The darkest time in the coin collecting world...
For those of you who have been collecting for a long time (decades), was there ever a period of time that you would consider the "Dark Ages" of coin collecting? Was there a time that dishonesty and sleazy practices were the norm?
When I was a kid, I many local coin dealers (not all) had reputations of being dishonest. Many dealers who sold through magazines like Coin Prices sold junk. There were "investment companies" that ripped people off big time with supposedly "rare" coins.
That was back in the early 80's, and things as I remember them were pretty bad. Many people, I think, were driven from coin collecting because of all of the dishonesty that they saw.
What's the worst time that you can remember for coin collectors? With certification services and the internet, do you think things could ever get that bad again?
Dan
When I was a kid, I many local coin dealers (not all) had reputations of being dishonest. Many dealers who sold through magazines like Coin Prices sold junk. There were "investment companies" that ripped people off big time with supposedly "rare" coins.
That was back in the early 80's, and things as I remember them were pretty bad. Many people, I think, were driven from coin collecting because of all of the dishonesty that they saw.
What's the worst time that you can remember for coin collectors? With certification services and the internet, do you think things could ever get that bad again?
Dan
0
Comments
al h.
Tom
K S
I have read the threads about the eBay scammers, the "bull" market for coins and the overpriced/low quality coins sold through magazine ads, but, generally, I have found (or maybe thought naively) that if you have half a brain, you have a chance. This seems very different than when I was young, and only had access to some magazines and dealers.
You have obviously been doing this longer and consistently more seriously than I have, so please, let us know why you feel the way you do. Thanks.
in the hobby are just going to find what they do alittle more difficult as so many collectors have learned so much
of the truth about these less-than-honest people that the crooks would probably find it easier,and more
profitible,to just go with the flow and be honest too.Like most of us.
I can imagine in the future it being every increasingly difficult to scam someone about a coin they might be selling.
People are so much more educated on coins than they were say, 10 years ago.
So coin crooks? Your days are definitly numbered.
<< <i>When I was a kid, I many local coin dealers (not all) had reputations of being dishonest. Many dealers who sold through magazines like Coin Prices sold junk. There were "investment companies" that ripped people off big time with supposedly "rare" coins. >>
I remember that, it was in the 70's....and the 80's....and the 90's.....come to think about it it's still going on today.
(I'm sure it was going on before the 70's as well, it's just that i wasn't active before then so I don't have personal memories of it. In reallity though you can go back to periodical from any era and find the same complaints about the local dealers, the advertisers selling junk, and people getting ripped off on so-called "investments". As the saying goes "The more things change, the more they stay the same."
we have access to much more information than ever before.
I started collecting in the 1960s, and excepting one or two old guys who wanted to help a young kid get off on the right foot, virtually every dealer out there I saw tried to rip me. Standard operating procedure: you buy a BU coin, but it's an Unc. when you try and sell it back to the dealer.
Info like we have available now re cleaned, whizzed & AT'd coins were unknown then. You had a Redbook, a Coin World, and hoped that coin you ordered was as nice as the seller said it was (and it usually wasn't), and if you didn't like the coin, it was always a pain in the *** to return it.
You'd buy a coin at a bid board and hope it wasn't whizzed, because you really didn't know what to look for, and even if you did, you couldn't tell much with the lighting around you.
Eventually I got disgusted and did something more constructive with my time, like trying to get girls to have sex with me
What got me back into the hobby was a combination of slabbing, coupled with more available information and a curiosity of what the stuff I had collected years earlier was worth.
"Seu cabra da peste,
"Sou Mangueira......."
never change. Today there are very few of the outright crooks operating. They have
been shut down by the grading services and the easy flow of information and know-
ledge. Sure there are those few who sell coins at two or three times there normal
wholesale value, but these are generally exactly what the seller says they are. While
the prices are inflated it's otherwise a fair deal. The biggest thing that has gotten most
of the crooks out of the business is the simple fact that this ain't where the money is
anymore. The crooks tend to travel to whatever field has lots of growth and lots of mon-
ey. If the hobby continues its torrid growth of the last few years then some of the newer
people will get a chance to deal with the crooks. Just watching out for deals that are too
good to be true will protect you from most of their ripoffs.
The real dark days of coin collecting were in the mid 90's. Things were dead. Coin shows
looked like old folks conventions and prices of most coin just continued to slide. There was
also a sense that things could be much worse and soon would be. It was the moderns that
finally woke up in '95-'96 and at least stopped the slide in the market. By mid '98 there were
a few baby boomers starting to trickle back into the market in anticipation of the states coins.
And soon there was a flood of new collectors.
While the high priced coins and the great rarities may not have lost much ground in the mid-90's,
most of the less expensive coins did. These included many nice collector issues even in popular
series. This won't show up so much in the price guides because they don't show that many nice
coins could be bought for 20% to 80% of the listed prices.
There was a very real fear that the hobby might not be able to revive or even to replace its aging
collector base. -Of course, it's still not a done deal.
Another period that I consider to be the true Dark Age was 1974-1978. During this period there were more junk coins than you could shake a stick at. It was hard to get a coin from a Coin World ad that was worth the retail $$ that you paid. The auction scene wasn't much better. I do remember Tom Waggoner, Renrob and a few other folks who actually sold fair value. But as a rule, you started at least 30% in the hole (often more) from your local dealer to the biggest ones. One of tuffest bunch was the Kansas City / St. Louis Connection. From heavily scratched bust dollars to cleaned BU Barber halves, it was tough to get a nice coin out of some of those dealers.
roadrunner
<< <i>today. in 35 years, i have never seen more ripoffs around than there are today.
