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How to Tell Clients They Can't Cherry Pick Dealer Stock at Greysheet Prices

CoinosaurusCoinosaurus Posts: 9,645 ✭✭✭✭✭

You see it every show. People walk up to a table with a Greysheet and expect to buy the most PQ examples at that price. The usual dealer responses:

"I'll buy all you have to sell me at that price." "The auction prices are substantially higher." "I paid 2x Greysheet for this one." Etc.

Are there any better responses to educate consumers as to the reality of the market?

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Comments

  • SoldiSoldi Posts: 2,177 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Politely pass and attempt to inform them, politely, that you have more in the pieces than that. They are your "Clients" according to your query. How did you let them get this way? Perhaps you meant to say "potential customers" Either way you are in a rough business, best of luck. Sol

  • thebeavthebeav Posts: 3,919 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Perhaps even worse than that is when you have a box of 120- 1970s proof sets. They're 3 dollars each. Someone pulls up a chair and unboxes and looks at EVERY one of them before they buy one (Yes, it happened to me). Move along folks, nothing to see here.....

  • Cougar1978Cougar1978 Posts: 8,792 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited February 4, 2018 9:31AM

    You could just refer them to the CPG, CW, or TPG PG.

    At shows I have told them: “so what thats wholesale, go find one, maybe you should go open a coin shop, do you have one to sell me that, and with another dealer at a show telling me I wanted too much wanting to buy at sheet (to flip to the guy standing next to him) I yelled at him “like heck it is - get away from my table and don’t ever come back.” Everybody in the room heard. Many applauded. The coin was priced about 30pct above bid, a very fair price. Once their BS starts it’s time for them to leave.

    If your going to be in the business you need to be tough and stick to your guns to make target ROI. Its not necessarily that those critters are stupid or ignorant they are simply there to rip you.

    I remember the first show I set up at some guy came up, opened up a blue sheet, and like some sniveling little twerp tried to educate me like to buy a coin I had at that. I think I replied “do u have one sell at that.”

    On eBay you can just say “unless it’s BIN/MO it’s already at our best price.”

    Investor
  • cladkingcladking Posts: 28,739 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited February 4, 2018 9:28AM

    Dealers don't price coins because the price goes up 50 to 200% when anyone asks what it costs.

    If the prices aren't on the coins the best bet is just ask what they have near greysheet and cherry pick those. Then you can try the coins around double greysheet or triple.

    It's always hard to do business with someone who isn't willing to commit to an approximate price. I don't mind if they won't come down but I sure mind watching the price go up as he sizes me up.

    tempus fugit extra philosophiam.
  • cladkingcladking Posts: 28,739 ✭✭✭✭✭

    ...And how come dealers never have dreck at half of greysheet?

    Now there's some cherry pickin' fun.

    tempus fugit extra philosophiam.
  • Coin FinderCoin Finder Posts: 7,413 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I would visibly price the "cherries" and leave the rest. Then when the greysheet comes out simply say it is PQ for the grade and thus the price..

    CAC does help sometimes..

  • cladkingcladking Posts: 28,739 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Cougar1978 said:
    You could just refer them to the CPG, CW, or TPG PG.

    At shows I have told them: “so what thats wholesale, go find one, maybe you should go open a coin shop, do you have one to sell me that, and with another dealer at a show telling me I wanted too much wanting to buy at sheet (to flip to the guy standing next to him) I yelled at him “like heck it is - get away from my table and don’t ever come back.” Everybody in the room heard. Many applauded. The coin was priced about 30pct above bid, a very fair price. Once their BS starts it’s time for them to leave.

    If your going to be in the business you need to be tough and stick to your guns to make target ROI. Its not necessarily that those critters are stupid or ignorant they are simply there to rip you.

    I remember the first show I set up at some guy came up, opened up a blue sheet, and like some sniveling little twerp tried to educate me like to buy a coin I had at that. I think I replied “do u have one sell at that.”

    On eBay you can just say “unless it’s BIN/MO it’s already at our best price.”

