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New Low For Hotel Buyers?
A lady asked me to evaluate a necklace made of a dozen gold U.S. and British coins which was strung together by 10k chain links. The total gold value was $5,600. The chain links themselves were worth $857. The hotel buyers price??? ---> $200
"Let me tell ya Bud, you can buy junk anytime!"
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Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
Without that show, I wouldn't realized this is a (multi?) billion dollar business.
<< <i>A lady asked me to evaluate a necklace made of a dozen gold U.S. and British coins which was strung together by 10k chain links. The total gold value was $5,600. The chain links themselves were worth $857. The hotel buyers price??? ---> $200 >>
Taking into account the overhead involved, if you were a "hotel" buyer, what would YOU offer as a fair price for her gold. Since a dozen gold coins were worth about $4800, we can assume that they had little or no numismatic premium or that any premium was destroyed by damage.
Steve
<< <i>
<< <i>A lady asked me to evaluate a necklace made of a dozen gold U.S. and British coins which was strung together by 10k chain links. The total gold value was $5,600. The chain links themselves were worth $857. The hotel buyers price??? ---> $200 >>
Taking into account the overhead involved, if you were a "hotel" buyer, what would YOU offer as a fair price for her gold. Since a dozen gold coins were worth about $4800, we can assume that they had little or no numismatic premium or that any premium was destroyed by damage. >>
At least 50-70% of melt. That's a fair margin.
Too many positive BST transactions with too many members to list.
yeah that $200 offer should be a criminal account besides the moral injustice
<< <i>Why does it matter what the second offer was?? The orignial offer was $5600 which the owner turned down. She goes looking for a better offer. The experienced buy pick up on the fact the necklace wasn't for sale and made an offer which achieved it purpose of make the seller go away so they could move on to serious sellers. >>
Was the first offer $5600? Or $200?
Chris' Complete Lincoln Variety Set 1909-date
<< <i>Why does it matter what the second offer was?? The orignial offer was $5600 which the owner turned down. She goes looking for a better offer. The experienced buy pick up on the fact the necklace wasn't for sale and made an offer which achieved it purpose of make the seller go away so they could move on to serious sellers. >>
My gist is that the owner refused the $200 offer and sought the second.
<< <i>
<< <i>Why does it matter what the second offer was?? The orignial offer was $5600 which the owner turned down. She goes looking for a better offer. The experienced buy pick up on the fact the necklace wasn't for sale and made an offer which achieved it purpose of make the seller go away so they could move on to serious sellers. >>
My gist is that the owner refused the $200 offer and sought the second. >>
That's my impression as well.
I thought the seller got a low ball offer from the hotel buyer, turned them down and
then went to Veep to get a second opinion on the value.
<< <i>The OP put a price on it of $5600 >>
He put a value on it of $5600. He didn't say that is what he offered.
<< <i>My gist is that the owner refused the $200 offer and sought the second. >> >>
This doesn't make sense, if the $200 offer had been a good price for the item, The hotel buyers would have been gone before the seller could have returned to sell the item. Most people get an idea of what something is worth before they go to sell it or buy it for that matter.
$200 is a disgustingly low offer.
And PS...saying that "stupid" sellers should either know better or be ripped off, is not acceptable...as many of these people are probably widows and younger people...so this should not be a learning (i.e. rob them blind) experience. Either you're an honest dealer or you're just a plain old crook. And yes, making a decent profit is permissible...but c'mon...stuff like this is just plain wrong.
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<< <i>
<< <i>My gist is that the owner refused the $200 offer and sought the second. >> >>
This doesn't make sense, if the $200 offer had been a good price for the item, The hotel buyers would have been gone before the seller could have returned to sell the item. Most people get an idea of what something is worth before they go to sell it or buy it for that matter. >>
Why would someone who has an idea of the worth of what they have, bother to go to a "hotel" buyer for a second offer? One can get an offer from them and get another offer from someone else in less than an hour.
<< <i>we can assume that they had little or no numismatic premium or that any premium was destroyed by damage >>
While not entirely on subject but certainly not irrelevant; this in not necessarily true 100% of the time. I have seen plenty of coins over the years that came out of bezels and actually graded. Each coin must be considered separately.
<< <i>
<< <i>we can assume that they had little or no numismatic premium or that any premium was destroyed by damage >>
While not entirely on subject but certainly not irrelevant; this in not necessarily true 100% of the time. I have seen plenty of coins over the years that came out of bezels and actually graded. Each coin must be considered separately. >>
12 coins worth about $4800 would be about 3 ounces in total or about a quarter of an ounce each. For me significant numismatic premium would be 1.5X spot or more. I'm just guessing that the OP found little or no premium here. Wasn't trying to make a condemnation of all coins used as jewelry pieces.
