local dealer who exhibits at a show will have a different way of interfacing with the public vs. a major national dealer. Similarly, a specialty house that handles one area of numismatics will have a different attitude from a large wholesaler that survives by trading everything. In walking the bourse floor, I am mindful of the different reasons why different companies are there, and I don't expect them all to take time to chit-chat with me.

    MrEureka wrote:

    Dealers leave shows early because the bourse slows down. Period. If the shows were shorter, the bourse would stay lively and more dealers would stay through the end. So the REAL reason most dealers leave shows early is that the shows are too long.

    Andy, this WAS only a two-day bourse. The Thursday dealers' bourse didn't start until 2:00PM and was not handled in a manner consistent with retail trade (almost no display cases were set up). So there was only Friday and Saturday, that's all. And everyone bagged Saturday. I understand why, but here would be my suggestion: (1) only have the bourse for one or two days, but make everyone stick around; and (2) I think a solid 5-6 hours on Saturday is generally a good idea, because most of us who buy coins, even high-end certified coins, work during the week. If you want to pare it down to a ONE DAY bourse, make it Saturday !!! Or if it's going to be a one-day bourse on Friday, SAY SO UP FRONT so we don;t waste our time coming on Saturday to buy coins.

    What ends up happening is that collectors have to get there the first day of the retail bourse. That's the only day all dealers are happy & available to the public. But unfortunately, that often ends up being a Thursday. Since the major shows are scattered about, it means taking 2-3 days off from work just to go to a show.

    Part of my point here is that I still like coin shows !!! I love browsing through display cases. It is less pressured than going through dealer boxes at early bird, and more leisurely than viewing auction lots. It is part of my enjoyment of the hobby. I think it would be a shame to lose it. But no question, this is a seller's market, and large dealers are doing their business wholesale and via the auction block. When did Heritage or many others ever display their REAL inventory at a show ??

    Best,
    Sunnywood
  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,162 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I like shows, too. But I rarely find anything to buy at them any more. They're still fun, tho.

    However, having sat behind Legend's table enough now, I can honestly say that they sell 99% of the coins they sell at a show to customers they know in advance are coming to the show. In fact, I manned the table for two straight days at Portland ANA and didn't sell a single coin. What dealer wants to stick around for that???

    The retail portion of the coin show has slipped far back on the priority list for major dealers. Look at what happens at the bigger shows: There's auctions before the show and during the show. There's lobby leeching before the show and wholesale during the show. There's grading during the show and then wholesale when the coins come back. There's regular customers that come on dealer set up day and early in the show. And then for the most part there's only the general public that comes during the latter part of the show. Given the choice between getting back to the office and listing the newps and actually selling some of them [and/or having a day with the family] or sitting for two days and not selling a thing, I know which I'd make as a businessman.

    Oh, btw, here's Legend's Market Report. See - no days off! image

    Market Report
  • So the bottom line is ...What do we need the shows for?
    Customers cn meet with the dealers at other places.
    Dealers can deal with each other at other places.
    It seems shows are not meant for the collectors anymore.
    Why should a collector go, if the dealers aren't going to be there or aren't interested in selling to them?
    When I want to buy an expensive coin(s), I sure as heck am not going to do it from a photo, it will be in person so I can examine it myself.
    But apparently shows are a waste of time nowadays for collectors.
    image
  • RYKRYK Posts: 35,797 ✭✭✭✭✭
    When I want to buy an expensive coin(s), I sure as heck am not going to do it from a photo, it will be in person so I can examine it myself.

    I might be in the minority, but I would prefer to buy a coin "from a photo" on approval (or with return privilige) in my own home taking a day or two to make the decison rather than at the coin show with poor lighting and the sense of more pressure to make a decision.
  • SunnywoodSunnywood Posts: 2,683
    TDN,

    No arguments with any of your points from a dealer's perspective. But then just do away with weekends on the bourse floor, and make admission free. Anyway, the more I think about this, the more sense it makes to just go buy everything yourself at auctions. Or find another hobby. If I can't wander around a bourse floor looking at coins, I might as well go do something else. Perhaps it is another side effect of this market - it's becoming a real turn-off to be a collector.

    Best,
    Sunnywood
  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,162 ✭✭✭✭✭
    The problem with just going and buying everything yourself from auction is that you will miss out on an awful lot of coins and you will tend to overpay.

    Many of my best coins never saw the light of day. They went right from a collector to me via Legend. If I only bought at auction I wouldn't own them.

    Many, many coins are available in nicer condition at a lower price on the bourse floor than what they sell for in auction.

    And at most auctions you are going up against the crackout guys. The coins you really should own you will not buy [for the most part] because someone is seeing it a grade higher. The coins they pass on are not the ones you really want. That's a tough rock and a hard place to squeeze yourself into! image
  • elwoodelwood Posts: 2,414
    If you have never witnessed, as a collector, dealer setup and the feeding frenzy that occurs you should. I don't know the % of sales that are done in the first few hours of a show, but I think it would be quite substantial. I usually don't take part in this ritual because dealers are quite rude and very aggressive.
    I will sometimes hold coins back and save them for collectors (coins which I could have sold easily during setup, to dealers). Many of these coins I end up bringing home because of low collector turnout.

