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An appraisal contest

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  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,205 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Eh. It’s all for fun. Doesn’t matter much in the real world

  • 291fifth291fifth Posts: 24,698 ✭✭✭✭✭

    When you are selling coins at this lofty level you need to know the players. You need to know who has the money and who has the ego that demands he/she own these trophy coins.

    All glory is fleeting.
  • lonn47lonn47 Posts: 236 ✭✭✭

    okay here we go thats a nice 3.2 mil coin, its has been down a few roads but still in good loving shape 1804 over 200 years old and the last of that era type of coin so hold on to it and keep it off the roads. thanks

  • MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,419 ✭✭✭✭✭

    M> @privaterarecoincollector said:

    @tradedollarnut said:
    It might be a factor...if the 1804 above wasn’t a nice coin. It is. So shrug

    If one is to believe the bidding, the Pogues value their 1804 at $10M. If that’s the case, how does it hurt the third finest?

    doesnt matter how the Pogues value their coin. Only matters if its really sold and at what price. I can value my 1795 Ten also at 4 Million.

    There appeared to be an underbidder on the phone. If it was a real bidder and not a shill of some sort, his bid is a valid data point.

    Andy Lustig

    Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

    Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
  • jonrunsjonruns Posts: 1,197 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited June 10, 2019 4:38AM

    @291fifth said:
    When you are selling coins at this lofty level you need to know the players. You need to know who has the money and who has the ego that demands he/she own these trophy coins.

    +1

    I can guarantee you that the guy who paid $91 million for the Koons Rabbit did not use any analytical approach...all your algorithms are just going to come up with a lower price...past performance is no indicator of future results...

  • jesbrokenjesbroken Posts: 10,615 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I can't grade a $200 coin to give a quote for someone else from a photo, so if I like the photo of the coin and really wanted it I would bid up to what I was able, and sometimes even when I am not able.
    Jim


    When a man who is honestly mistaken hears the truth, he will either quit being mistaken or cease to be honest....Abraham Lincoln

    Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.....Mark Twain
  • TurboSnailTurboSnail Posts: 1,668 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I would simply add 15% and have a estimate of $3.8 million from the last public documented price of $3.29 million in 2017.

    I doubt there are a massive amount of buyers for a coin with this caliber. So I would just research a few potential buyers who would be interested in this coin and their current buying power to check if there was a significant change. Anyhow, two years is too short to have a major impact on the value of this coin.

  • topstuftopstuf Posts: 14,803 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @tradedollarnut said:
    You’ve been commissioned to appraise this coin. Your client will NOT accept a WAG - you must have data to support your value conclusion . Show your method and state the current value. Best appraisal wins a lil sumptin sumptin from my old box of junk stuff.

    When does the contest end?

  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,205 ✭✭✭✭✭

    It already did. I need to sit down and review each response...preferably without two five year olds yelling in my ear

  • DollarAfterDollarDollarAfterDollar Posts: 3,215 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Well, I'm glad I'll never need to worry about such things.

    If you do what you always did, you get what you always got.
  • JohnFJohnF Posts: 339 ✭✭✭✭✭

    A great coin and very interesting discussion. IMO, it's worth exactly what someone will pay for it, and the seller is willing to part with it. Seven-figure-coin transactions are rarely rational by the standards of traditional financial models.

    John Feigenbaum
    Whitman Brands: President/CEO (www.greysheet.com; www.whitman.com)
    PNG: Executive Director (www.pngdealers.org)
  • CoinPhysicistCoinPhysicist Posts: 603 ✭✭✭✭
    edited June 11, 2019 4:38AM

    @tradedollarnut Do you not think that using 20-25 year old data is a little questionable in this pricing exercise? The market has changed a lot in 25 years, has it not? I personally don't think it's a fair comparison. Especially when newer data is available. I understand why you might have chosen that data to use, but I am not convinced that was the right data to use.

    Edit: Typo.

    Successful transactions with: wondercoin, Tetromibi, PerryHall, PlatinumDuck, JohnMaben/Pegasus Coin & Jewelry, CoinFlip, and coinlieutenant.

  • SanctionIISanctionII Posts: 12,618 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Interesting thread.

