Old Green Holder Myth true?

UPDATED WITH PHOTOS
Update --- I have bought the coin. I felt it was a good deal as is. What do you guys think? MS61 as is, or do you think it would grade higher/lower if I sent it in for a regrade?


Original post --------------------------------
So, I have been looking at a $5 Liberty that is slabbed in an OGH as ms61. Is it true that generally coins in those OGH are graded higher on a regrade? The price is good as is, but if if this is true that it will regrade higher, even one point, that coin is much more attractive to me. You guys are the wizards, please tell me what you think about this.
Thanks in advance!
Update --- I have bought the coin. I felt it was a good deal as is. What do you guys think? MS61 as is, or do you think it would grade higher/lower if I sent it in for a regrade?


Original post --------------------------------
So, I have been looking at a $5 Liberty that is slabbed in an OGH as ms61. Is it true that generally coins in those OGH are graded higher on a regrade? The price is good as is, but if if this is true that it will regrade higher, even one point, that coin is much more attractive to me. You guys are the wizards, please tell me what you think about this.
Thanks in advance!
"When I die I want to go peacefully in my sleep like grandpa did, not screaming like the rest of the people in his car."
--- Jack Handy
Positive BST transactions with members - Tander123, Twincam, UtahCoin, ianrussell
--- Jack Handy
Positive BST transactions with members - Tander123, Twincam, UtahCoin, ianrussell
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Comments
Many OGHs that were upgrade candidates have already been cracked out and regraded. If you have already thought of that, then you have to ask why this one wasn't.
Was it because it really is a MS61?
Is it because someone wanted to keep the holder?
No one here can tell you anything without seeing the coin. There are coins in just about any version of the holder that could upgrade at any time.
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
Judge the coin on it's own merits to determine what YOU like and don't like about it. Do you think it has good eye appeal? Do you think it merits the 61 grade? You said the price is good as is...that's the bottom line. If you like the coin at the price it's being offered at, that's really all that matters.
Coins in old green holders can legitimately be considered to be more stable and you know they haven't been messed with in several years. But an OGH does not mean a sure upgrade any more than any other holder.
What bochiman and midlifecrisis stated are very good responses to you as well.
However, most OGH coins that you will have access to purchasing will likely have already been considered for regrade and potential upgrade in the open market.
Stuart
Collect 18th & 19th Century US Type Coins, Silver Dollars, $20 Gold Double Eagles and World Crowns & Talers with High Eye Appeal
"Luck is what happens when Preparation meets Opportunity"
--- Jack Handy
Positive BST transactions with members - Tander123, Twincam, UtahCoin, ianrussell
<< <i>Is there anyway to find out if a OGH has already been sent in for regrade consideration? I guess any PCGS graded coin for that matter. You guys are awesome, thanks again. >>
If I recall correctly, coins sent to PCGS for regrade are broken out of their holders.
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
--- Jack Handy
Positive BST transactions with members - Tander123, Twincam, UtahCoin, ianrussell
<< <i>
<< <i>Is there anyway to find out if a OGH has already been sent in for regrade consideration? I guess any PCGS graded coin for that matter. You guys are awesome, thanks again. >>
If I recall correctly, coins sent to PCGS for regrade are broken out of their holders. >>
This is correct, it would of lost the old holder.
In other words, on any given OGH coin, maybe it will upgrade, maybe it will stay the same, maybe it will downgrade, and maybe it will no grade (yes, I have had that happen to me).
https://pcgs.com/setregistry/showcase/2819
Re the OP's point, as others have said, the upgrade candidates from OGHs have been picked-off by now, unless they've been locked up for 20 years as another poster said.
If you have lots of time on your hands, if you're willing to look through enough of them, find an inexpensive coin, like a 38 D Nickel in PC 6, and see enough of them in OGHs to see if you run across an upgrade candidate. I stumbled onto one such coin five years ago and upgraded it.
"Seu cabra da peste,
"Sou Mangueira......."
