Please urge David Hall to edit the "PCGS Price Guide" verbiage to make it harder for lowli
coinguy1
Posts: 13,484 ✭✭✭
This topic has been discussed here and elsewhere, many times before. In fact, several months ago, after speaking to a representative of PCGS, I even forwarded some suggestions/possible changes, in order to help them to edit the "PCGS Price Guide" language. As best I can tell, no changes were made.
Below, are but two paragraphs of current PCGS Price Guide text which could easily be changed, in order to warn the unsuspecting. For example, something to the effect of the following could be added and highlighted:"These prices are for PCGS coins only - coins certified by other grading companies can and often do bring considerably less".
As it stands now, the PCGS Price Guide prices are quoted by sellers everywhere, including on Ebay, to try to take advantage of the numerous novices/unsuspecting buyers who don't know better. Many of us are all-to-familiar with the widespread offerings of coins in off-brand holders, and the PCGS Price Guide prices being quoted for coins which are worth small fractions of those prices/values.
I realize it's impossible for PCGS to prevent the PCGS Price Guide prices from being quoted by unscrupulous sellers. However, I also believe that PCGS has a duty to the hobby, to at least make it more difficult for such sellers to take advantage of the unknowledgeable buyers. It should/would take very little time and effort to make such changes/improvements.
Ok, I will now step down from my soapbox.
<< <i>The PCGS Price Guide is a guide to assist the coin buying public in determining values for all significant United States rare coins. Before you use the PCGS Price Guide, you should read the following information very carefully. >>
<< <i>WHAT DO PCGS PRICES MEAN?
The prices listed in the PCGS Price Guide are the average dealer asking prices for properly graded United States coins. The prices are compiled from various sources including dealer ads in trade papers, dealer fixed price lists, significant auctions, and activity at major coin shows. Prices for the most actively traded coins are updated daily. Other issues are updated as needed. All prices are reviewed at least once a month. >>
Below, are but two paragraphs of current PCGS Price Guide text which could easily be changed, in order to warn the unsuspecting. For example, something to the effect of the following could be added and highlighted:"These prices are for PCGS coins only - coins certified by other grading companies can and often do bring considerably less".
As it stands now, the PCGS Price Guide prices are quoted by sellers everywhere, including on Ebay, to try to take advantage of the numerous novices/unsuspecting buyers who don't know better. Many of us are all-to-familiar with the widespread offerings of coins in off-brand holders, and the PCGS Price Guide prices being quoted for coins which are worth small fractions of those prices/values.
I realize it's impossible for PCGS to prevent the PCGS Price Guide prices from being quoted by unscrupulous sellers. However, I also believe that PCGS has a duty to the hobby, to at least make it more difficult for such sellers to take advantage of the unknowledgeable buyers. It should/would take very little time and effort to make such changes/improvements.
Ok, I will now step down from my soapbox.
<< <i>The PCGS Price Guide is a guide to assist the coin buying public in determining values for all significant United States rare coins. Before you use the PCGS Price Guide, you should read the following information very carefully. >>
<< <i>WHAT DO PCGS PRICES MEAN?
The prices listed in the PCGS Price Guide are the average dealer asking prices for properly graded United States coins. The prices are compiled from various sources including dealer ads in trade papers, dealer fixed price lists, significant auctions, and activity at major coin shows. Prices for the most actively traded coins are updated daily. Other issues are updated as needed. All prices are reviewed at least once a month. >>
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Comments
Russ, NCNE
<< <i>OR....make the prices accurate >>
Even that wouldn't work. An accurate price for a properly graded PCGS or NGC coin is not the same as an accurate price for a PCI or NTC dog turd.
Russ, NCNE
I have said before that PCGS should give up on the price guide. It is not a revenue generator and is a source for confusion and abuse. For serious collectors, it is not a valuable resource.
<< <i>not the same as an accurate price for a PCI or NTC dog turd >>
you have such a way with words, Russ!
Total Copper Nutcase - African, British Ships, Channel Islands!!!
'Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and taste good with ketchup'
<< <i>David Hall said he'd do it a couple years ago. >>
They are too busy with the "speared Bison"
and the prices are screwed up anyway.
I deleted a long, rambling, tome about sellers who know better, and continue to reference the guide.
No amount of verbiage is gonna put a halt to this practice, tho..
As Russ says about "greed"....
edited for spelling..
In the world in which we live, I think people should educate themselves before making any sort of major purchase. Caveat emptor is the order of the day.
"Seu cabra da peste,
"Sou Mangueira......."
There also needs to be some changes made to the pricing of coins that simply do not trade often enough to offer any current prices.