    Try as one might to use one's knowledge, experience, intellect and creativity to come up with a methodology that would allow one to accurately state [ in reality accurately "predict"] the market value of an item of property, including a collectible coin, successfully doing so is impossible.

    For multiple reasons one cannot accurately predict any future event, including a sales price of an item.

  • CatbertCatbert Posts: 7,618 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @CoinPhysicist said:
    @tradedollarnut Do you not think that using 20-25 year old data is a little questionable in this pricing exercise? The market has changed a lot in 25 years, has it not? I personally don't think it's a fair comparison. Especially when newer data is available. I understand why you might have chosen that data to use, but I am not convinced that was the right data to use.

    Edit: Typo.

    And, how does inflation affect valuation when using these numbers?

    Seated Half Society member #38
    "Got a flaming heart, can't get my fill"
  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,205 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @CoinPhysicist said:
    @tradedollarnut Do you not think that using 20-25 year old data is a little questionable in this pricing exercise? The market has changed a lot in 25 years, has it not? I personally don't think it's a fair comparison. Especially when newer data is available. I understand why you might have chosen that data to use, but I am not convinced that was the right data to use.

    Edit: Typo.

    I used the three most recent ultra rarity sales...fresh data. Those particular coins last sold at auction in a tight time frame (1996/1997). An 1804 dollar of the same grade sold in the same sale. What more could a reasonable person ask for in pertinent data?

  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,205 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Winner: cameonut
    Honorable mention: batman

    Both used comparative methods in their evaluation. PM me your mailing addresses and I’ll send you out a lil sumtin from the stuff-box

  • CoinPhysicistCoinPhysicist Posts: 603 ✭✭✭✭

    @tradedollarnut said:

    @CoinPhysicist said:
    @tradedollarnut Do you not think that using 20-25 year old data is a little questionable in this pricing exercise? The market has changed a lot in 25 years, has it not? I personally don't think it's a fair comparison. Especially when newer data is available. I understand why you might have chosen that data to use, but I am not convinced that was the right data to use.

    Edit: Typo.

    I used the three most recent ultra rarity sales...fresh data. Those particular coins last sold at auction in a tight time frame (1996/1997). An 1804 dollar of the same grade sold in the same sale. What more could a reasonable person ask for in pertinent data?

    But your not... your key ratios are from 1996 and 1997 in your first example and 2000 and 1999 in your second example. I think it is a Herculean size assumption to assume that these ratios might hold even remotely true today. You must agree that the market has changed a lot in the past nearly 25 years...

    Successful transactions with: wondercoin, Tetromibi, PerryHall, PlatinumDuck, JohnMaben/Pegasus Coin & Jewelry, CoinFlip, and coinlieutenant.

  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,205 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @CoinPhysicist said:

    @tradedollarnut said:

    @CoinPhysicist said:
    @tradedollarnut Do you not think that using 20-25 year old data is a little questionable in this pricing exercise? The market has changed a lot in 25 years, has it not? I personally don't think it's a fair comparison. Especially when newer data is available. I understand why you might have chosen that data to use, but I am not convinced that was the right data to use.

    Edit: Typo.

    I used the three most recent ultra rarity sales...fresh data. Those particular coins last sold at auction in a tight time frame (1996/1997). An 1804 dollar of the same grade sold in the same sale. What more could a reasonable person ask for in pertinent data?

    But your not... your key ratios are from 1996 and 1997 in your first example and 2000 and 1999 in your second example. I think it is a Herculean size assumption to assume that these ratios might hold even remotely true today. You must agree that the market has changed a lot in the past nearly 25 years...

    Ok, let me ask you this: if historically a gem 1804 dollar has ALWAYS sold for more than a gem 1885 trade dollar, and a gem 1885 trade dollar was just sold at auction then isn’t it logical to assign a higher value than the 1885 price realized to the 1804?

    Absent some sort of dramatic change in stature between the two (none has occurred), I think it absolutely proper.