"“Those who sacrifice liberty for security/safety deserve neither.“(Benjamin Franklin)
"I only golf on days that end in 'Y'" (DE59)
In your particular case the price differential from MS61 to MS62 is only $10 ($510 vs $520). It's irrelevant and certainly not worth the effort to resubmit it. If the coin is nice, it would fetch MS62 money. The real upside would be if the coin were nearly nice enough to make MS63. And that doesn't happen all that much with ogh's though at times some rattlers might be nice enough to make it.
roadrunner
Despite isolated anecdotal contradictions by others, the vast majority of ogh coins that still exist are in all likelihood "upgrade rejects" that have already been submitted at some point in the past. I hear a lot of "well, I know a guy who submitted 5 ogh and they were all 2-3-4-5 point upgrades" stories, but I seldom if ever see any verifiable proof of such claims. Even if occasionally true, the chances of this happening at this stage of the game are next to nil. I'm not tryng to be a buzzkill, just a realist.
In short...BUY THE COIN, NOT THE HOLDER.
RIP Mom- 1932-2012
I have seen some potential upgrade coins in OGH's. But not all OGH coins will upgrade.
If you had high resolution images we could help with the grading, but since there's no pics it's impossible to tell if it would upgrade.
--- Jack Handy
Positive BST transactions with members - Tander123, Twincam, UtahCoin, ianrussell
You can’t use the size of the holder (e.g. old rattler) or the color of the label (green) to decide if a coin is properly graded. You have know how to grade coins and judge the eye appeal of the piece.
<< <i>Thanks, these are great comments. I ended up buying the coin since the price at its current grade of ms61 I think was a good buy. Now, I just need to decide if it is worth trying to regrade. >>
Now the question becomes what is the upgrade motivation. If you are just hoping to turn it around for a profit, then that's your call. If you are a collector that would just like to own something that has a greater perceived value, my advise is to just enjoy what you have. Let me elaborate on my own upgrade misgivings.
I have an 1844-C $5 that I acquired around 1995. It was in an OGH (duh!) as a VF30. That grade is largely based on a weak strike. There is hardly a mark on it and it has more mint luster than most of the AU $5's I have. About 3 years ago, I sent it to PCGS as a regrade. It came back as a VF35 (I truly believe it's worth a 40). However, once the air hit it, a carbon spot developed that was not there before. It's not big and ugly. However, I'd rather have a 30 in an OGH, than a spot in a 35 blue label.
Moral of the story is ... if you enjoy and appreciate what you have, it's not worth the risk of messing it up for a different number on the label.
On another note ... much of the gold in OGH that I acquired 10-15 years ago looks so much better than what is on the market today. Most of my gold in OGH has very nice orange or rose patina. What's on the market today is the bright-n-shiny processed stuff. I only buy 1 or 2 coins a year because I don't see much I like.
Grading is a gamble, we all know this, if it were a true consensus of what the coin would actually be, then there would be no need for a TPG.
I'll give it a shot in a few weeks, 12 slabs that are a mix of rattlers and a few wrappers are going in for a regrade, and 10 old fat slabs from NGC are going in for a crossover.(I'll pump a group shot of em here, after I send them in and get the results back).
I'm feeling lucky this year..
Besides I want to visit with DW at the Houston Money Show, if he will entertain the moment.
PCGS guarantees that the coin will not down grade on a regrade but if you crack it out, all bets are off.
The name is LEE!
Stuart
Collect 18th & 19th Century US Type Coins, Silver Dollars, $20 Gold Double Eagles and World Crowns & Talers with High Eye Appeal
"Luck is what happens when Preparation meets Opportunity"
<< <i>Myth or not, other than postage, what is there to lose? If you really want to know, just send it in for a regrade.
PCGS guarantees that the coin will not down grade on a regrade but if you crack it out, all bets are off. >>
I think that this is not necessarily a good strategy. Often , the possibility of the upgrade carries the value of the coin, and the OGH fuels the possibility. If you send the coin for a regrade, it will be returned in the current blue ticket slab, and at the same grade, you will lose the mystique and added desirability of the green label.