To me the current PCGS price sheets are only good for looking at relative pricing between grades and relative pricing amongst PDS coins. The PCGS prices appear to be taken only from the "big boys" asking prices and they do not appear to be true for the masses of dealers.
I like Jeremy's idea:
<< <i>How about a clause that the prices are only to be used for PCGS coins and other use is strictly forbidden. While that sounds worthless, I believe PCGS is a company with the power to end auctions on eBay that infringe on their copyright (ex: someone uses a CoinWorld holder and calls it a PCGS slab)... perhaps they could take reports and end auctions in violation of this policy... >>
Mr. Hall, I invite you to step up to the plate and remind everyone why you once were (or still are) called "homerunhall".
If it acurately reflected prices, the scammers probably wouldn't use it so much
My posts viewed
since 8/1/6
<< <i>If it acurately reflected prices, the scammers probably wouldn't use it so much >>
It would be much easier and faster to edit the language to make it applicable for PCGS coins only, than it would be to change (and keep udating) the prices. Even if prices were updated, that wouldn't solve the problem of sellers using them for non-PCGS coins.
WH
<< <i>If it acurately reflected prices, the scammers probably wouldn't use it so much >>
Suppose the prices were accurate... a third-tier company might holder a coin as MS67, when it is in fact an MS63 or MS64. Even if the prices for all grades were right, that could be an enormous swing. The problem isn't only the prices, but the relative grades.
Jeremy
How 'bout:
"The PCGS prices should not be relied on for coins in non-PCGS holders as their grading standards my differ from those at PCGS."
Joe
<< <i>I have said before that PCGS should give up on the price guide. It is not a revenue generator and is a source for confusion and abuse. For serious collectors, it is not a valuable resource. >>
AGREED!! Just get rid of it; its inaccurate, out of date, poorly or never maintained and I see no reason why PCGS should expend manpower or funds going after those who misuse/abuse it on eBay and elsewhere.
You remain my hero. There are too few Don Quixotes and too many windmills.
HRH,
Sounds like a marketing opportunity to me.
Other dealers, E-Bayers, and "wanabes" (that disagree),
I know it is nice to have bars to sell over but this has been a good run for you.
<< The PCGS Price Guide is a guide to assist the coin buying public in determining values for all significant United States rare coins. Before you use the PCGS Price Guide, you should read the following information very carefully. >>
<< WHAT DO PCGS PRICES MEAN?
The prices listed in the PCGS Price Guide are the average dealer asking prices for properly graded United States coins. The prices are compiled from various sources including dealer ads in trade papers, dealer fixed price lists, significant auctions, and activity at major coin shows. Prices for the most actively traded coins are updated daily. Other issues are updated as needed. All prices are reviewed at least once a month. >>
Thanks for this thread.
How many price guides are there? Blue sheet, Grey sheet, Quarterly, Monthly--all from CDN.
Then, Trends, Numismedia, and more
Then, asking prices from Dealer web sites
Then, prices realized from auctions, mail bid sales(occurring in many different years and market conditions)
And each coin is low end to high end for grade.
And it can be white, off-white, slate grey, lusterous, mottled, full strike, weak stars, soft corn ear, and a large gouge in the left field at 3 o'clock.
So, for even the PCGS coin, and it's pricing in the "Guide", the variance within the same grade is a mutiple of adjectives .
The last 2 lib nickels in 66 for the 1896 date brought 10,000 and 19,000. The "Guide" says 9000. Maybe okay.
But the prices quoted for the 1886 in 66 (17,500) and the 1885 in 67 (37,500) are just a guess, as neither coin has sold by private treaty or in auction for years. The same will be true for many 66's and 67's.
I would rather see a * or __ for coins that have not traded or been in auction except sporadically.
The change in language, limiting the guides to PCGS only doesn't solve anything for the unwary consumer. He/she is in big trouble relying only on the eBay seller.
You and I have agreed and disagreed many times on different subjects.I agree this time.The problem is,as many have said David can't just add paragraphs to it.It is far more complicated than that.I do believe it could be made more accurate/up-to-date.That in itself would help.
Registry 1909-1958 Proof Lincolns
–John Adams, 1826
P.S. sorry coinguy nuttin personal but cmon lol
No matter what David Hall and PCGS does to try to change things for the better, the scammers will still have a home as long as the suckers are still out there.
I am still at a quandry accepting the fact that there IS A MONOPOLY out there if PCGS coins are considered more valuable just because they are in a PCGS holder. Well, that's not neccessarily true either. PCGS's price guide says a 1794 dollar MS62 (IN THEIR HOLDER I ASSUME) is worth $425,000. Does that mean a coin is worth WWAAAYYY more in an NGC holder, because an NGC MS61 sold recently for $747,000???
