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What determines a key or semi key date?

For you... What determines a key date or semi key date coin? I am trying to formulate a long term plan and a selection criteria for my collection. A lot of VAM's and Snow varieties may only have 5 to 50 graded examples. Is it a particularly scarce grade for that date? Total known Population? Historic Mintage numbers? Where do scarce varieties, VAM's, or Snow IHC (plug in favorite series) fit into the mix? For example... the 1878 8TF (14.whatever VAMS) are in high demand while some interesting, yet equally scarce but obscure Snow variety goes ignored.
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Don
RMR: 'Wer, wenn ich schriee, hörte mich denn aus der Engel Ordnungen?'
CJ: 'No one!' [Ain't no angels in the coin biz]
Being a somewhat "modern low-mintage rarity" it was likely hoarded. As such it is a "key date" I will probably never own as it seems like a terrible value. Oh, look it seems i've gotten off on a tangent!
RMR: 'Wer, wenn ich schriee, hörte mich denn aus der Engel Ordnungen?'
CJ: 'No one!' [Ain't no angels in the coin biz]
RMR: 'Wer, wenn ich schriee, hörte mich denn aus der Engel Ordnungen?'
CJ: 'No one!' [Ain't no angels in the coin biz]
A mix of real collector demand and dealer promotion.
This as well as the catalog price mentioned by Bill Jones.
And fwiw, none of those actually ensure that the coin is indeed a "key" date...only that it's popular, promoted, and/or expensive vs. most other dates in the series.
When I first started out in seated quarters, most of the key dates were not considered key dates at all....but rather 2nd or 3rd tier. The ones with the biggest price tags tended to be coins with low mintages or promoted by dealers. For decades, some coins like the 1878-s and the 1855-s quarters, rode on the coat tails of their scarcer half dollar sisters.
In the Peace dollar series, the 1934-S is considered the key date in MS grades (rightly so from survival estimates and realized prices), but there are always at least a dozen to chose from a handful of Internet sellers. They come up at auction all the time. The 1921 and 1928 are considered key dates, but in reality these aren't all that hard to find either, up to MS65, and even MS66 for the 1921.
The overlooked semi-keys in my opinion are the 23-S, 24-S, 26-P, 26-S, 27-D, and 27-S, at least in the grades I'm looking for. They come to auction very much less frequently than the 34-S. Finding a PQ example is many, many times more difficult than finding nice MS65 or even MS66 34-S coins.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
And as someone stated, the key/semi key status can be quite relative. A 21D walker is readily available in quantities in low
grades, but in AU you'd be lucky to see even one on the bourse of a major show. Same for a number of the early and middle dates
of this popular series. Most large cents by date are readily available in quantities, but the early and middle dates (apart from the hoard coins) with choice surfaces are the 'keys'.
On eBay, the seller.
For me, I am a contrarian generally. Research the series, look at populations, prices, auction appearances, qualitatively is the issue also a condition rarity, most importantly is there a reason for demand to increase if you are looking for a collection which will hold or increase in value. Don't compromise on quality even for a higher grade. Buy the best quality, not grade that you can afford.
Latin American Collection
An addendum to popularity as a factor is what I would call "relativity", I hope someone can come up with a better word for it. What would be a key date in one series is much less so in another. I have an 1885 quarter eagle in the Liberty head series and the PCGS pop reports say they've graded 63 business strikes. In the Indian head quarter eagles, the 1911-D strong D is listed as having 3,424 graded by PCGS. Yet the 1911-D easily outdistances the 1885 in price because it's the key of the Indian head series and is a proverbial big fish in a small pond. People like collecting the Indians and it's a series that can be completed. A coin with the same scarcity as the 1885 in the Indian head series would go for huge bucks.
Quite true. The Liberty Quarter Eagle series contains 19 post Civil War Philadelphia issues with mintage figures under 5,000. Few other than specialists are aware of them or care about them. Not many will ever attempt to complete the series. They will never be popular or key dates but at least they are still affordable for those who do care.
https://www.pcgs.com/setregistry/gold/liberty-head-2-1-gold-major-sets/liberty-head-2-1-gold-basic-set-circulation-strikes-1840-1907-cac/alltimeset/268163
For you... What determines a key date or semi key date coin? I am trying to formulate a long term plan and a selection criteria for my collection. A lot of VAM's and Snow varieties may only have 5 to 50 graded examples. Is it a particularly scarce grade for that date? Total known Population? Historic Mintage numbers? Where do scarce varieties, VAM's, or Snow IHC (plug in favorite series) fit into the mix? For example... the 1878 8TF (14.whatever VAMS) are in high demand while some interesting, yet equally scarce but obscure Snow variety goes ignored.
Varieties to me are not traditional key or semi key dates unless published in the red book .
I give away money. I collect money.
I don’t love money . I do love the Lord God.
it comes to Mint State or Mint State Full Band examples.
Anyone that believes otherwise has just stared at the mintage
figures in the Red Book for far too long and have just NEVER
properly researched the information like I have. It is really
quite simple to properly do the analysis. It just takes a little time.
Heck, I even posted a thread on it a few years back.
Looking for Top Pop Mercury Dime Varieties & High Grade Mercury Dime Toners.
Key date coins should have some history to them as well, with prior generations of collectors appreciating them for the rarities they are. They need not be absolutely rare.
Some people would define key dates based on rarity in the grade range they collect in. By that logic, key date Lincolns would include coins like 1926-S if you collect in MS-65 RD, but certainly not 1909-S VDB, which is common in Unc.
Others simply look at prices across the board. A coin that is expensive in all grades for its series counts as a key. By that system, the 1909-S VDB is a key to the Lincoln series- even though we know there are literally thousands of them available in Gem Unc. One cannot get an example in any grade without paying a lot. A semi-key is expensive only in the upper grades, so one can skirt the issue by purchasing a lower grade coin. That definition would make the 1926-S Lincoln a semi-key.
I tend to favor the second definition as a collector of Seated material. By definition #1, the real keys to the Seated quarter would be dates like 1859-S, 1860-S, and 1861-S to anyone who collects the series in nice Unc. grades, as there are no MS-63 or finer specimens of these dates known. The 1873-CC No Arrows is less of a key date, because there are a few them available in Unc. (out of a total population of five coins). That just doesn't make sense to me. By definition #2, the 1873-CC No Arrows is the #1 key to the series because it is extremely expensive in all grades. Other expensive keys include 1870-CC, 1871-CC, and 1873-CC Arr., but coins like 1859-S would count as semi-keys because they can be had in G-4 for a reasonable price.
Of course, scarcity feeds into some specimens - but is not a factor in other scarce pieces.
Cheers, RickO