Great Britian 1948 and 1949 1d question

If you want to sell a 1948 and 1949 1d, to sell for maximum price, should the coins be slabbed? The coins are in the MS63-MS64 RED range. Is it worth the slabbing cost? Remember, these are to be sold.
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'Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery'
CU #3245 B.N.A. #428
Don
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Todd
Having said that if the coin is coming from one of the 2-3 dealers whose grading judgement I trust then I would probably pay the same amount.
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Well, just Love coins, period.
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.
However, I think you will have a larger market base for the slabbed coin. I buy the coin AND the slab. By that I mean I buy a coin that has the eye appeal and price that I want, but also the additional assurance of a more experienced eye that the coin is not fake and has not been (or has minimally been) doctored. I learned a $400 lesson recently with raw coins and am out of the raw coin market.
For your 2 penny's, I suspect the market is large enough that this isn't a concern and slabbing would just cause you to lose $10-$15 on each coin.
<< <i>If you want to sell a 1948 and 1949 1d, to sell for maximum price, should the coins be slabbed? >>
For a Maximum price, yes, they should be slabbed. If you are talking about maximum profit, probably not... The cost of slabbing VS the final hammer price of raw or slabbed coins really depends on you as the seller and me as a buyer (what are you selling and what am I buying)? Can you picture the coin and describe it in a way that makes me comfortable? I recently paid almost 3 times Krause for a German 1/2 mark because it was in PCGS plastic. It was a 15 dollar coin that I would have had to pay to have graded in order to add to my registry set. I got a known graded MS coin for my set that cost me 43 bucks. If I bought it raw for book value ($15) and paid to have it graded by PCGS I would be out about $45 bucks with shipping plus the membership fees and no guarantee that the coin would not be bodybagged for some reason. I think I got a deal for my registry set at 43 dollars... No worries, no fees and no waiting! If I were just wanting a nice example of that coin for my collection I could have bought it raw and saved about 30 bucks but wanting to build a registry set I saved time, worry and money, even at almost 3 times book value. If it were just to be added to my mundane collection at home that almost nobody would ever see, I would take the 15 dollar raw coin since I know what I am looking at when grading these coins. I'm sure you remember seeing all the posts, "It is hard to grade by pics, but I think that coin will grade at *** but I can't be sure while trying to grade from a pic" That makes all of us, I can't grade a coin from a pic no matter how good of a pic you take. Being in a slab eliminates that concern (at least for me anyway, I trust most of the TPGS or at least know how I grade VS their grades. Bottom line, I saved money by purchasing a slabbed coin at almost 3 times book, will you make money selling a coin at 3 times book after paying the costs of slabbing? The time it is tied up in shipping and being graded? flip a coin for a 5 dollar profit after a week or 10 dollars after 2 months, which is more profitable?
Just my "2d" worth...
Rick
1836 Capped Liberty
dime. My oldest US
detecting find so far.
I dig almost every
signal I get for the most
part. Go figure...
Aidan.
Well, just Love coins, period.
DPOTD-3
'Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery'
CU #3245 B.N.A. #428
Don
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.
Well, just Love coins, period.