    Everyone says how great the internet is for the hobby and it is. I'm affraid the result is what you are witnessing at shows. A slow death!!
    (of collector attendance)

    What irritates me as a dealer is that many of the dealers that leave early are the big boys with the best table locationsimage

    Maybe dealers should be MADE to man their tables unti the end of the show. If they chose not to, then at the next show they get moved to the back of the room. Why should table location matter if you are there just for dealer to dealer business?
    Please visit my website prehistoricamerica.com www.visitiowa.org/pinecreekcabins
  • BarryBarry Posts: 10,100 ✭✭✭
    Question for the dealers:
    Why is it that dealers would rather sell to other dealers than to collectors when they get retail from collectors and wholesale from dealers? Do the quick, multiple sales at wholesale make it more worthwhile?
  • CameonutCameonut Posts: 7,293 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I made the big mistake of going to a big show in Indianapolis a number of years ago on Sunday. After driving 6 hours to get there, I was greeted with a half empty bourse with the rest of the dealers getting ready to leave. I was there to buy lots of coins, but left with nothing. On the 6 hour drive home, I decided that I would never go to a big show on a Sunday again. Since I am sure I am not alone in this reaction, so it is not surprising that the action on Sunday dwindles.

    So my question is - why don't the organizers just plan for a show to end on Saturday?

    “In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock." - Thomas Jefferson

    My digital cameo album 1950-64 Cameos - take a look!

  • elwoodelwood Posts: 2,414
    I would much rather sell to a knowledgeable collector and build a relationship with a collector than selling to a dealer who is just buying product.. I find much more enjoyment selling to a collector who will appreciate the coins I've found. I'm a collector at heart and usually don't buy a coin that I would not want to own myself. So, I like them to find a good home.

    From my experiences there is no such thing as wholesale. Coins that I sell are the same price no matter who is buying, dealer or collector.

    I think most sellers will give quantity discounts. Obviously if you do business with someone regulary (buying and selling) you will give this regular customer a better deal than someone you have never done business with before.
    Please visit my website prehistoricamerica.com www.visitiowa.org/pinecreekcabins
  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,303 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I collect, invest, and deal, like many others here. Personally, I would love to set up some retail clients and sell to them at advantageous prices. But it doesn't happen. I could stay at a show until Sunday at 5 pm and not make over $200 in retail sales. And it's not for lack of trying, lack of material, lack of exposure, or being hard to deal with.

    I take great pleasure in showing things to people whether they buy or not. But acting out the role of Maytag repairman just for the heck of some tire kicking is not a good return on my time. The same goes to dealers I bring coins to. Some will buy consistently and others won't buy anything. The latter group get weeded out over time as it is a big waste for both of us. I can visit the same 4 to 6 dealers at major show and do all my selling in a few hours. I can sit at a table for 3 days and be lucky to sell 20% as much.... none of which is retail. I'm on both sides of the fence here too as I'm one of the pickiest buyers at a show. But if you show me a good coin at a good price, I'm going to buy it. We just may not always agree on what a good coin or good price is.

    One does what works for them. I've made the effort for the retail side and it has not worked. I applaud those people that don't have that issue. My opinion is that the typical retail buyer feels much more comfortable buying from a B&M, Heritage, Legend, Whitlow, RCNH, DLRC, DVRC, DHRC, etc. because they feel they are getting tremendous expertise for their dollar, much the same way you would take your investment dollars to TRowe Price or Goldman Sachs. Like Sunnywood or TDN, I don't care if my next purchase is from Centles or Whitlow. If the coin is right, it gets sold.

    roadrunner
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • tmot99tmot99 Posts: 5,238 ✭✭✭
    As has already been said, if you end on Saturday, then they leave early on Saturday. end it early Saturday, they leave Friday.

    I had to go to the Midwest show in Chicago on Sunday. It was my only option even though I knew the potential downfalls. Most of the dealers were gone, probably over half. But the dealers that were there got my business. I found at least 5 dealers that had coins I was looking for and/or were buying coins that I had to sell. It certainly could have been better, but I came away with some great contacts and great coins. Guess what dealers I will visit the next time I go to a show?
  • BarryBarry Posts: 10,100 ✭✭✭


    << <i>So my question is - why don't the organizers just plan for a show to end on Saturday? >>


    Because then the dealers will leave Friday, as a good portion of them did in NYC this weekend.
  • if dealers sell primarily to dealers , who makes the money? the buyer or the seller? and do these coins just show up at the next show , and the money flows the other way?
    so if they're not set up on day 1 , and leave early on last day , why bother with tables . just rent an entire floor in the marriott , and have dealers visit the room next to them for half an hour , and rotate routinely until all have seen everyone
    Home of quality widgets
  • I view shows as an educational forum. I can see what a 1794 $ dollar looks like, or a gem $3 gold piece.

    Most of my buying is done on the web now. At least at shows I can see coins (even if they aren't the ones I'm interested in) and meet some of the dealers.

    Even if some dealers leave early, it doesn't really bother me. I make appointments when I really want to see someone. Usually they will tell me ahead of time when I need to be there by. Sometimes I can't make it until early Saturday.

    This ANA Show, I'll be prepared. I plan on being there Wed. for PNG day. My wife says I need to get a life! Don't all of us here need to????

    Mike



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