So there are those "suckers" that will pay more for a PCGS holdered coin??? I wish them luck in the end.
Buy the coin, not the holder - boy - saying that gets old.
THe MARKET helps to get a more accurate price of a particular coin - not some price guide. There will never be an accurate guide - it changes DAILY, whether the coin was sold or not.
Do your homework, look at past prices realized, but more importantly, be cautious about the grades - especially all the upgrades on coins that shouldn't be IMPROVING with age like wine.
I feel that the prices quoted based on the PCGS price guide are compatible for PCGS and NGC graded coins ONLY!!! Even though NGC coins sell for slightly less at times
(but sometimes more), I feel they are just as reputable and trusted by the collecting community, and therefore, are equal in status. To use the PCGS price guide for any other grading company is just plain incorrect in my opinion and yes, some sort of verbiage should be inserted to prevent the un-informed from making costly mistakes. JMHO
I'm not speaking to the unavoidable, obvious and widespread inaccuracies of the PCGS Price Guide or any other guide. That is nearly impossible to correct on anything other than on an intermittent and/or short term basis.
However, that doesn't mean that some (easy-to-accomplish) changes in the verbiage shouldn't be made, when it is well known that the current information is being widely abused. Some improvement is better than none.
Think about situations such as the Coin world do-it-yourself holders where sellers can "slab" their own coins, put whatever grade they choose on the grading label and then quote PCGS Price Guide prices in their listings. Then there are sellers of coins/slabs of grading companies that grade to a standard that is 2 or more points looser than PCGS and list completely irrelevant (absurdly high) prices from the PCGS Price Guide.
For the most part, people who frequent this forum are far more knowledgeable and sophisticated than the type of collector/buyer I am concerned about - I think it is good for the hobby if we and PCGS consider their plight and not merely say "too bad for them if they don't do their homework". That type of attitude can end up hurting the hobby and many of us in the long run.
<FONT face=Verdana>David:
It would be an easy fix to rename it the PCGS Price Guide (which everyone practically calls it, anyway) and to prominently post on each page/series that the prices are for PCGS coins only ... I just hate, as I am sure you do, to see the bottom sellers profiting by selling crap in junk plastic to the uneducated and then propping it up with your good name...
Randy
<FONT face=Arial>Thanks, David ... </FONT>A further thought, and your lawyers would want to review the language, of course, but you also could include a disclaimer: "Coins in other services' slabs at the same grade as PCGS coins often command lower prices in the marketplace." The statement is certainly true and accurate ...
Regards,
Randy
</FONT>
The Ludlow Brilliant Collection (1938-64)
We all really appreciate the experienced dealer helping the coin community (new and old) understand the myriad of problems and differences in grading coins, and pricing them accordingly.
I have been trying to improve my skills for 13 years, and am 1/10 of the way there. To be in the place where true experts can look at a coin, grade it accurately, and then have the resources to place a fair value on it, in the hope that someone will want it, and/or hold it for possible profit.
A first solution is for the newcomer to rely on a seasoned dealer/collector. He/she will then learn the basics, read, and view, and after a short time, will be more comfortable in purchasing on their own.
Those that just jump into the fray, without the easy to find basic info. are somewhat foolish.
Fools and their money shall soon part. We do not have the tools available in any industry to educate the fools.
I just do not like spending time(mine or yours) on less than fruitful projects.
However, if there is no PCGS response to this thread directly, perhaps you can post your suggestion in the Q&A.
I'm definitely sick of seeing raw overgraded coins on Ebay with price quotes that are more than 10 times the value of the coin.
for the more common purchases I was making.
As my tastes grew more refined, I tend to agree with RYK. The more desirable half eagles
are way off price wise in the guide.
Fatguy basically pointed me to Heritage for a better look at current prices.
All the same, I find myself using the guide whenever I am buying PCGS graded coins.
Good thread!
(fatman i meant)
<< <i>I concur. >>
PCGS has some new folks on board and ARE in the process of updating the price guide. They are contacting folks that know each of the series. The tough part of the price guide is how to price coins that have no real price lists (many moderns, cameo's etc). There is a real market, and the folks that buy/sell in the market know it.
As they get through the series, it will be more useful.
The series I was contacted on is (in my opinion) very close to the true market. Yes the prices are a touch on the high side of retail, but for nice coins, they are accurate.
There will always be scam artists out there. Nothing PCGS can do about that. With all the price guides out there, one can always find a price 2-3x the coins true value and quote it. For those that buy without research, it's their own fault. Live and learn.
Bottom line is you have to know the market and how nice a coin is for the grade in order to determine the right price you'd be willing to pay.
Ike Specialist
Finest Toned Ike I've Ever Seen, been looking since 1986