    Two people usually won't agree on the price of a coin and the dealer usually has the advantage of better knowing the market and always has the advantage of knowing what he paid.

    Buyers are just looking for needed coin he values higher than the dealer. Dealers are buying coins that are underpriced relative to his clientele and wholesale buyers.

    Sometimes it works, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.

    tempus fugit extra philosophiam.
  • specialistspecialist Posts: 956 ✭✭✭✭✭

    First, it is poor education by the Grey Sheet people. It is a wholesale rag. The people who subscribe to it need to know that.

    Simply laugh and say, Grey Sheet? That's wholesale, can you sell me coins for that? I am a buyer at that price, what do you have?

  • lcoopielcoopie Posts: 8,873 ✭✭✭✭✭

    that's just a guide and this is better or much better than the avg.

    LCoopie = Les
  • Wabbit2313Wabbit2313 Posts: 7,268 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @specialist said:
    First, it is poor education by the Grey Sheet people. It is a wholesale rag. The people who subscribe to it need to know that.

    Simply laugh and say, Grey Sheet? That's wholesale, can you sell me coins for that? I am a buyer at that price, what do you have?

    At FUN I sold a bunch of nicer non-CAC coins and most were sold at 10-15% back of bid. No eBay and PayPal fees or even worse, Heritage fees, and I insisting on getting paid in cash. Fair deal in this market. No trouble at all selling CAC coins at bid but they go for so much more at auction.

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  • Coin FinderCoin Finder Posts: 7,413 ✭✭✭✭✭

    This business has changed so much in the last 10 years, I think grey sheet worked in the 60's and 70's even the 80's but now there are many ways to get "prices" and following the market trends is a lot easier.

    I think what grey sheet does do is allow a conversation to take place about a coin or group of coins. it is a third party in the transaction..It can act as an authority and keep the conversation civil. With some however is makes things worse....

  • bronco2078bronco2078 Posts: 10,425 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @ProfHaroldHill said:
    Where are all the dealers who pay Greysheet? (Rhetorical question.) Unless I have a truly rare coin, or one on the dealer's want list, Greysheet doesn't mean very much in today's market.

    It's certainly understandable from a dealer's perspective. To buy for stock in a declining market is not a good idea unless you can do so at a steep discount.

    Maybe retailers frustrated by such collectors, should mention to the potential buyer with the GS that in this market, the 'rules of engagement' are ill-defined and ever-changing.

    It does seem that a lot more collectors carry the GS at shows these days, and I can understand their reasoning. I sure don't understand why they carry it so openly though(!)

    Maybe walking around looking at tables full of coins with no prices confuses them. Maybe dealers need to declare one way or the other how they feel about GS prices on a sign at their table? For the sake of consistency If you don't want buyers making offers based on GS then you shouldn't be allowed to club sellers over the head with those same prices if they are trying to sell.

    Imagine how stupid trying to use the BST forum would be if there were no asking prices for posted items?

  • KccoinKccoin Posts: 1,086 ✭✭✭✭✭

    A simple "that's too cheap" could work.
    I think a knowledgeable buyer may be able to respect that. I might add "read the directions" to the guy looking to cherry pick.

  • RogerBRogerB Posts: 8,852 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Mustard squirts.

  • mvs7mvs7 Posts: 1,662 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Cougar1978 said:
    You could just refer them to the CPG, CW, or TPG PG.

    At shows I have told them: “so what thats wholesale, go find one, maybe you should go open a coin shop, do you have one to sell me that, and with another dealer at a show telling me I wanted too much wanting to buy at sheet (to flip to the guy standing next to him) I yelled at him “like heck it is - get away from my table and don’t ever come back.” Everybody in the room heard. Many applauded. The coin was priced about 30pct above bid, a very fair price. Once their BS starts it’s time for them to leave.

    Was this at the Boeing show in Seattle? This exact scenario played out there a few weeks ago. Some jerk was completely rude about the levels he would pay and the dealer (justifiably) let him have it. If that was you, good for you. If it wasn't, this apparently happens more than you'd think. ;)

  • cladkingcladking Posts: 28,739 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @mvs7 said:

    @Cougar1978 said:
    You could just refer them to the CPG, CW, or TPG PG.