  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,205 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited June 11, 2019 11:45AM

    1804 sold in 1941 at auction for $4250
    1885 sold in 1946 at auction for $1450

    Stature

    Same grade 1804 sold in 1997 at auction for $1.815M
    1885 sold in 1997 at auction for $907,500

    Stature

    1885 just sold at auction for $3.96M...what value do you assign to 1804 in an independent appraisal using your numismatic knowledge? Methods may vary but isn’t it logically more than what the 1885 realized?

  • CoinPhysicistCoinPhysicist Posts: 603 ✭✭✭✭

    S

    @tradedollarnut said:

    @CoinPhysicist said:

    @tradedollarnut said:

    @CoinPhysicist said:
    @tradedollarnut Do you not think that using 20-25 year old data is a little questionable in this pricing exercise? The market has changed a lot in 25 years, has it not? I personally don't think it's a fair comparison. Especially when newer data is available. I understand why you might have chosen that data to use, but I am not convinced that was the right data to use.

    Edit: Typo.

    I used the three most recent ultra rarity sales...fresh data. Those particular coins last sold at auction in a tight time frame (1996/1997). An 1804 dollar of the same grade sold in the same sale. What more could a reasonable person ask for in pertinent data?

    But your not... your key ratios are from 1996 and 1997 in your first example and 2000 and 1999 in your second example. I think it is a Herculean size assumption to assume that these ratios might hold even remotely true today. You must agree that the market has changed a lot in the past nearly 25 years...

    Ok, let me ask you this: if historically a gem 1804 dollar has ALWAYS sold for more than a gem 1885 trade dollar, and a gem 1885 trade dollar was just sold at auction then isn’t it logical to assign a higher value than the 1885 price realized to the 1804?

    Absent some sort of dramatic change in stature between the two (none has occurred), I think it absolutely proper.

    So you don’t think the high end coin market has changed since the late 1990s? If you don’t think so, that’s fair.

    If i have time after I get off work tonight I will test that claim later. I would be surprised to see no change after 25 years.

    Successful transactions with: wondercoin, Tetromibi, PerryHall, PlatinumDuck, JohnMaben/Pegasus Coin & Jewelry, CoinFlip, and coinlieutenant.

  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,205 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @CoinPhysicist said:

    S

    @tradedollarnut said:

    @CoinPhysicist said:

    @tradedollarnut said:

    @CoinPhysicist said:
    @tradedollarnut Do you not think that using 20-25 year old data is a little questionable in this pricing exercise? The market has changed a lot in 25 years, has it not? I personally don't think it's a fair comparison. Especially when newer data is available. I understand why you might have chosen that data to use, but I am not convinced that was the right data to use.

    Edit: Typo.

    I used the three most recent ultra rarity sales...fresh data. Those particular coins last sold at auction in a tight time frame (1996/1997). An 1804 dollar of the same grade sold in the same sale. What more could a reasonable person ask for in pertinent data?

    But your not... your key ratios are from 1996 and 1997 in your first example and 2000 and 1999 in your second example. I think it is a Herculean size assumption to assume that these ratios might hold even remotely true today. You must agree that the market has changed a lot in the past nearly 25 years...

    Ok, let me ask you this: if historically a gem 1804 dollar has ALWAYS sold for more than a gem 1885 trade dollar, and a gem 1885 trade dollar was just sold at auction then isn’t it logical to assign a higher value than the 1885 price realized to the 1804?

    Absent some sort of dramatic change in stature between the two (none has occurred), I think it absolutely proper.

    So you don’t think the high end coin market has changed since the late 1990s? If you don’t think so, that’s fair.

    If i have time after I get off work tonight I will test that claim later. I would be surprised to see no change after 25 years.

    Meaning what - that a gem 1885 trade dollar is now more desirable than a gem 1804 dollar? No - that has not changed since 1997. Nor since 1947...or 2017 for that matter. There has NEVER been an 1885 trade dollar that was more valuable than an 1804 dollar on a grade by grade basis. Ever.

  • DollarAfterDollarDollarAfterDollar Posts: 3,215 ✭✭✭✭✭

    This was an interesting topic and was enjoyable to consider the input of others. I'm curious if matters such as eye appeal (comparing apples to apples), the state of the hobby, alternative investment options (that are "hot") etc factor into appraised value as well?

