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You purchase a coin from an online auction and you assume the coin is raw

The auction mentions nothing about the coin being graded by a third party. You're thinking that it's an AU58 or possibly MS60 by the pictures. You win the auction and when the coin arrives, it's in a PCGS XF45 holder. When you contact the seller he says that he didnt agree with the grade either but left it in the holder for protection. And that is also why he didnt disclose the PCGS holder or grade in the auction listing. Would you be disappointed?

Comments

  • mozeppamozeppa Posts: 4,431 ✭✭✭
    depends on a lot of things...price...type of coin series, to name 2.
  • rickoricko Posts: 98,724 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Hold it for six weeks, crack it out and resubmit it.... Cheers, RickO
  • fcfc Posts: 12,793 ✭✭✭
    i would be happy with that situation.
    would you have rather the person sent the coin to you raw
    and you would be oblivious to the fact your grading from
    pictures really needs a lot of work ;-)
  • TomBTomB Posts: 22,090 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Certainly, sellers can disagree with the slabbed grade of a coin, but if I were to list a coin that was already in a slab, and where I disagreed with the assigned grade, I would list the slab grade as well as my own grade. Therefore, yes, I would be surprised if I were in your shoes, but, depending on what you paid for it, what it is and how the auction was worded, I don't know if I would be disappointed. Will you provide a link?
    Thomas Bush Numismatics & Numismatic Photography

    In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson

    image
  • Tom,
    This didnt happen to me, just wanted to see the response. Personally, I wouldnt care what the holder said as long as I liked the appearance of the coin.
  • Coins in a TPG slab should have the company and grade disclosed in the auction or advertisement. To omit known relevant information is unethical.

    "Giving away an MS-65 $20 St. Gaudens to everyone logged in when I make my 10,000th post..."
  • mrpotatoheaddmrpotatoheadd Posts: 7,576 ✭✭✭
    What if somebody cracks and resubmits a coin half a dozen times, and finally gets an upgrade- would it be unethical to omit that information?


  • << <i>What if somebody cracks and resubmits a coin half a dozen times, and finally gets an upgrade- would it be unethical to omit that information? >>



    I think it's now generally assumed by knowledgeable collectors and dealers alike that coins are often resubmitted until they achieve the best grade that could be reasonably given that coin, so I don't think it's necessary to volunteer what's already presumed to happen to many coins (just like it's not necessary to state that most blast white 1800's silver coins have been dipped at one time or another). That having been said, if a potential buyer *asks* if the seller has previously submitted a particular coin to a TPG, then the seller has an obligation to reply truthfully.
    "Giving away an MS-65 $20 St. Gaudens to everyone logged in when I make my 10,000th post..."
  • mrpotatoheaddmrpotatoheadd Posts: 7,576 ✭✭✭


    << <i>I think it's now generally assumed by knowledgeable collectors and dealers alike that coins are often resubmitted until they achieve the best grade that could be reasonably given that coin, so I don't think it's necessary to volunteer what's already presumed to happen to many coins... >>

    Fair enough.

    Suppose, instead of not disclosing that the coin is in a "MSwhatever" holder when it's put up for sale, it is cracked out of that holder first, before being put up for sale. Any disclosure issues there?

    BTW- I'm not trying to pick on anybody here. I really *am* curious about what sort of facts people (in general) consider to be relevant as far as disclosure goes. Is that a sufficient disclaimer? image
  • OKbustchaserOKbustchaser Posts: 5,546 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>Coins in a TPG slab should have the company and grade disclosed in the auction or advertisement. To omit known relevant information is unethical. >>



    How is the fact that it happens to be in a TPG holder (ANY holder) relevent? The seller is selling a coin not an opinion in this case. It is no more necessary to mention that a coin is in a holder than it would be to mention that a coin is raw.
    Just because I'm old doesn't mean I don't love to look at a pretty bust.


  • << <i>

    << <i> >>



    The seller is selling a coin not an opinion in this case. >>





    I must disagree.

    By selling the coin in the slab, the seller is selling both a coin and an opinion. His coin, and the TPGs opinion. If he wishes to sell just the coin (or the coin with only the seller's opinion), he could always crack it out."
    "Giving away an MS-65 $20 St. Gaudens to everyone logged in when I make my 10,000th post..."
  • fcfc Posts: 12,793 ✭✭✭
    buyers want everything on a silver platter it seems.
  • My problem with this scenario is that removing a coin in a slab is not like removing it from a 2x2 or an airtite, you need a vice or a bandsaw, etc.

    I know that some people buy raw coins for their Dansco, etc, and in that context might specifically avoid a slab, because it is so hard to remove from the slab.

    I understand that many of you are keen on cracking slabs, and that's fine, but I also know that I'm not the only one who is terrified of damaging the coin.

    For this reason, and the others stated, I think that a slab, any slab, should be disclosed.

    Rex
  • OKbustchaserOKbustchaser Posts: 5,546 ✭✭✭✭✭
    On the contrary, he never mention the PCGS opinion because he isn't selling the opinion. The coin could just as easily be in a 2X2.
    Just because I'm old doesn't mean I don't love to look at a pretty bust.
  • Would I be disappointed? No. If I liked the coin enough to bid on it and win, and now I have it, then great. If it's been graded by one of the top TPGs, I see that as a bonus. Unfortunate that it's in a lesser grade than originally thought, but that seems to be a common trend, to think a coin grades better than it is. Probably because our love for the hobby clouds our vision a bit at times.

    Sorry to comment on something mentioned here that's a bit off-topic, but I wonder: when did it start, this fascination with cracking open and resubmitting a coin over and over again until you get the grade you want? Do people really do this, and to what extent? I'm sure PCGS (or whoever) is laughing all the way to the bank, but is it really worth it to the collector? And what does is say about the TPG? If you really question the validity of what they're doing, why do you send your coins to them? My 2c.
    Exclusively collecting Capped Bust Halves in VF to AU, especially rarity 3 and up.
    image
    Joe G.
    Great BST purchases completed with commoncents123, p8nt, blu62vette and Stuart. Great coin swaps completed with rah1959, eyoung429 and Zug. Top-notch consignment experience with Russ.


  • << <i>I must disagree.

    By selling the coin in the slab, the seller is selling both a coin and an opinion. His coin, and the TPGs opinion. >>


    I think he is selling the coin and HIS opinion. The buyer gets both of those and absolutely free, a nice protective holder and someone else's opinion as well.
  • ZoinsZoins Posts: 34,401 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Buy the coin, not the holder.

    In this case you just got a better holder than you were expecting.
  • DarkmaneDarkmane Posts: 1,021
    You got the coin you paid for. Hopefully it was described accurately.... you agreed w/ the grade.

    Resubmit it if you like, or crack it out and put it in the Dansco. Either way, you got EXACTLY what you paid for... and a free slab to boot.

    IN FACT - you can send in that label for 50c, IIRC.
  • mozinmozin Posts: 8,755 ✭✭✭
    The seller should have disclosed the coin resided in a PCGS 45 holder, or he should have cracked the coin out before he shipped it.

    I don't believe the buyer should feel unhappy with his purchase, assuming the coin looks like the pictures. He has the added benefit of knowing that PCGS accepted the coin for grading, while about 95% of the raw Busties on ebay would not be acceptable to PCGS..
    I collect Capped Bust series by variety in PCGS AU/MS grades.
  • Damn right I would be dissappointed. That guy should have disclosed the holder and grade. He is nothing but a greedy loser wimp!

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