Economics of Grading Modern Coins

When I consider the coins I've sent to PCGS for grading, I do an economic assessment knowing that the total cost/coin for grading is in the $22-25 range. If my cost of my raw coin plus the cost to grade is less than what the PCGS graded coin costs, then I send it in. Otherwise, it makes more sense to sell my raw coin and purchase the PCGS coin. In my coins, I'm not considering high-end coins worth thousands which leaves other considerations.
But I don't understand how there are so many PCGS modern coins being sold on Ebay for under $10. What are the situations when someone would send these coins in to be graded?
Economy grading while including both way shipping costs and the PCGS submission fee at best gets the price to around $22/coin. There's a bulk submission rate for submitting hundreds of coins, but there are restrictions such as many of the coins have the be the same denomination/date/mintmark and that wouldn't get the average cost of submission low enough.
I hypothesize...
1. They were hoping for a MS67 and instead got a MS64 and are just dumping their coin.
2. Some people don't consider economics when submitting coins and will submit low value coins just to have everything in their collection PCGS.
3. Are there are large dealers who negotiate special rates to make submitting these low value coins economical?
Are there other reasons why low-value modern coins are submitted for grading? Thanks. A friend and I have been wondering this for awhile.
But I don't understand how there are so many PCGS modern coins being sold on Ebay for under $10. What are the situations when someone would send these coins in to be graded?
Economy grading while including both way shipping costs and the PCGS submission fee at best gets the price to around $22/coin. There's a bulk submission rate for submitting hundreds of coins, but there are restrictions such as many of the coins have the be the same denomination/date/mintmark and that wouldn't get the average cost of submission low enough.
I hypothesize...
1. They were hoping for a MS67 and instead got a MS64 and are just dumping their coin.
2. Some people don't consider economics when submitting coins and will submit low value coins just to have everything in their collection PCGS.
3. Are there are large dealers who negotiate special rates to make submitting these low value coins economical?
Are there other reasons why low-value modern coins are submitted for grading? Thanks. A friend and I have been wondering this for awhile.
I love the 3 P's: PB&J, PBR and PCGS.
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Comments
Key to profits lies with submitter's ability to screen out the non-70's before submitting. Appears many flippers just submit the whole mint order.
No Way Out: Stimulus and Money Printing Are the Only Path Left
1962-D Lincoln Cent $8.95
Mostly modern commemorative's I would buy from the Mint or on eBay, but also 1968-1971 proofs and 65-67 SMS coins.
70 DCAM's were rare back then, like 2% and they did well on eBay which had a really low FVF and you got paid with checks and MO's.
I tended to throw a lot of coins at PCGS to see what would stick, and made quite a few 68-71 PR67 Kennedys
Over time PCGS raised their prices, and so did eBay. I started submitting commems ATS and would get more 70 UCAM's than 69 UCAM's. They didn't sell for as much as a PCGS 70, but more then a PCGS 69.
As prices rose it no longer was profitable so I stopped but have spent tens of thousands on grading fees.
There was a guy here, Russ, who once scored a 69 DCAM AH he got off eBay. He could pick a AH from a mile away. Sold it for around 9k.
Today the nice people on eBay are cheaper / poorer and for the most part flippers today make money for TPG's, eBay, PP and the USPS. But back in the day flipping help fund my Type Set.
I started playing again last year. I took a bath on the Gold Kennedy's, and recently got 2 70 Jackie's and 1 HR 69 and 1 HR 70. I'll be luck if I break even.
6 PCGS Jefferson Nickels
also looking at this listing you just referenced, many times I ll buy collections that contain coins of this caliber, and Ill list in groups just like the nickels you see, to get rid of them. Not cost effective to sell individually , so I group em
jim
<< <i>But somewhere back in the ownership chain, someone made the odd decision to send some of these coins off for grading. >>
They didn't know what the grade was going to be before they submitted the coin for grading. The "winners" are the PR-70 DCAM coins. The "losers" are anything else. It's like playing a shot machine. You hope that the winners will out weight the losers.
Even those of us who know how grade coins can't predict what is going to get a 69 and 70 with total accuracy. One might go over the entire surface of the coin with a 10X glass and find a tiny "hole" in the surface of an PR-69. That might have been the reason for the grade, but you never know for sure because the grading services never tell why a coin got a certain grade.