Personally, I like the way gold looks in the OGH (the color of the slab ticket goes very nicely with gold), and I would leave it as is.
Finally, if it is a common date Liberty $5, the price spread between 61 and 62 is negligible and not worth submitting. (You did not say in this thread what coin it is.)
President, Racine Numismatic Society 2013-2014; Variety Resource Dimes; See 6/8/12 CDN for my article on Winged Liberty Dimes; Ebay
Fwiw coins in ogh's have NOT been retried at PCGS at least since before 1999. If they were, they would have been broken out and reslabbed into a newer blue label holder. The people that continue to claim that the ogh is all myth are the same people who probably have limited to zero experience in that area. When I stop running into PQ+ coins on a monthly basis I'll be the first to write the epithat. About 2-3 yrs ago I let go of an ogh 1857 PF66 dime purchased off ebay without trying it when my cash position was a bit low....settling for a "nil" $2000 pq+ premium. Even back then there were plenty of threads about the ogh myth being just that. That coin did end up in a PCGS PF67 holder as finest graded. It ultimately sold for about 2.5X what I originally let it go for. Some myth.
Millions of coins were graded pre-1999. Not all of them have even been bothered to be tried for regrade. Either the owners know exactly what they have and what to keep them in old holders or they just don't care. A lot of coins were buried and forgotten about in the early 1990's. About 2 yrs ago a dealer friend of mine purchased an entire 18th and 19th century type set of ogh's put away in the 1993-1998 time frame. There wasn't a bad coin in the bunch with some upgrading and essentially every coin bringing decent premiums to bid. I ended up with the VG Flowing Hair half and later sold it for nearly Fine money in the same holder.....just another myth.
roadrunner
I also continue to search and find PQ examples in old holders. I found this one last week in an MS62 holder OGH—it looks better to me, but I don’t plan to resubmit.
<< <i>Fwiw coins in ogh's have NOT been retried at PCGS at least since before 1999. If they were, they would have been broken out and reslabbed into a newer blue label holder. The people that continue to claim that the ogh is all myth are the same people who probably have limited to zero experience in that area. When I stop running into PQ+ coins on a monthly basis I'll be the first to write the epithat. About 2-3 yrs ago I let go of an ogh 1857 PF66 dime purchased off ebay without trying it when my cash position was a bit low....settling for a "nil" $2000 pq+ premium. Even back then there were plenty of threads about the ogh myth being just that. That coin did end up in a PCGS PF67 holder as finest graded. It ultimately sold for about 2.5X what I originally let it go for. Some myth.
Millions of coins were graded pre-1999. Not all of them have even been bothered to be tried for regrade. Either the owners know exactly what they have and what to keep them in old holders or they just don't care. A lot of coins were buried and forgotten about in the early 1990's. About 2 yrs ago a dealer friend of mine purchased an entire 18th and 19th century type set of ogh's put away in the 1993-1998 time frame. There wasn't a bad coin in the bunch with some upgrading and essentially every coin bringing decent premiums to bid. I ended up with the VG Flowing Hair half and later sold it for nearly Fine money in the same holder.....just another myth.
roadrunner >>
...and this would be one example of the isolated anecdotal contradictions of which I spoke. I still maintain that the school of thought that "most or all OGH holders are undergrades" is false and rooted largely in myth. Using a couple of instances to infer that all or even most OGH pieces are somehow upgrade worthy is silly. Further, just because someone succesfully sold an OGH coin at a profit doesn't necessarily mean the coin was a true undergrade...it only means that someone else happened to agree with the seller's assessment (and/or bought into the OGH mystique). Look at the "MS61" coin (with what looks to be rather obvious wear) that is the subject of this thread and tell us how much "PQ+" profit can be made. (No offense to op intended but that piece looks 58).
(And "fwiw" I've been a dealer for over 25 yrs. so I have slightly more than "limited to zero experience" thanks.)
RIP Mom- 1932-2012
Hoard the keys.
"Seu cabra da peste,
"Sou Mangueira......."