Pogue IV

Still shaking my head over the "bidding" action or non "action" on the 1804 dollar and 1822 $5.
Most bizarre auction and "bidding" I've ever seen in art, wine, sports cars or autos.
Ouch. The word embarrassing came up often post auction. The post auction buzz was tasty
Mark
Most bizarre auction and "bidding" I've ever seen in art, wine, sports cars or autos.
Ouch. The word embarrassing came up often post auction. The post auction buzz was tasty
Mark
Walker Proof Digital Album
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
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Very odd. $10M for the 1804 $1, and $7M for the 1822 $5 seem like market competitive prices - but neither was enough. These are nice, but they are not Picassos. And now they are very slightly stigmatized for having not sold. (Who knows, maybe they sell for more privately - if so, more power to the consignor & auction house. It's generally not a good strategy tho.)
It would have been nice to have seen paddles in the air on either of these coins rather then "book or phone bids".
mark
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
Very odd. $10M for the 1804 $1, and $7M for the 1822 $5 seem like market competitive prices - but neither was enough. These are nice, but they are not Picassos. And now they are very slightly stigmatized for having not sold. (Who knows, maybe they sell for more privately - if so, more power to the consignor & auction house. It's generally not a good strategy tho.)
Hopefully, the coins will always be the coins.
The stigmatization will be on the short-term to maybe mid-term market for them. The word "pall" comes to mind.
As Roadrunner points out, it's safe to assume the house and consignor have advisers who know what they are doing.
The bid on the 1822 seemed plenty of money for that coin ($7.5 MILL all in). Not sure why that's wasn't let go. Having been owned by the Pogues for 34 years, it may have been difficult to let go.
It could be the same reason I can't sell my $1,000 coins for $5,000
Contursi bought the 1794 SP66 $ for $3 MILL or so and then advertised for years at nearly 3X that. That didn't deter him. Eventually, a buyer came along at $7 MILL.
siliconvalleycoins.com
Maybe RR. I know that if it were me and I could have held on to just one coin out of the whole collection, that 1822 would have been the one....
For me it would have been only the 1804. PF68 trumps AU50 for 19th century US rarities. Or from the old days, PF65/66 trumps XF45. There are 3 1822's known. Could even be another one out there. Another 1804 dollar showing up would have little to no change on the price structure.
The 1870-s half dime and 1873-cc NA dime are both unique and in 64/65 condition. Both of these sell for 1/3 or so of what the 1822 was "apparently" bid to. Can't quite wrap my head around those comparisons. The 1822 wins the "freshness" award having been off the market for 32 years. But, it just got a tad of tarnish on tonight's appearance.
mark
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
It could be the same reason I can't sell my $1,000 coins for $5,000
Wouldn't be the first time this occurred.
Everything is all right!
Maybe they'll end on eBay next week, ya think? At least it would be a lower commission that way.
Great Collections would be a better choice.
Wondercoin
and the 1804 for $8.5m
I learned a lot tonight. Light bulb kind of stuff
mark
Incandescent, fluorescent or LED?
Very odd. $10M for the 1804 $1, and $7M for the 1822 $5 seem like market competitive prices - but neither was enough. These are nice, but they are not Picassos. And now they are very slightly stigmatized for having not sold. (Who knows, maybe they sell for more privately - if so, more power to the consignor & auction house. It's generally not a good strategy tho.)
There is an old saying "Pigs feed, but hogs get slaughtered."
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It could be the same reason I can't sell my $1,000 coins for $5,000
Not quite analogous as that would be like comparing the 1804 dollar as having a market value of 50 million, and no one is declaring that.
peacockcoins
I learned a lot tonight. Light bulb kind of stuff
mark
Incandescent, fluorescent or LED?
LED, by the nose.,, on a beer budget here.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
Better 1804 pic.
Beautiful!
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Passing on bids that high seems a mistake to me ... but then I never dwelt in the upper reaches of the numismatic market.
You guys are missing the boat on what happened.
mark
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
Passing on bids that high seems a mistake to me ... but then I never dwelt in the upper reaches of the numismatic market.
You guys are missing the boat on what happened.
mark
No paddles and house said they would bid to raise price.
mark
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
Passing on bids that high seems a mistake to me ... but then I never dwelt in the upper reaches of the numismatic market.
You guys are missing the boat on what happened.
mark
Up the proverbial tributary without a paddle?
Passing on bids that high seems a mistake to me ... but then I never dwelt in the upper reaches of the numismatic market.
You guys are missing the boat on what happened.
mark
Up the proverbial tributary without a paddle?
Most appropriate coming from the Capt. of the USS Double Entendre
mark
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
Passing on bids that high seems a mistake to me ... but then I never dwelt in the upper reaches of the numismatic market.
You guys are missing the boat on what happened.
mark
This Reuters article has Sotheby's implying the underbids were real, though not clearly and definitively saying so. I think it would be helpful to know they were real as opposed to it being a meaningless dance of dueling false bids well above what legitimate bids would be.
Sounds like some think that was the case with there being no legitimate under bids. I don't know what the situation was, but it seems extreme to go to the lengths of having fake split bids and all the pausing for time to ponder the next bid if they were not for real.
