Trade Dollar grade thoughts...

Picked up this wonderfully original Trade Dollar in a NGC holder and recently crossed to PCGS. I'd appreciate some objective grade opinions on the coin. It's crusty so the luster is present in the protected areas but muted due to the tannic toning probably from a leather pouch.
Thoughts please?
Thoughts please?

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Coins for Sale: Both Graded and Ungraded
https://photos.app.goo.gl/oqym2YtcS7ZAZ73D6
<< <i>My guess is that it was an NGC 58 and is now a PCGS 53 or 55. It all depends on remaining luster which is where the two grading companies differ most, in my experience. NGC will grant a 58 for a circulated coin with no high point rub, whereas PCGS requires 50%+ remaining luster for that grade. >>
I think that you are spot on with this statement. PCGS graded it a 53 while NGC had it as a 58. The luster is naturally muted due to the attractive toning which PCGS discounted. I was surprised at the grade as the coin has AU58 detail. Seems this grading behavior just encourages dipping out naturally toned coins.
Latin American Collection
<< <i>My guess is that it was an NGC 58 and is now a PCGS 53 or 55. It all depends on remaining luster which is where the two grading companies differ most, in my experience. NGC will grant a 58 for a circulated coin with no high point rub, whereas PCGS requires 50%+ remaining luster for that grade. >>
should have read down, Dan is Spot on. Welcome to the cross over game on old silver
<< <i>
<< <i>My guess is that it was an NGC 58 and is now a PCGS 53 or 55. It all depends on remaining luster which is where the two grading companies differ most, in my experience. NGC will grant a 58 for a circulated coin with no high point rub, whereas PCGS requires 50%+ remaining luster for that grade. >>
should have read down, Dan is Spot on. Welcome to the cross over game on old silver
Agree and I didn't buy the coin for any reason other than I found it exceptionally attractive. I do find it illogical to penalize coins with muted luster due to the presence of natural toning. The same coin when processed should not be worthy of a high grade. This is obviously a common and relatively inexpensive coin so no financial loss really in the grade differences, just surprised.
Latin American Collection
To be clear - I'm not suggesting this coin should EVER be dipped. I rather like it just how it is and I think it's fantastic. The grading difference is just the variation in what each of the companies looks for (with PCGS placing a little more emphasis on luster across the board).
<< <i>My guess is that it was an NGC 58 and is now a PCGS 53 or 55 >>
This.
<< <i>
<< <i>My guess is that it was an NGC 58 and is now a PCGS 53 or 55. It all depends on remaining luster which is where the two grading companies differ most, in my experience. NGC will grant a 58 for a circulated coin with no high point rub, whereas PCGS requires 50%+ remaining luster for that grade. >>
I think that you are spot on with this statement. PCGS graded it a 53 while NGC had it as a 58. The luster is naturally muted due to the attractive toning which PCGS discounted. I was surprised at the grade as the coin has AU58 detail. Seems this grading behavior just encourages dipping out naturally toned coins. >>
Yeah..they do the same with Barber Halves as a rule.