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CU VALUES GROSSLY OVERSTATED / BEWARE COIN MARKET HYPE ?

Due to the widely hyped "white hot" market in the coin press, I recently consigned eight PCGS Certified 20th Century type coins to the Bowers & Merena Baltimore ANA Auction in July. This group of eight coins had a total current Collectors' Universe (CU) value of $14,165. Five of the coins graded PCGS MS-66 with the remainder PCGS MS-65. This lot of eight coins realized only $10,621 WITH Buyer's Premium or 25.0% below CU Value. Only one coin sold at a price which was less than 20% (18.1%) below the CU Value (1916 WL Half PCGS MS-66). The worst price vs. CU Value was for a 1917-Ty. 1 SLQ PCGS MS-65FH which realized a price of only $920 or 37% below CU Value of $1,450. I might understand a few coins coming in below "market" but not the entire group and at a significant discount to market! I even purchased one of the coins myself, a 1900 Barber Quarter in PCGS MS-65 (white) because the highest bid at the time was $575 or $875 below CU Value - this for a coin which has a population of 18 with only 7 higher! Absolutely none of these coins had any problems whatsoever and all silver coins were bright white or with very light toning.

My warning to everyone is to be careful of the hype and put reserves on your coins if you consign them to auction. Otherwise you could be very disappointed - like myself. I would be interested to learn if other collectors have similar experiences with auctioning their coins or where have you been successful in getting good value for your coins - EBay?
Buyer and seller of registry and investment quality coins of the United States.

Comments

  • The CU price guide is widely recognized as being a work of fantastic fiction.

    While the question has been raised many times, the answer has never been forthcoming.
    I have long maintained that this ultimately hurts the credibility of the entire guide.

    In this day and age of technology - establishing a price guide based on actual numbers is not only
    realistic, it's achievable. For whatever dark and unknown reason, HRH consistently has ignored the pleas
    for accurate pricing.

    Since it's his ballgame - He can call the shots... but I for one, ignore the results. They're unrealistic,
    unreliable - and NOT updated at all - despite the claim to the contrary.

    Sorry David... the enterprise as a whole is a class act - but the price guide is garbage.

    For a small fee - I could make it all right for you. (all depends on how highly you value professional I.T. services.)
    If it's anything like Heritage's - I won't hold my breath. image After all... why pay a professional, when band-aids are cheap?
  • dragondragon Posts: 4,548 ✭✭
    Understand that in most cases, the published CU coin prices are not a reflection of actual market prices. In the series I collect, the CU prices are usually about 30-35% too high, and I have heard others say that in some series, the prices are way, way too high.

    dragon

  • Precisely the problem.

    If you recognize it... and I recognize it - why doesn't anyone who runs the show recognize it?

    or - more appropriately... why do they ignore it? It makes no sense to me whatsoever.
  • wondercoinwondercoin Posts: 17,001 ✭✭✭✭✭
    There is certainly no "hard and fast rule" that the 20th century coins are roughly 25% overstated in the guide. And, certainly, if you go to Heritage's prices realized, you will see that a particular coin (the same coin) can vary greatly in price realized from auction to auction. Indeed, many coins are extremely conservatively set out in the guide. For example, the 1970(d) Kennedy half dollar in MS67 is listed in the guide at $500 and sold Friday in the Heritage sale at $2300 (and if I personally had wanted the coin for my current #2 set, I can assure you the coin may have sold even higher). image

    Wondercoin
    Please visit my website at www.wondercoins.com and my ebay auctions under my user name www.wondercoin.com.
  • I was just about to say that Mitch, many are understated!
    You can fool man but you can't fool God! He knows why you do what you do!

  • Everybody loves a bargain.

    CU intentionally inflates the price guide so that their dealer network can discount coins from list and let their customers think they are getting a deal.

    The dealer network is still a brick and mortar set-up, with high overhead. If PCGS were to publish a price guide showing what the coins actually trade for, their dealer network couldn't match it and stay in business.

    It's much easier to sell a $200 coin for $300 when the list price says it's $500

    image
    My posts viewed image times
    since 8/1/6
  • 291fifth291fifth Posts: 24,700 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I never use CU's price guide as a reference for anything. It, like all price guides, is prone to be on the the high side and is generally innaccurate. You have to be active in the market, both buying and selling, to know where the real price levels are.
    All glory is fleeting.
  • PlacidPlacid Posts: 11,299 ✭✭✭
    The value of a coin is what someone is will to pay and what someone is willing to sell at.
    The selling price of a coin often changes within minutes for the same exact coin. Many people flip coins at shows.
    Now take into account that no two coins are exactly alike even though they are graded the same and you can see how hard it would be to try to tell someone what their coin is currently worth without even seeing it.

    I like Heritage because they use their auction results and give links to the actual coins that sold as well as use a price range rather than a fixed number.

    If you see a anacs xf40 coin sold for $300 you can look at the coin and see that the coin was net graded for a problem.

