What Would You Pay For This Coin At Auction? ACTUAL AUCTION RESULTS POSTED

What would you pay for this coin at auction?
1889-S
Grading, like pricing, is your call. It is in an old PCGS rattler holder.
Recent auction results:
MS66: $4,485 to $4,600
MS65: $1,207 to $1,495
MS64: $ 402 to $431
MS63: $ 287 to $402
Additional hypothetical facts: You collect Morgans and need this date. Although buying this date on the bourse floor might be a better alternative to chasing one at auction, because of your constant anti-dealer rants on the PCGS Coin Forum no dealer will do business with you–not even the wannabes. Assume also for the purpose of this thread that your negative feedback on ebay is so bad that everyone has you on their blocked bidder list. And your credit is no good at any other house except for this one which is so big that you have managed to fly under their radar.


Actual Grade and Price Realized: PCGS MS65 price $1,322.50 with the juice.
The auction description is
<< <i>Peach, cream-gray, and lavender colors consume this lustrous and refreshingly undisturbed Gem. The strike is good although not razor-sharp >>
This coin drew a lot of negative comments from forum members posting to this thread. Most thought it worth no more than a low MS64 price; some just said they would not buy it and no one said anything positive about it.
The scan probably does not show the color and luster in its true light. But still, I thinnk that the marks on the face are more than most buyers would accept at the MS65 grade. So much for the theory that coins in old rattlers are undergraded by current standards.
Beauty, grade and value are in the eye of the beholder I guess.
Does anyone know what blue sheet bid is. That would create a price support for any coin in a PCGS 65 holder since if a dealer could buy it for less than bid he could flip it at a profit at the sight unseen price.
Thanks to all who responded. And sorry for any kinked necks.
CG
1889-S
Grading, like pricing, is your call. It is in an old PCGS rattler holder.
Recent auction results:
MS66: $4,485 to $4,600
MS65: $1,207 to $1,495
MS64: $ 402 to $431
MS63: $ 287 to $402
Additional hypothetical facts: You collect Morgans and need this date. Although buying this date on the bourse floor might be a better alternative to chasing one at auction, because of your constant anti-dealer rants on the PCGS Coin Forum no dealer will do business with you–not even the wannabes. Assume also for the purpose of this thread that your negative feedback on ebay is so bad that everyone has you on their blocked bidder list. And your credit is no good at any other house except for this one which is so big that you have managed to fly under their radar.


Actual Grade and Price Realized: PCGS MS65 price $1,322.50 with the juice.
The auction description is
<< <i>Peach, cream-gray, and lavender colors consume this lustrous and refreshingly undisturbed Gem. The strike is good although not razor-sharp >>
This coin drew a lot of negative comments from forum members posting to this thread. Most thought it worth no more than a low MS64 price; some just said they would not buy it and no one said anything positive about it.
The scan probably does not show the color and luster in its true light. But still, I thinnk that the marks on the face are more than most buyers would accept at the MS65 grade. So much for the theory that coins in old rattlers are undergraded by current standards.
Beauty, grade and value are in the eye of the beholder I guess.
Does anyone know what blue sheet bid is. That would create a price support for any coin in a PCGS 65 holder since if a dealer could buy it for less than bid he could flip it at a profit at the sight unseen price.
Thanks to all who responded. And sorry for any kinked necks.
CG
0
Comments
Russ, NCNE
The hypothetical facts are so that you gold guys can't respond by saying "its a Morgan so I would bid zero"
CG
Chris
My Collection of Old Holders
Never a slave to one plastic brand will I ever be.
CG
Capped Bust Half Series
Capped Bust Half Dime Series
<< <i>we can choose all the grades in between. >>
RYK,
You are correct in a sense. I thought a buy the coin not the holder exercise might be fun for a change. So you can grade it by price.
CG
Chris
My Collection of Old Holders
Never a slave to one plastic brand will I ever be.
<< <i>my neck hurts >>
Hell, I don't need to exercise.....I get enough just pushing my luck.
CG
I would grade it at a 63 or a light 64...
I love Toning but that Toning is a little distracting...
Plus the strike is soft...
Personally I would pass...
Currently Listed: Nothing
Take Care, Dave
roadrunner
<< <i>$50 max and then I might kick myself in the arse for buying it. >>
And if you don't kick yourself in the arse, I'll do it for you
<< <i>
Additional hypothetical facts: You collect Morgans and need this date. Although buying this date on the bourse floor might be a better alternative to chasing one at auction, because of your constant anti-dealer rants on the PCGS Coin Forum no dealer will do business with you–not even the wannabes. Assume also for the purpose of this thread that your negative feedback on ebay is so bad that everyone has you on their blocked bidder list. And your credit is no good at any other house except for this one which is so big that you have managed to fly under their radar.
>>
So wait, my options are to buy from this auction house, inherit it, or dig it out of the ground?
otherwise 250.
A witty saying proves nothing- Voltaire (1694 - 1778)
An error does not become truth by reason of multiplied propagation, nor
does the truth become error because nobody will see it. -Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948)
<< <i>So wait, my options are to buy from this auction house, inherit it, or dig it out of the ground? >>
No matter how much of a chump one is I spose he could aiways find smoeone else to buy it for him.
CG
NoEbayAuctionsForNow
<< <i>The scan probably does not show the color and luster in its true light. But still, I thinnk that the marks on the face are more than most buyers would accept at the MS65 grade. So much for the theory that coins in old rattlers are undergraded by current standards. >>
Do you think that if PCGS knew 20 years ago what they know now that a lot of those coins in old rattlers would have been graded even more conservatively than they were?