    At shows I have told them: “so what thats wholesale, go find one, maybe you should go open a coin shop, do you have one to sell me that, and with another dealer at a show telling me I wanted too much wanting to buy at sheet (to flip to the guy standing next to him) I yelled at him “like heck it is - get away from my table and don’t ever come back.” Everybody in the room heard. Many applauded. The coin was priced about 30pct above bid, a very fair price. Once their BS starts it’s time for them to leave.

    Was this at the Boeing show in Seattle? This exact scenario played out there a few weeks ago. Some jerk was completely rude about the levels he would pay and the dealer (justifiably) let him have it. If that was you, good for you. If it wasn't, this apparently happens more than you'd think. ;)

    It happens a lot. And I'm with TomB that most of the time it's unnecessary.

    If you say you need triple greysheet then the guy should just walk away. I'd save the snarky comments for when the wouldbe buyer offers a fraction of my price. It's hardly unusual for buyers and sellers to be far apart. This is why one owns the coin and the other doesn't.

    tempus fugit extra philosophiam.
  • RegulatedRegulated Posts: 2,994 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Before I was in numismatics, I worked in the concert business. When I first started, the guy I worked for said something that I've never forgotten: "No is the strongest word in any negotiation."


    What is now proved was once only imagined. - William Blake
  • jmlanzafjmlanzaf Posts: 36,724 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Several people have mentioned posted prices. That helps, of course, but it isn't a cure all. People assume prices are negotiable - and they often are. I receive emailed offers all the time on Buy It Now lots on eBay that have NO BEST OFFER option. Sometimes they are legitimate and I oblige. Other times it is someone trying to buy sub-wholesale and hoping I'm dumb enough to accept.

    I get emailed offers all the time offering to buy my no problem XF Morgan Dollars for $15 or $16 which is ridiculously back of the bulk price even in the current environment for widgets. They are just trying, knowing they can flip them wholesale for $20-ish with a phone call. Those people aren't worth my time.

    Just today, I got a request for a better price on a Pilgrim commem I had listed at $165 (no Best Offer). He asked if I could do better as some unnamed other dealer had one at $140. I told him I paid $138 (true) but would take $158 for it with shipping. He accepted. Deal done, everyone happy. For the record, it's an NGC slab. Greysheet is $165

  • cladkingcladking Posts: 28,739 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @mustangmanbob said:

    Without being snarky, SO WHAT? If a dealer is buried in a coin, paid too much, market has plummeted, that means ABSOLUTELY NOTHING as the only salient point is what is the value of the coin NOW.

    Most dealer inventory changes hands relatively quickly and the price paid (at least on expensive stuff) tends to be correlated to its value.

    Otherwise the dealer will tend to not be able to stay in business.

    tempus fugit extra philosophiam.
  • cladkingcladking Posts: 28,739 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @mustangmanbob said:

    When I set up at a show, everything I bring is either marked with a price or marked in a box (Anything in this box is $5 or whatever). If someone snakes me for something that sky rocketed in price that I missed, good for them, as they will spend more time looking at my stuff for more, and I have cash in my pocket and made the $$ I set out to make.

    I am the guy who'll snag a few $7 items from your $5 box but mostly I'll be looking for things that will be worth $200 in a few years from the same box.

    tempus fugit extra philosophiam.
  • rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭

    There are two sides to every coin. On one side, we see some people trying to buy monster, high-end material for wholesale Bid, causing frustration for the sellers. On the other side, we see certain sellers charging monster, high-end prices for coins that are neither monsters nor high-end, resulting in frustration for the prospective buyers. Either way, keep your cool and move on to the next coin.

  • bronco2078bronco2078 Posts: 10,425 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @mustangmanbob said:
    ... "the dealer always has the advantage of knowing what he paid."