    If you do what you always did, you get what you always got.
  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,205 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Great post

  • CoinPhysicistCoinPhysicist Posts: 603 ✭✭✭✭

    @tradedollarnut said:

    @CoinPhysicist said:

    S

    @tradedollarnut said:

    @CoinPhysicist said:

    @tradedollarnut said:

    @CoinPhysicist said:
    @tradedollarnut Do you not think that using 20-25 year old data is a little questionable in this pricing exercise? The market has changed a lot in 25 years, has it not? I personally don't think it's a fair comparison. Especially when newer data is available. I understand why you might have chosen that data to use, but I am not convinced that was the right data to use.

    Edit: Typo.

    I used the three most recent ultra rarity sales...fresh data. Those particular coins last sold at auction in a tight time frame (1996/1997). An 1804 dollar of the same grade sold in the same sale. What more could a reasonable person ask for in pertinent data?

    But your not... your key ratios are from 1996 and 1997 in your first example and 2000 and 1999 in your second example. I think it is a Herculean size assumption to assume that these ratios might hold even remotely true today. You must agree that the market has changed a lot in the past nearly 25 years...

    Ok, let me ask you this: if historically a gem 1804 dollar has ALWAYS sold for more than a gem 1885 trade dollar, and a gem 1885 trade dollar was just sold at auction then isn’t it logical to assign a higher value than the 1885 price realized to the 1804?

    Absent some sort of dramatic change in stature between the two (none has occurred), I think it absolutely proper.

    So you don’t think the high end coin market has changed since the late 1990s? If you don’t think so, that’s fair.

    If i have time after I get off work tonight I will test that claim later. I would be surprised to see no change after 25 years.

    Meaning what - that a gem 1885 trade dollar is now more desirable than a gem 1804 dollar? No - that has not changed since 1997. Nor since 1947...or 2017 for that matter. There has NEVER been an 1885 trade dollar that was more valuable than an 1804 dollar on a grade by grade basis. Ever.

    So here is another example using your ratio technique with 25 year old data. #2 condition census Olsen-Hydeman specimen 1913 Liberty Head Nickel vs 1794 SP66 Silver Dollar. Chosen because both of them were auctioned twice within a close time period to each other both times.

    Nickel: Stack's 10/1993:245, $962,500. Dollar: 5/1991, $506,000.
    Nickel/Dollar ratio: 1.9.

    Nickel: HA 1/2014, $3,290,000. Dollar: 1/2013, $10,016,875.00.
    Nickel/Dollar ratio: 0.33.

    Things change over 25 years. In the early 1990s, the liberty head nickel was worth almost double the 1794 dollar. By 2014, the dollar was worth triple the nickel. Things can change. There is no reason that the ratio you quoted back in the 1990s should hold constant until today, in fact it probably doesn't.

    Successful transactions with: wondercoin, Tetromibi, PerryHall, PlatinumDuck, JohnMaben/Pegasus Coin & Jewelry, CoinFlip, and coinlieutenant.

  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,205 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited June 11, 2019 5:29PM

    Yes - Martin Logies wrote a book with scientific research showing that the 1794 was most likely the very first struck US dollar. Most certainly the first struck known example. This added many millions of dollars in value to the 1794. I know this for a fact because my high bid became $13M all in vs $7.5M all in.

    I am a dollar expert and know of NO such research regarding 1804 vs 1885 trade dollars. There is no black swan event so you are talking apples to oranges.

    The 1991 auction of the 1794 was at the very bottom of the market. Perhaps a distress sale which is ignored for appraisal purposes. Maybe Andy can expound.

  • CoinPhysicistCoinPhysicist Posts: 603 ✭✭✭✭
    edited June 11, 2019 5:49PM

    I'm trying very hard to keep it to coins that today are probably worth on the order of $1 million or so, but it's hard to find examples where auctions of 2 happened in a reasonable time span. So here is another example with a changed ratio, using the same nickel and the SP 66 1796 quarter.

    Nickel: Stack's 10/1993:245, $962,500. SP 66 1796 Quarter: 4/1997, $176,000.
    Nickel/Dollar ratio: 5.46.