<< <i>Wasn't trying to make a condemnation of all coins used as jewelry pieces >>
Understood - I just thought it should be said
They're traveling pawn shops.
<< <i>More info: The lady said that her husband had it appraised 8-10 years ago and was told something in the neighborhood of $2,000. She took it to the Holiday Inn and was told $200. This confused her. On the same day, she showed it to me and I told her that I would pay $5,600 which was 85% of the gold value. The coins ranged from $1's to $5's to a $20 along with a British sovereign and half sovereigns and a $10 Canadian piece. All of them were worn, highly polished and had links soldered to them holding the whole thing together. She did not sell it as she wanted to talk it over with her husband. At least she now knows the current value and wont get cheated. >>
My bet is the lady will go back to the Holiday Inn and sell the gold for $200 just because they buyers had free coffee, doughnuts and smelled good.
TRUTH
<< <i>I have to believe legislation will be forthcoming at some point which will redefine precious metals fraud. This kind of thing is only slightly less heinous than burglary. >>
This will never happen. One small town local coin shop buys bullion for 10% under gold spot. In the big city 200 miles away, the coin shops pay 3% under spot. Where is the fraud when there's an offer and acceptance. Too many variances in buying to legislate.
TRUTH
<< <i>
<< <i>I have to believe legislation will be forthcoming at some point which will redefine precious metals fraud. This kind of thing is only slightly less heinous than burglary. >>
This will never happen. One small town local coin shop buys bullion for 10% under gold spot. In the big city 200 miles away, the coin shops pay 3% under spot. Where is the fraud when there's an offer and acceptance. Too many variances in buying to legislate.
TRUTH >>
Agree with TRUTH. In a meeting of the minds between a buyer and seller, it's their minds and their business. The bracelet could have held fake coins. G_d knows I've been "stuck" with a few.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
<< <i>At least 50-70% of melt. That's a fair margin.<<<< in this crowd too
yeah that $200 offer should be a criminal account besides the moral injustice >>
There are numerous laws against it but now days even big multi-nationals are all crooks and no one wants to be the first to toss stones.
They weren't selling anything. A lady sitting there with a scale and several bottles of testing solutions.
Talk about low, 7x face for 90%, 10x for 90% dollars. Doesn't stop people from selling though.
Then she had the nerve to ask me, "Do you want to sell?"
EDIT: <<At least 50-70% of melt. That's a fair margin.>>
The OP assigned a total value of $6457, chain + gold coins.
A $200 offer is 96.9% of $6457.
<< <i>I have to believe legislation will be forthcoming at some point which will redefine precious metals fraud. This kind of thing is only slightly less heinous than burglary. >>
I don't trust legislators to have intelligence enough to come up with a good bill. Remember some of them even scoff at the thought of even reading bills before they vote on them. Don't we ever learn our lessons? People too stupid or lazy to educate themselves about the value of an article they want to sell and who instead want "Big Brother" to protect them in these matters are not deserving of freedom and will lose it in short time. The slime balls who intend to defraud people in a trade will find ways around most laws the Congress might make or they will throw enough money at the right people to make sure they do not get busted.
<< <i>The OP assigned a total value of $6457, chain + gold coins.
A $200 offer is 96.9% of $6457. >>
Huh? You may want to check those computations.
Lary L.
Edited to add: OP's corrections appear below and better emphasize how pathetic (3.1% of spot) the offer was. Yet, people still go to the hotel buyers when they could do so much better elsewhere.
<< <i>I have to believe legislation will be forthcoming at some point which will redefine precious metals fraud. This kind of thing is only slightly less heinous than burglary.
>>
The real difference is that the robber makes house calls. If you keep your gold
stored in a safety deposit box you only have to worry about Morgan Stanley et al.
There's not much safety anywhere any longer.
<< <i>The OP assigned a total value of $6457, chain + gold coins.
A $200 offer is 96.9% back of spot of $6457. >>
Fixified.
Thanks, I knew my math was right, goofed on the wording, I'm human.
EDIT:
200 is what percent of 6457? 200/6457 = x/100 cross multiply 200 x 100 = 20000, then divide by 6457 x= 3.09%
Round up to 3.1. 100 - 3.1 = 96.9.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5