    Without being snarky, SO WHAT? If a dealer is buried in a coin, paid too much, market has plummeted, that means ABSOLUTELY NOTHING as the only salient point is what is the value of the coin NOW. If the dealer was able to purchase a box of $20 Gold coins, at $50 each, and the dealer's normal mark up is 100%, do you really think they would be sitting out for sale for $100 each? So no break on the great purchase deals, but smack down hard bargain on the stuff the dealer is in too deep and will hold forever. Maybe it is time to lose money on some stuff and say good bye to the losers.

    As a collector I care deeply about a dealer buried in a coin. Especially when hes telling me the slabbed MS 65 morgan I'm trying to sell him is really an AU .

    Of course not making a 100% profit on something isn't actually the definition of "buried" that most of us would use. I think thats what they actually mean though when I'm looking at the exhibits in their traveling coin museums .

  • BochimanBochiman Posts: 25,556 ✭✭✭✭✭

    No dealer has ever used the "I'll take all you have at that price" to me (so I must be a sucker and not dicker low enough ;) ) but if one did, I would laugh in his/her face and tell them how stupid that is to say. I truly believe that is just a really stupid thing to say.

    If you don't like the price someone is offering, just tell them straight out "sorry, it is mine to sell and THIS is the price I am asking". To me, that is honest and simple. Trying to play word games or anything else just makes that person reek.

    I feel the same way about customers as well...if they are trying the "this is wrong, this is wrong, and it has these problems...give me a lower price" game.

    If you are going to nitpick a coin, then just make the offer based on how you see the value. Skip the stories. I've had 1 or 2 dealers do that to me (NGC MS66 Ikes called AU53/55 by one dealer). I withdrew my offer to sell and have never offered them anything (other than 90% melt bullion) since.

    The internet has been a big equalizer for buying and selling and very few coins are "unique" to most of us at the levels we deal in.

    I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment

  • blitzdudeblitzdude Posts: 6,592 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Haven't found a dealer yet willing to buy at greysheet bid thus I don't pay over greysheet bid. It's a buyers market out there, easy to find coins at bid. Money talks. If they don't like your offer move on to the next one.

    The whole worlds off its rocker, buy Gold™.
    BOOMIN!™
    Wooooha! Did someone just say it's officially "TACO™" Tuesday????

  • topstuftopstuf Posts: 14,803 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Not all dealers at all "shows" are there to sell coins. :|

  • 1630Boston1630Boston Posts: 14,111 ✭✭✭✭✭

    A lot of perspectives to think about here :smile:

    Successful transactions with : MICHAELDIXON, Manorcourtman, Bochiman, bolivarshagnasty, AUandAG, onlyroosies, chumley, Weiss, jdimmick, BAJJERFAN, gene1978, TJM965, Smittys, GRANDAM, JTHawaii, mainejoe, softparade, derryb, Ricko

    Bad transactions with : nobody to date

  • jmlanzafjmlanzaf Posts: 36,724 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @blitzdude said:
    Haven't found a dealer yet willing to buy at greysheet bid thus I don't pay over greysheet bid. It's a buyers market out there, easy to find coins at bid. Money talks. If they don't like your offer move on to the next one.

    Depends on what it is. Widgets? Definitely not. You can't even sell widgets at greysheet bid. Premium coins? Absolutely. As you can probably get over ask on them.

    All the collectors here really should try dealing for a year, they might think differently. Margins on coins are pretty slim, so much so that people scoff. If I buy a 65 Morgan for $40 and sell it for $50, that is HUGE...and also not terribly profitable once time and expenses are taken into account. And most of the time, I'm going to end up at $45 on the coin if I want to move it quickly. And buying bulk wheat cents at 2.5 to 3 cents each so I can wait until I have a 35 pound bag and sell at 3.5 cents each is back-breaking and thankless, especially if I have to pop them all out of the album first. Hard to make 10% on 90%. And for most dealers (who aren't Legends), those widgets are the bulk of your business. People don't walk in with a set of Proof Morgans more than once in 10 years.

  • topstuftopstuf Posts: 14,803 ✭✭✭✭✭

    When you see coins going across the tables in both directions, you've probably located the dealer to trade with.