People want to know. I demand investigations by congress and the Jerry Springer Show! Or is there no difference?
http://www.reuters.com/article...S&feedName=topNews
"To Be Esteemed Be Useful" - 1792 Birch Cent --- "I personally think we developed language because of our deep need to complain." - Lily Tomlin
Reuters couldn't even get through the first sentence without an inaccuracy.
"The collection focused on non-machine manufactured currency made from 1793 to the 1830s, said David Tripp, Sotheby's worldwide senior numismatic consultant."
I presume that David Tripp knows that a screw type press is a machine but something got misunderstood somewhere.
"Tuesday's auction marked only the second time in over a century that collectors have a chance to compete for the rare amber-colored coin, which also features Lady Liberty, this time donning a cape with "LIBERTY" printed on its side."
Cape with LIBERTY? She's wearing a cape on her head?
My 1866 Philly Mint Set
If I were the highest real bid, I would have felt like I was used.
If the highest bidder actually would have won and then found out he was shilled all the way up there, the "used" feeling would have changed to the "got the shaft" feeling very quickly.
If I were the highest real bid, I would have felt like I was used.
Especially if you were one of the few big shots who didn't know how high the reserve was set. Apparently or at least by conjecture, the Legend team and others got some word on at least the approximate size of the reserve such that they confidently predicted a NO SALE well before the auction.
The simpler explanation is that "someone" had to bid the coin up to the reserve to help establish current market value. Someone could have been compensated to be the chosen bidder to take it all the way up to reserve....knowing or not knowing whether they'd get the coin or not.
The Mysterious Egyptian Magic Coin
Coins in Movies
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Maybe this is all part of the game, but I do feel cheated. The Pogue auction centered around these two coins. Of course, the other coins are fantastic but the idea of these two rarities being sold together on the same night was much of the hype. I bought the catalogue. I bought a couple books regarding this historic sale from stacks---one entirely about the 1822. And now it appears that they really weren't for sale. I guess if anything , it has made me even more skeptical of auctions---and maybe that is a good thing.
It is a good thing to be skeptical. It was exactly my takeaway from sitting through it.
mark
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
Maybe this is all part of the game, but I do feel cheated. The Pogue auction centered around these two coins. Of course, the other coins are fantastic but the idea of these two rarities being sold together on the same night was much of the hype. I bought the catalogue. I bought a couple books regarding this historic sale from stacks---one entirely about the 1822. And now it appears that they really weren't for sale. I guess if anything , it has made me even more skeptical of auctions---and maybe that is a good thing.
This is an interesting take.
You are describing this as though it was a football game or other form of entertainment for the public, and not merely a vehicle to match a coin seller with a coin buyer.
Coin Rarities Online
Maybe this is all part of the game, but I do feel cheated. The Pogue auction centered around these two coins. Of course, the other coins are fantastic but the idea of these two rarities being sold together on the same night was much of the hype. I bought the catalogue. I bought a couple books regarding this historic sale from stacks---one entirely about the 1822. And now it appears that they really weren't for sale. I guess if anything , it has made me even more skeptical of auctions---and maybe that is a good thing.
This is an interesting take.
You are describing this as though it was a football game or other form of entertainment for the public, and not merely a vehicle to match a coin seller with a coin buyer.
I see your point--but disagree from this prospective---although I wasn't bidding on those coins, I do have an interest beyond mere rooting interest. I would say 99% of the people following it were like me to some degree. There are a handful of people in the coin market that could plop down $5,000,000 or more on one coin. But even though I did not bid on these particular coins, I think it goes to the integrity of our marketplace that things will be done in an above board way. If I lose confidence in two coins that are the subject of the most scrutiny the coin world has to offer---how does that impact me when I am considering bidding on that key date missing from my set for $5000? If these coins had been outright sales for say 11 million and 7 million each---we would have heard that the coin market is healthy and this sale was a good omen for all coins. I think it is fair to say that given what some have described as a "bizzare" result, that it too may reflect on the overall health of the coin market.
mark
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
Maybe this is all part of the game, but I do feel cheated. The Pogue auction centered around these two coins. Of course, the other coins are fantastic but the idea of these two rarities being sold together on the same night was much of the hype. I bought the catalogue. I bought a couple books regarding this historic sale from stacks---one entirely about the 1822. And now it appears that they really weren't for sale. I guess if anything , it has made me even more skeptical of auctions---and maybe that is a good thing.
This is an interesting take.
You are describing this as though it was a football game or other form of entertainment for the public, and not merely a vehicle to match a coin seller with a coin buyer.
The books on the collection and the 1822 were sold as a form of entertainment for the public, not just to the likely bidders. I wonder when SB knew the reserves made them unlikely to sell. Was it only recently or from the beginning when the collection was consigned?
"To Be Esteemed Be Useful" - 1792 Birch Cent --- "I personally think we developed language because of our deep need to complain." - Lily Tomlin
Pouge currently loves and values these two coins more and can better afford to own them than anyone else. So they stay with him, for now.
No doubt that an auction with a 94% sell through rate in terms of number of lots is quite successful while a sell through rate of under 50% in terms of value is pretty bad. It was unusual, to be sure.