K S >>
I disagree! This is the age of enlightenment and information, I think in general the internet and specifically sites such as these help educate and in turn PROTECT newer collectors and the uninformed so that they may make educated, intelligent purchases. Just MHO.
Joe
Numonebuyer
Numonebuyer
However today I believe there are just as many if not more problems to worry about. Granted today there are grading companies, but I have read probably a hundred of threads about people b*&tching how bad grading company "A" is, and how bad grading company "B" is. In fact I even recall reading about counterfieted coins being slabbed (A thread about a 1916d merc comes to mind). I have been told that even with the big three there can be big differances. Like buying a NGC MS64 morgan will probably only grade a 63 in a PCGS slab because NGC uses ANA standards and PCGS uses there own stricter guidlines. If this is not true sorry, but this has been told to me by numerous board members.
Or people saying that this coin was graded in a green holder so it is under graded, or this coins slab has a 10 didget seriel number so it should be fine opposed to the same companies that have 8 or 9 numbers or something of the sort. Or trying to be told that this coin was graded before they used designations and it should upgrade. Even to the informed new person this can be tricky, because for some of us we just don't have the skill at eyeing it out yet. Granted we know about it, just not experienced enough to be able to see it all the time.
Plenty of more information is at hand - Yes there is plenty of information at hand to help out the new collector, but how many people start out reading this forum or another companies forum or magazines before they actually start collecting. I would have to guess not to many. It's after they buy there first slabbed coin before most would even know about this place IMO. Or have purchased a few raw coins and they want to see what they are worth so they do there nice little search on the internet and find PCGS coin price guide. They then believe that is what they should be paying for coins or what there coins are worth. Took me a few weeks and a few bad buys to realize that this was a mistake.
I don't believe that most new people realize that a guide is just a starting point to work on a price for a coin, and there are to many sellers that use that to their advantage. Like listing a coin and saying it is very good or fine, and in reality the coin has problems to net down even lower, such as corrsion, pits, dinged rims, are cleaned. Hard to tell from an online pic.
Now today we have plenty of information at our hands as new collectors to help us along, but with that info comes even more confusion and doors of opportunity to get burned on as well. Such as the designations of Cameo's and Deep Cameos, Full Torch, Full Bands, Full head etc etc etc. Now as a new collector knowing these classifications are out there, it is real easy to get suckered into purchasing a raw coin that you are told that encompises these traits, just to have it slabbed or told by someone else, that it was close but no cigar. Money paid for a premium quaility coin just wasted.
And don't get me started on the late night TV ads. I believe most of the time they are robbing everyone.
How about them MONSTER Toners out there, how many of them have just come out of the oven. The informed newbie knows that toned coins can bring in a hefty premium. But until recently I did not know that they can also be worth less if the toning is butt ugly, or even created artificially. I still am not sure I could not tell most of the time, which scares me away from raw toned coins, even the ones that I think are awsome looking, I just to afraid of getting burned. So hence I am getting scammed out of possible legit nice coins by fear.
Now onto Ebay, Yahoo, or Bidz or any of the other online auctions (Except Teletrade, Heritage, or Bowers) How many of you guys/gals out there that actively use these avenues to get coins, can honestly say they have never been screwed by a misleading description or picture. Just about every auction that posts BLURY or no pictures is trying to sell something for more then it is or worth. Think about all of the coins that you just skip over as junk as you are browsing, yet you see bids on them. I now about a year ago that was my bid. I hate to admit it, but I have been burned more times on-line then I care to count, that is why I will not use ebay to buy coins that I can saftly get from my dealerfor perhaps a few dollars more. Yes I was a sucker that read the desciption and was gullible enough to believe or greedy enough to make myself believe that I was doing the right thing so I bid and bought.
LITTLETONS - Well enough said.
I have been to some dealers that have been absolutely horrible, luckily I have been stuborn and stuck around the hobby and have finally found a couple local dealers that are great for me.
And this is just my opinion, and I hope I don't get sucked into it to heavily, but I probably will, "Registry Sets". I believe this leads to a lot of scamming. How often in the old days did people pay hundreds of dollars for a penny that was just minted that year.
As I ponder over all of my mistakes over the last year or so in collecting coins, I realize that I cannot be the only stupid schmuck out here (At least I hope), and it amazes me that I still want to collect. But you know what, I just got done looking at my walking liberty set which is comprised of mostly circulated coins. Even if I did get screwed on many of my purchases to complete the set, I still love the beauty of them and the pride in myself for being able to complete it. Know that makes it worth it. Now a year later the one thing I know for sure is, I still know squat about coins, but I'm addicted to the gorgeous art work on coins and the history that goes with them. I love the challenge of finding the ones I need for a set, and the new knowledge from you guys. And last but not least I love the fact that even if a spend to much on a coin, it's a hell of a lot better for me then pissing it away at the bar like I use to, now that was a waste of money.
Just my opinions, from a new guy in the hobby.
Ron
Link
Now was it this bad 15 years ago. I certainly hope not.
Ron
In my lifetime, no time has been any better or worse than any other time. There have always been plenty of pitfalls and plenty of opportunities. A smart collector will always find a way to build a great collection. A stupid collector will always find a way to lose his money.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.