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NGC VS. PCGS
Just for curiosity.....If someone was to take new bullion coins that were graded MS70 from NGC...what percentage of those coins do you guys think would get graded MS70 from PCGS on a crossover?
Thanks and Merry Christmas.
Thanks and Merry Christmas.
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Go do your own research on the 1997 $100 Plat Proof for example in PR70 at both services - what do you come up with?
Now, go check on the REV PROOF Gold 2006-W in PR70...
same analysis?
Wondercoin
One might also ask how many PCGS 70's, if cracked out and resubmitted, would come up 70 again?
Or, if the same coin were resubmitted on 100 different occasions, how many times would it 70 ?
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<< <i>Just for curiosity.....If someone was to take new bullion coins that were graded MS70 from NGC...what percentage of those coins do you guys think would get graded MS70 from PCGS on a crossover?
Thanks and Merry Christmas. >>
The key word is : miniscule
Merry Christmas to you
<< <i>Just for curiosity.....If someone was to take new bullion coins that were graded MS70 from NGC...what percentage of those coins do you guys think would get graded MS70 from PCGS on a crossover?
Thanks and Merry Christmas. >>
interesting post and welcome to the boards.....
my answer...10%
ngc hands out 70`s like candy, thats why i view ngc 70`s as 69`s.
i don`t submit to ngc because of this.
<< <i>NGC is at least one grade high in most of their gradings. I would not dream of sending any to them to grade. >>
You're entitled to your opinion, but I find that statement ridiculous.
<< <i>I am not planning on doing it....I was just curious.....but if someone did do it.....would he stand a better chance of getting a 70 in a crossover or cracking it....or would make a difference. >>
PCGS will not allow a 70 crossover. They cannot see the edge is the reason I was given.
Chance favors the prepared mind.
<< <i>One might ask the reciprocal question as well ... how many PCGS 70's would cross to NGC?
One might also ask how many PCGS 70's, if cracked out and resubmitted, would come up 70 again?
Or, if the same coin were resubmitted on 100 different occasions, how many times would it 70 ? >>
Would a PCGS70 get a 71 at NGC? Or a 70.99?
<< <i>NGC is at least one grade high in most of their gradings. I would not dream of sending any to them to grade. >>
If that's the case, many people would submit to NGC precisely because they grade higher. Something to think about.
<< <i>It's different by coin. You should be able to calculate the expected crackout rate using the numbers in their pop reports. >>
That's most of it. You also have to consider that the more knowledgeable bulk submitters send the most promising pieces to PCGS. Therefore, the ratio from the pop reports is not the whole story. Then again, try cracking out 10 70s and 10 69s from PCGS holders and resubmitting them raw to see how they fare. Apparently, the people who have the most at stake in the 70 game are afraid to try it and find out what their position really is. They might be right; it might be a discernable difference that will manifest itself repeatably through the grading process.
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<< <i>I thought I read somewhere that PCGS would take 70's but the submitter must be willing to accept a 69 in return. >>
I guess cross at any grade would cover that. My error.
Chance favors the prepared mind.
<< <i>Just for curiosity.....If someone was to take new bullion coins that were graded MS70 from NGC...what percentage of those coins do you guys think would get graded MS70 from PCGS on a crossover?
Thanks and Merry Christmas. >>
IMHO there is no such thing, a "perfect" coin does not (or should not) exist.
Heck.....even a 69 should be a freak.
Ray
Fact: On recent modern bullion, NGC has graded up to 50% of submitted coins as 70's. PCGS rarely exceeds 20% of submitted coins and is often far below 20% and that is why the pcgs graded coins command a premium in the market. On the 2006 1oz Buffalo NGC graded 30000 of 60000 (roughly...last i saw which was a long while back...im not sure if that was proof or MS) as 70's vs PCGS MS70's 3683 of 58040 current pop. or 6.34% The PCGS 2006 Buffalo proofs are 1891 of 9273 or a ratio of 20.4% currently.
The ratio of 70's for your coins submitted for crossover will most likely be approximately the same as the current ratio of 70's to total coins submitted for the specific issue you submit to PCGS as published in their population report...so become a member and analyse the pop report. The concept that, if NGC graded it a 70, it has a better chance of crossing to PCGS as a 70, is unfortunately not true, because they simply dont agree on an interpretation of the grading standards. So the result is that an NGC coin might as well be ungraded as far as PCGS is concerned. I consider all modern bullion not graded by PCGS to be ungraded, because it all trades so close to bullion as to make the grade meaningless. Only the PCGS 70's command much of a premium in the market, because there are so few of them.
Learn to grade for yourself. Learn what PCGS expects in a coin, and dont rely on NGC to cull your submissions for you. The odds are ..not good.
I hope this info helps...I learned it by trial and error.
Snapdragon
The numbers on the ASE 07W say about 50%...
With NGC grading at 20% and PCGS grading at 10%...
True Story without really even thing about it till now...
