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A Dealer offers you a finest known Top Pop coin
And suddenly it appears in a major auction
Do you punch the dealer in the face ?
Try and talk ethics with the dealer ?
Walk away and never speak to the dealer again ?
Any other suggestions ?
Stewart
of course I bought the coin.I have "sucker" written across my face.
0
Comments
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
Bought from the auction?? Wierd sequence of events.
Chris
My Collection of Old Holders
Never a slave to one plastic brand will I ever be.
the dealer jerked me off for six months and picked my brain for every available bit of information.I made offers and everything imaginable to make him understand I was THE SUCKER for the coin.And the Dealer lied to me to boot.
stewart
Mark,
I know absolutely nothing about what has transpired, but I would be willing to bet money that if I took a guess I would be right.
Jack
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
Chris
My Collection of Old Holders
Never a slave to one plastic brand will I ever be.
So he strung you along, pumped you for information and then offered it for sale to everybody else through auction?
That would probably piss me off too.
Mark,
Dang, I would have lost my money. I just checked on my hunch and I was wrong. Now my brain is really churning. C'mon Stewart, out with it. Now, I gotta know.
Jack
It sounds like the dealer was asking one price, You offered another. You spent 6 months trying to
convince him it was only worth your offer price. He disagreed and put it in an auction. I don't see
a problem with that. What was the out come?, Did you end up paying more or less for the coin?.
Same question worded a little differently. Who was right about the price?. You or the dealer?.
Doug - Your absolutely correct.I would like to add that I was maliciously lied to so this dealer could milk this coin for every cent.
Mark aka Coinguy1 -Why does it seem that you are the ONLY person who never understands me.
Big E - Its leaning this way as the dealer is avoiding me dramatically for the first time since I've known him.He also knows I busted him.
Only Roosies - The dealer approached me saying a womans father bought the coin and has died.He paid $600 for the coinWhat the dealer lied about was that he had already gagged the daughter and owned the coin.
Laura - Yes the dealer had a partner.One extremely greedy PIG and another (I'll do anything) A$$hole.And both of these guys are multi- millionaires.
Stewart
Stewart
You sound like you've been around the block
Oh, Stewart has been around the block alright, probably more than once!!
Jack
Ronyahski,
Stewart's a legend, uhmm, I mean dinosaur
I agree. 6 month squabble over a measly $600-type coin??? You AND the dealer have too much time on your hands.
I'll see you at Long Beach. I'll take you out to dinner.... you can order anything up to $600!!!!
Jack: Tell me what coin it is that Stewart needs/wants and is in the auction, so I can bid on it.
<< <i> Any other suggestions ?
Stewart >>
Yes, I have a suggestion: Try to relax. You seem very, very tense.
Finest known for 600 bucks ? i think not,less its its a modern piece o crap.
I dont think stewart deals in ms70 state .25
Stewart,how bout smoe mo details ?
Proof
<< <i>Ronyahski,
Stewart's a legend, uhmm, I mean dinosaur
A legendary dinosaur?
Why do that when you can play a game of chicken and have Stewart bidding against the potted palm in the back of the room?
Here's what happened.
The dealer ripped a 1915 Lincoln from the dead collectors daughter for $600 and submitted it to PCGS where is was graded MS68 RD.
Stewart offered him $1,200 for the coin, then $3,500, then $10,000 and then $15,000.
When the coin went to auction, he bid $28,482 and won the coin.
My posts viewed
since 8/1/6
Stewart offered him $1,200 for the coin, then $3,500, then $10,000 and then $15,000.
When the coin went to auction, he bid $28,482 and won the coin.
OMG! Who does that dealer think he is - Saintguru?
Relayer - Your close.I offered $20,000 for the $600 coin the dealer bought for squat.I wound up paying double that amount.And then the POS dealers told me the girl from nowhere consigned her $600 coin to auction.
stewart
Lloyd,
You've been in Florida too long! Stewart's after that awesome 13-P in 67RD that's in the Heritage auction!
Jack
The guy played you and you let the guy string you along. What can you do? You had hopes that the guy was seeing you eye to eye but greed gets in the way with these things and sometimes it's hard to accept.
Life goes on! Perhaps you should look futher down the road for this coin since you know what it's worth.
You'll only screww yourself if you pay more.
Leo
The more qualities observed in a coin, the more desirable that coin becomes!
My Jefferson Nickel Collection
YOU paid 40 k
The POS dealer paid 600 and ripped the client ?
should you both not be shot at sunrise ?
The trick is knowing which is when...
You offered 40 k for a 600 buck coin and it goes to auction anyway ?
that would be on the advice of the dealer that you know and love ?
dealer gets punched it the face in public and gets outted here for being a scum sucking dog !
Proof
John Albanese
Hold on now - how is that any different than Saintguru's score the other day? Don't forget that this is a coin that is probably worth $1,000 in the undergrade, so almost every cent of profit was predicated on getting the grade [unlike SG, who paid for 3 grades less so he had profit no matter if he didn't get the grade].
Do you think the graders sometimes get in a playful mood, decide to create a pop-top when the opportunity is there, then sit back and laugh as the registry lemmings go nuts over it?
To me, it has nothing to do with whether the people involved are dealers or collectors, or what particular coin it is. It is the treatment of people that is at issue. Toss out the fluff and look at the facts we know:
1. We all no that Stewart is the number one collector in his series. I don't just mean that he has the best set, but he has an extremely deep knowledge in the series that I know he collects, i.e. lincolns, indians, barbers, Canadian copper.
2. The dealer knew this and wanted information about the value of the coin and its marketability.
3. My personal experience with Stewart is that he is honest when discussing coins. He could have told him that the grade was a gift and he has 4 more in the undergrade that are nicer and waited for the coin to come back around. My guess is that he told the dealer it was a real finest known and that he wanted to buy it.
4. The dealer played him, and used Stewart's knowledge of the coin to market it to other collectors and tossed in the air at auction for the highest price.
My view is that the dealer took advantage of him. Say what you want about Stewart, but my personal experience with him is what counts to me. I have a coin in my collection that I think he would like to have. When we discussed the coin, he made no bones about how nice the coin was, and that it was the nicest one he had ever seen. I asked him why he wasn't trying to buy the coin from me, he said "it hasn't been offered to me." That shows respect. I don't have any intention of selling my collection right now, but when I do I will call him about that coin first.
<< <i> will also remind you that I purchased a special Proof Lincoln Cent for my COLLECTION for a Worlds Record Price and "you were part of the deal". >>
Stewart -- Although we have done numerous transactions with you over these many years. I'm going to assume I know EXACTLY the deal you're referring to (the one that includes poor Scott Schechter trudging through a NYC snow storm)? I'm further assuming that you are referring to this incident as an example of how this type of transaction SHOULD be handled ethically?
(Edited for a typo in Mr. Schechter's name). Sorry.
Partner / Executive VP
Heritage Auctions
<< <i>A Dealer offers you a finest known Top Pop coin And suddenly it appears in a major auction >>
tough bananas. go to the next coin deal.
K S
<< <i>A Dealer offers you a finest known Top Pop coin >>
<< <i>And suddenly it appears in a major auction >>
Stewart
I'm suprised that you're suprised?
If it's someone you've done business with and have had a good relationship with, then I think you need to confront them and give them your perspective of the deal. Give'm a piece of your mind.
Otherwise walk away and never do business with them again.
I wish Stewart had the guts to pass at auction at let a " potted plant" bidder buy the stupid penny.
<< <i>Do you think the graders sometimes get in a playful mood, decide to create a pop-top >>
I keep hoping.
Russ, NCNE