If you can see an obvious defect, that seals it. That coin should not be submitted for grading, but for many Proofs it's not a real easy call.
1. BULK grading. Coins can get encapsulated for a lot less than the $20-$22. I will not quote the numbers, but it is a lot less than your assumptive $20-$22. Often, dealers in this space, send in rolls of this stuff hoping for a pop grade where they can really make up for it.
2. Lack of knowledge. I have seen families, send "grandpas" entire collection in for grading even though 99% of it was common or low grade. Very sad.
If I need something, I just go to ebay and buy it. That's the economics of grading modern coins.
Once bitten, twice shy.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
sometimes the answer is as simple as different collectors do things for reasons you and I may never understand or be able to figure out.
Beyond that it simply is not economical in the majority of cases based on the OP's cost vs pcgs value criteria. I think his calculations are right on and makes a lot of sense.
Even if mods make 70 its hard to get anywhere near all the money (per price guides). I am not a player of trying to get 70's on mods for this reason. In addition many USM mint issues drop dramatically in the after market once all the newness hype blows over. Further more slabbed mods can become spotted over time - try and sell a spotted 70. BEWARE of ebay sellers selling slabbed 70 mods cheap where you do not receive the coin pctured! Your risking getting some low end piece of spotted trash. I recently returned 2 of these. I guess the guy thought I was too lazy to go stand in line at USPS and send them back for refund.
Take a look at what some of the slabbed cupro nickel mods are bringing on ebay, many less than $10. In addition one can acquire many one ounce silver mod commem or ASW issues in slabbed 69 for less than melt plus $15. However I would not recommend bulking up on these - storage problems. I am currently thinning my slabbed portfolio roster down to 60 pieces. This simplifies record keeping, storage, and tax filing.
It was during this period that I believe NGC lowered itself to second class status when it came to the certified modern coin market. This was obviously a bulk coin grading situation, and at least from this group, I don't think that NGC put enough effort into grading the coins. I've understood that bulk grading can go as low as $8 a coin, at least back then. Maybe these Sacajawea Dollars were graded for even less, but in my opinion it was no bargain.
<< <i>Here's an auction of 6 PCGS coins where I wonder what the person was thinking when he submitted at least 4 of them.
6 PCGS Jefferson Nickels >>
Bulk Submissions
The name is LEE!
This week, my son made his very first pop 1/0 business strike (MS68) modern quarter at PCGS- a coin that might be worth upwards of $1,500 -$2,000, but perhaps less. With it, he spent maybe about $700-$800 total in other grading fees on coins that mostly graded a point or two less and are probably not worth the grading fee cost and the overall cost of the coins. Let's say he ends up selling some of these other coins for as little as $4 or $5 each and loses many hundreds of dollars on this "other stuff" when the dust settles. To me, a small price to pay for the fabulous finest known business strike modern coin Justin just found and preserved, for the future generations of collectors, in a PCGS holder.
But, to the myriad folks who might do the same thing Justin just did but not end up with the pop 1/0 - just a pile of lower grade coins- it would not surprise me if many "lost their shirts" submitting bulk. There is a learning curve and, quite often, an extended period of time that one needs to "pay their dues" to be successful at bulk grading- especially the business strike coins.
As always, just my two cents. Wondercoin.
I love modern coins (yes they're low value now ) and I'd rather get some already slabbed by others than to put forth the effort necessary as already mentioned with wondercoin (Mitch) in this thread (numismatically and economically).
I'm glad you addressed it sir (Mitch). I'd already alluded to you and others regarding "low value " modern coins, slabbed by the TPG's in the first post. For me, tt's just a matter of what it is. And let's face it, economics dictates more than the market, for any of us on a budget.
I would not mind having a set of MS and PR coins instead of having them in albums. We know over time the albums will tarnish these coins and they'll never get a lofty grade. EVER.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
I fail to follow this logic as you'd never submit a coin worth less than $220 for regular submissions or less than $130 for bulk submissions. I think the more appropriate measurement is at what cost was the coin acquired vs. what will be the value of the coin if it makes the desired grade. I can easily see the value of submitting a $70 coin if I purchased it for $35. But for a less expensive coin, it's much more difficult to purchase at enough of a bargain to make submitting worthwhile.
Or the logic is how important that coin is for your collection and keeping it protected in a PCGS slab.
Wondercoin
<< <i> It's like playing a shot machine. >>
Love that typo!