    If you see a ms64 morgan sold for $600 you can look and see that the coin had wild toning.

  • Steve27Steve27 Posts: 13,275 ✭✭✭
    Only 25% overstated, all of your coins must have been pre-1964, because it's 50-66% over on most post-1964 coins.
    "It's far easier to fight for principles, than to live up to them." Adlai Stevenson
  • dorkkarldorkkarl Posts: 12,691 ✭✭✭
    the cu price guide, like ALL other price guides, is a price guide.

    K S
  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,205 ✭✭✭✭✭
    There are many coins in the series that I collect that I wish I could buy at the CU price guide levels. Or Trends for that matter. So it cuts both ways.
  • IrishMikeIrishMike Posts: 7,737 ✭✭✭
    For coins that are sold quite often the price guide is way overpriced. My experience is 15-40%. On rarities, seldom traded coins, condition rarities, registry driven pop tops their is no price guide to go by. Unless you are in the market buying and selling these coins and knowlegable about them, it's a crap shoot.

    Of course the dealers want these prices to be high. Look how often they are quoted on Ebay in hopes that some unsophisticated bidder thinks he or she is getting a bargain. As others have mentioned past prices realized are a better barometer in general. Of course there are coins out there that will sell for way more than any published guide says they are worth. Exceptional coins if marketed correctly will always bring better prices.

    I would like to see a list of the many coins, above exceptions noted, that WSM says are underpriced in the PCGS guide. Deltadon, first lesson you should learn is not to believe the marketing hype presented by slabbing companies.
  • Tradedollarnut is right. Someone PLEASE sell me a 1793 cap large cent in g-4 for the price in any price guide.
  • One of the major price guides on the net says my 1884 seated quarter in pcgs m.s. 66 is worth over
    9 K !!! First offer over 8 K takes it, anyone ?image

    Les
    The President claims he didn't lie about taxes for those earning less then $250,000 a year with public mandated health insurance yet his own justice department has said they will use the right of the government to tax when the states appeals go to court.
  • jdimmickjdimmick Posts: 9,781 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I cant speak from a modern standpoint like Mitch, but I can tell you this also, there are quite few key-dates listed that i would love to buy at CU prices!

    jim
  • RussRuss Posts: 48,514 ✭✭✭
    deltadon,

    Are we to assume from your post that when you purchased the coins you paid what the CU price guide lists as values? Without checking any real and reliable sources of pricing information?

    Russ, NCNE
  • BarryBarry Posts: 10,100 ✭✭✭
    Which do you think is more accurate - the CU price guide or the PCGS pop reports?
  • I will buy all Barber 65s and keys EF or better at Trends. The guides are a joke. If you want real pricing, somewhat accurate info go with CDN. They aren't the greatest but the best compared to the others.
  • lordmarcovanlordmarcovan Posts: 43,888 ✭✭✭✭✭
    CU priceguide is way too high; that's been said for a long time now. Too bad, because a nice free online price reference is sure handy to have, and Numismedia has locked out the MS prices on their site to all but paying members. This means I'm back to the old Red Book, since that's what most of my customers use anyway. I subscribed to Greysheet but don't like it.

    Yeah, yeah, I know the Red Book prices lag way behind, but I don't really care, and I do not need daily market updates anyway. I sell cheaper circulated material, for the most part. When I do get a slabbed piece with an unlisted grade like AU58, I use Numismedia. Over MS/PR60, I'm afraid the PCGS priceguide's the only reference I have (though Red Book often does give one or two MS grades, usually 63 and 65).

    Explore collections of lordmarcovan on CollecOnline, management, safe-keeping, sharing and valuation solution for art piece and collectibles.
  • mdwoodsmdwoods Posts: 5,559 ✭✭✭
    None of the price guides are very accurate. Heritages price guide that they use during auctions is more realistic of what you can expect to get on ebay for a coin.
    Of course, like it has been said many times before, choice coins will bring choice prices. CUs price guide has certain coins undervalued as well, but it is closer than some
    of the others.
    National Register Of Big Trees

    We'll use our hands and hearts and if we must we'll use our heads.
  • coinlieutenantcoinlieutenant Posts: 9,320 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I usually only pay CU prices for extremely nice coins....
  • ccexccex Posts: 1,188 ✭✭✭
    The online PCGS price guide is easily accessible and free of charge, unlike CDN, or even CW Trends. My impression of this retail price guide is that it provides a starting point for sellers to mention. I see it mentioned constantly in eBay auctions for third-tier slabbed coins. It is probably in PCGS' best interest to keep this price guide based on wishes instead of transactions for most coins, since the disgruntled bargain-seeking buyers of third-rate slabs may eventually move to PCGS-graded coins (which bring closer to the published fantasy prices) and may generate grading revenue for the company.

    Personally, I'm happy paying for an occasional Graysheet and learning to grade the series I collect.
    "Never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity" - Hanlon's Razor

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