    Nickel: HA 1/2014, $3,290,000. Quarter: HA 8/2014, $881,000.
    Nickel/Dollar ratio: 3.73.

    Anyways, I rest my case. I suppose we can agree to disagree. You're the one out there buying coins of this caliber, so in the end, my opinion really doesn't matter at all :smile: It was a fun thought experiment, so thank you for passing some time with me.

    Successful transactions with: wondercoin, Tetromibi, PerryHall, PlatinumDuck, JohnMaben/Pegasus Coin & Jewelry, CoinFlip, and coinlieutenant.

  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,205 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited June 11, 2019 8:13PM

    I don’t consider the 1796 quarter to be a classic rarity so I have never researched it in that manner. I can tell you that when I did extensive research on the classic rarities that they all followed the same linear path...subject to noise, of course

  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,313 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited June 11, 2019 8:37PM

    Regardless of finest known statures on 1913 LHN or 1885 TD'S, they don't carry the oomph of a US 1804 Silver Dollar. And a couple of grade points on an 1804 dollar from 65 to 67/68 is missing the bigger picture....when the better struck one is the PF65. It's an EAC thing. How did we get here where a couple grade points carries far more weight than a superior strike? Which one IS the best struck? Which ones are not rubbed/frictioned.

    1804 $'s are the Kings of American Coins, plain and simple. It has been that way since the later 1800's (though maybe the SP1794 has wiggled in there the past 10 yrs). Based on strike and eye appeal I consider the PF65 1804 as the better looking coin of the top 3 - it's simply marvelous. Maybe the 4th most valuable non-gold US rarity.

    Strike matters. And the "story" on the Type 1's is much better with deep historical data and far cleaner (ie legal) than on the Type 2 and 3's, and the 1913 5c and 1885 TD's. The higher ups in the US Govt authorized those Type 1's....that decision wasn't made at the US Mint Superintendent/Manager level as it was on the others coins. Take that all into account. Don't beat me up too hard as I'm just a bystander in this area.

    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • cameonut2011cameonut2011 Posts: 10,181 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited June 11, 2019 8:09PM

    @CoinPhysicist said:

    @tradedollarnut said:

    @CoinPhysicist said:
    @tradedollarnut Do you not think that using 20-25 year old data is a little questionable in this pricing exercise? The market has changed a lot in 25 years, has it not? I personally don't think it's a fair comparison. Especially when newer data is available. I understand why you might have chosen that data to use, but I am not convinced that was the right data to use.

    Edit: Typo.

    I used the three most recent ultra rarity sales...fresh data. Those particular coins last sold at auction in a tight time frame (1996/1997). An 1804 dollar of the same grade sold in the same sale. What more could a reasonable person ask for in pertinent data?

    But your not... your key ratios are from 1996 and 1997 in your first example and 2000 and 1999 in your second example. I think it is a Herculean size assumption to assume that these ratios might hold even remotely true today. You must agree that the market has changed a lot in the past nearly 25 years...

    I think TDN's point more broadly is that there is a reason that the 1804 dollars (the originals at least) have frequently been dubbed the "King of American" coins and for the longest time (through the 19th and 20th centuries if I am not mistaken), the issue was the most valuable U.S. coin. It was overtaken in the early 2000s only when the Treasury Department legitimated the Farouk 1933 Saint Gaudens Double Eagle and then TDN's specimen 1794 dollar broke the 8 figure barrier. After having outperformed the 1913 Liberty Head Nickel, the 1885 Trade Dollar, and others for a century or so, it would be very unlikely (although not impossible) that the others would surpass it.

    As for Mr. Lustig's point about being the finest known "V" nickel - I don't put as much weight to being "finest known" as he does. I think the 1913 LHN is more controversial and there are far fewer nickel collectors in general. I also think once you hit a certain point, the differences in grade matter less than they might for other coins and the price spread might not be as wide (rare is rare and there is a certain "basal" value). That is part of the reason that I went the other way and valued the 1804 dollar higher.