  • TwoSides2aCoinTwoSides2aCoin Posts: 44,618 ✭✭✭✭✭

    “tire kickers “

  • Insider2Insider2 Posts: 14,452 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @thebeav said:
    Perhaps even worse than that is when you have a box of 120- 1970s proof sets. They're 3 dollars each. Someone pulls up a chair and unboxes and looks at EVERY one of them before they buy one (Yes, it happened to me). Move along folks, nothing to see here.....

    You are a coin "dealer" so you should now this.

    1. I will not mention names but have you ever seen some of the top "cherrypickes" go about looking at coins?
    2. If I stack 10 "identical" TPGS slabbed coins with a date and grade you NEED...I give you a price you love for any coin in the stack, are you just going to take the one on the top? I don't think so.
    3. If the guy is not in the way and you're not busy at least he'll make you look busy and probably attract some other folks. He might even know to make a "courtesy" purchase!"
    4. Most of the dealers I know will admit they don't know everything about everything. Ever walk into a coin shop and find/buy a coin in his display case that is imaged on the front page of the Coin World siting on top of the same case. :wink:

    You are the dealer, he is the collector. It is a good bet that your goals are different.

    PS Imagine what a picture post card dealer goes through. Fifty + folks each show thumbing everything in his stock, mixing it all up, and spending a few bucks! LOL.

  • jmlanzafjmlanzaf Posts: 36,724 ✭✭✭✭✭

    You are all technically correct about the $3 proof sets. However, that is also the reason that when you go to shows now you don't find boxes of $3 proof sets. A lot of stores don't stock $3 proof sets either. It's not worth it for a dealer to spend a lot of time entertaining a customer who will spend hours for $3.

    Again, I'm not saying that you as the customer don't have the right to carefully vet every purchase. What I'm saying is that such activity eliminates dealer incentive to stock such items. One of the local coin stores - now closed - was owned by a man worth about $40 million. He didn't care about profit. I would stop in every Wednesday night and there were 5 or 6 people looking through 90% buckets, wheat cents, foreign coin bins, etc. They would stay for an hour or more and had access to all the cases blocked and would end up spending $20 or less each on most occasions. While entertaining such customers, the staff is not doing appraisals, sorting and pricing coins themselves, listing on the internet, etc.

  • 3stars3stars Posts: 2,294 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Sports cards have VCP online, which will tell you auction prices paid for cards in a given grade. Seems like the coin community would be better off if it had a VCP type website (or maybe it does, but I'm not aware of it).

    Previous transactions: Wondercoin, goldman86, dmarks, Type2
  • ashelandasheland Posts: 23,765 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Good thread

  • topstuftopstuf Posts: 14,803 ✭✭✭✭✭

    When I first started collecting, there was a coin dealer in Sacramento who ran his shop behind his LAUNDRY.

    No, it wasn't Gus Fring. ;)

    But... he was a Chinese guy and displayed all his coins upside down which , I believe, is a customary Asian practice as that's where the denomination shows.
    ANYHOW.... I suspected that since he had been in bizz for centuries, he would have great stuff.
    But he wouldn't show any of that sort to me. "Newbie" you understand.
    Sooo....one day on the way to his shop, I told the wife I was gonna buy SOMETHING even though all he displayed was mostly foreign bulk coins.
    And I did.

    HOOO--wweeeee..... did things change. He went in the laundry and came back with a GEM Pan-Pac half dollar and he priced it at about HALF of grey sheet.

    SNAG !!
    Then he commenced to ask me if I would like ....more.

    Oh you bet I would!

    So the next week we went back to glean through the treasure chest.....and.... he was CLOSED!

    Oh no, another trip up from Stockton the next week.

    Dammit, still closed.

    So I went to one of my other "regular" shops and mentioned that he was closed.

    "Well sure" was the response. He had DIED !!!

    And here was me all set to glom up some of the coolest gems in the whole dern town.

    :'(:'(:'( Oh, and... :'( ... in mourning for him. :D

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