I purchased 10 NGC & 5 PCGS - ASE / 07W / MS70's...
Five of the NGC's were not MS70's IMHO...
Currently Listed: Nothing
Take Care, Dave
<< <i>I am guessing that many PCGS-70's if cracked and re-submitted would not necessarily achieve the 70 again, even if correctly graded. They are just not going to give but so many that are deserving out >>
Doesn't PCGS have a quota for the number of 70's that they can give out?
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
<< <i>
<< <i>NGC is at least one grade high in most of their gradings. I would not dream of sending any to them to grade. >>
You're entitled to your opinion, but I find that statement ridiculous. >>
I agree with you. In fact, I think the grade of 70 is ridiculous, even for moderns.
Maybe NGC is the company correctly grading the coins as they see them and not trying to make a lottery of people's submissions.
Just an opinion....
to maximum profits and make up their rules as they go.
<< <i>If you feel its rediculous then just keep sending your coins to NGC and when you sell them just take the lower price and smile. >>
This has nothing to do with the post. The post was about grading, not pricing. There are many plastic buyers who will pay multiple times the price for the "exact same" coin in a PCGS holder.
<< <i>A few years ago NGC took some PCGS graded coins, broke them out of the slabs and reholdered them in NGC slabs with the same grade, sent them in for crossover back to the same grades PCGS had just given them. Less than half crossed >>
Excellent point......Again....Coin not the holder. But when you are talking about 70's it's a quota game since there are few who can tell a 69 from a 70 but a "perfect" coin should be granted its reward
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<< <i>Last summer I cracked out 3 NGC PR70 Kennedy Halves. 2005 clads. One did come back PR70 from PCGS. the other 2 came back 69. >>
Should have sent them in separately in three submissions, each teamed up with 2 69 crackouts. If the claim of a quota at PCGS is true, they gave the 70 to the most perfect of the 3 "perfect" coins you sent.
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<< <i>
<< <i>NGC is at least one grade high in most of their gradings. I would not dream of sending any to them to grade. >>
You're entitled to your opinion, but I find that statement ridiculous. >>
You're way to kind. I was flat out thinking stupid.
That never crossed my mind. Not a bad idea
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>NGC is at least one grade high in most of their gradings. I would not dream of sending any to them to grade. >>
You're entitled to your opinion, but I find that statement ridiculous. >>
You're way to kind. I was flat out thinking stupid. >>
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
<< <i>The more discussions like this dominate the higher end of the hobby, the more I'm enjoying collecting cheaper stuff to put in coin albums. >>
Do not confuse this thread with the "higher end of the hobby".
I agree with Keets. I'll PASS.
<< <i>If you feel its rediculous then just keep sending your coins to NGC and when you sell them just take the lower price and smile. >>
Sorry, but this post made me laugh.
edited for spelling.
<< <i>Stick with PCGS for your moderns and bullion.
Or skip moderns and bullion and collect the coins in the plastic and not the number on the label.
<< <i>Frank is that true??? What did PCGS say about this??? Did they believe NGC??? >>
NGC sent a certified letter to all NGC dealers around 1999 telling this story. I am unaware of PCGS' response.
I bet PCGS could do the same experiment in reverse and the results could be the same.
Steve
I usually BUY the SAME coin at a lower price, and yes, I do smile....
In reality, you can check a number of 69's, and a number of 70's (from BOTH services), and you will find that some of the 69's are nicer than some of the 70's. I have seen this, and so has everyone else on this board. I have also seen AU Large Cents (my main interest) in MS63 holders, again from BOTH services. I tend to go with 69's for moderns, because they are WAY cheaper, and true 70's don't exist anyway. I do admit to getting a 70 on the holder when I can, but it is for Registry points, not because of any belief that the coin is "perfect". I also prefer the NGC Registry, because they allow coins from either service. This seems a bit more "collector friendly", and a bit more realistic to me.
<< <i>
One might also ask how many PCGS 70's, if cracked out and resubmitted, would come up 70 again?
Or, if the same coin were resubmitted on 100 different occasions, how many times would it 70 ? >>
That is indeed the question. And no one has wanted to pay the 3K to find out
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What you are suggesting is that I might still have a PR-70 Silver Eagle lurking in the group of 5 that came back as PR-69s along with a PR-70.
I knew it would happen.
<< <i>Should have sent them in separately in three submissions, each teamed up with 2 69 crackouts. If the claim of a quota at PCGS is true, they gave the 70 to the most perfect of the 3 "perfect" coins you sent.
What you are suggesting is that I might still have a PR-70 Silver Eagle lurking in the group of 5 that came back as PR-69s along with a PR-70. >>
I am suggesting that IF the allegations of a quota system are in force, and I don't know that there is such a thing going on, sending in 3 70s together might have damned one or two of them to the 69 box. Even without that, psychologically playing with the graders it might make sense to send in the most promising ones sandwich with solid 69s to make them stand out as singular individual specimens. Not a game I am keen to play, but makes sense to me if I was to do so.
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