  • cameonut2011cameonut2011 Posts: 10,181 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @roadrunner said:
    Regardless of finest known statures on 1913 LHN or 1885 TD'S, they don't carry the oomph of a US 1804 Silver Dollar. And a couple of grade points on an 1804 dollar from 65 to 67/68 is missing the bigger picture....when the better struck one is the PF65. It's an EAC thing. How did we get here where a couple grade points carries far more weight than a superior strike? Which one IS the best struck? Which ones are not rubbed/frictioned.

    1804 $'s are the Kings of American Coins, plain and simple. It has been that way since the later 1800's (though maybe the SP1794 has wiggled in there the past 10 yrs). Based on strike and eye appeal I consider the PF65 1804 as the better looking coin of the top 3 - it's simply marvelous. Maybe the 4th most valuable non-gold US rarity.

    Strike matters. And the "story" on the Type 1's is much better with deep historical data and far cleaner (ie legal) than on the Type 2 and 3's, and the 1913 5c and 1885 TD's. The higher ups in the US Govt authorized those Type 1's....that decision wasn't made at the US Mint Superintendent/Manager level as it was on the others coins. Take that all into account. Don't beat me up too hard as I'm just a bystander in this area.

    I'm sorry, I didn't mean to duplicate the substance of your post Roadrunner. I didn't refresh the page before I posted so it didn't show.

  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,313 ✭✭✭✭✭

    No problem Cameonut. I'm just happy that at least one person agrees with me.

    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • AMRCAMRC Posts: 4,280 ✭✭✭✭✭

    How will we know whos right? Wait for auction? Otherwise, it is a WAG by definition. Remember the counter-stamped Trade dollar you "appraised." You were off by more than 100%. No one can predict auction prices well enough to avoid having an item in an auction. That is all a crap shoot.

    MLAeBayNumismatics: "The greatest hobby in the world!"
  • nagsnags Posts: 822 ✭✭✭✭

    I would have used the same comparison logic, but if I were to bid on such a coin I would use numerous other comparisons to form a greater data set.

    It doesn’t appear that this method, in hindsight, would have accurately predicted the hammer from prior sales. Even a change in the ratio from 1.5 to 2.0 ends up being a large disparity in final price.

    I’d use the 10 or 20 most comparable issues I could come up with. (Realizing they really aren’t that comparable). I’d then weigh the results in accordance to the relative level of comparability.

    Fun exercise.

  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,313 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited June 12, 2019 9:19PM

    And the things you can't predict or estimate going into the auction?

    Who the competition is? How badly do they want it? Filling a hole in a set or just for "fun." What's there time frame of ownership? How much $$ do they have ready? These alone can vary the price another 10-20%. When the whales last fought "to the death" at major auctions in 2007-2008 some of the prices realized were stunning.

    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,419 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @tradedollarnut said:

    The 1991 auction of the 1794 was at the very bottom of the market. Perhaps a distress sale which is ignored for appraisal purposes. Maybe Andy can expound.

    Well, it was a distress sale, but it was at public auction and I thought that the coin brought a realistic price at the time. And it wasn't the bottom of the market. A year later, things were significantly worse. But on the other hand, I turned down 950K in 1990, which I consider a valid data point. As was the 375K price I paid for it privately in 1988.

    Andy Lustig

    Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

    Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,205 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Sounds like markets change on a dime...

  • 2ltdjorn2ltdjorn Posts: 2,329 ✭✭✭✭

    this topic is interesting. I would love to live in a world that debating the valuation of a 1804 $ is irrelevant... if you have enough money is valuation is necessary? otherwise you were not in the position to acquire the piece for aesthetic pleasure.

    apprasisal is important. but its like buying based on future appreciation... which means you are stretched and subject to market fluctuations.

    WTB... errors, New Orleans gold, and circulated 20th key date coins!
  • MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,419 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @2ltdjorn said:
    this topic is interesting. I would love to live in a world that debating the valuation of a 1804 $ is irrelevant... if you have enough money is valuation is necessary? otherwise you were not in the position to acquire the piece for aesthetic pleasure.

    apprasisal is important. but its like buying based on future appreciation... which means you are stretched and subject to market fluctuations.

    If you have all money in the world, it’s still more fun to get a good deal than to overpay. It’s human nature, and it’s the nature of our game.

    Andy Lustig

    Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

    Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.

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