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Trivia Question -- Highest Multiple of Face Value Paid for a Coin
supercoin
Posts: 2,323 ✭
The 1933 Saint has handily grabbed the record as the most expensive coin ever.
But it sold for a mere 425,000 time its face value ($8.5M / $20 = 425,000).
What's the highest premium ever paid as a multiple of face value?
I'll start the bidding with the 1804 bust dollar -- 4,000,000 time face value.
But it sold for a mere 425,000 time its face value ($8.5M / $20 = 425,000).
What's the highest premium ever paid as a multiple of face value?
I'll start the bidding with the 1804 bust dollar -- 4,000,000 time face value.
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2,300,000 / .05 = 46,000,000
The nickel sold for about $1.8M, not $2.3M. Still a very impressive multiple. But I'm certain several large cents have sold for more than one fifth of that, so that's where the record probably resides.
A cent would have to sell for more than $368,000 be qualify as the highest.
OK, so the Wreath in MS69BN sold for $180,000. What about the PR68RD?
How about the MS67BN Chain cent?
<< <i>Parrino asked $1M for a 1793 cent....then at the same auction as the 1913 nickel it sold for about $180,000.
The nickel sold for about $1.8M, not $2.3M. Still a very impressive multiple. But I'm certain several large cents have sold for more than one fifth of that, so that's where the record probably resides. >>
The $2,300,000 came from Numismedia.
You will never know for sure - you only know the results of public sales, lots of really high priced material is sold privately.
The nickel definitely sold for $1.8M - I was there (and even bid on it up to a point). Don't know where Numismedia got that $2.3M price.
I think you are going to find that Tradedollarnut's nickel sets the public sale multiple record for US coins. I don't know what the public sale multiple record is for world coins. There might be some British stuff or antiquities that have a higher multiple (how do you put a multiple on a Greek copper owl?).
Seems to me that some old British farthings and ha'pences went for some pretty big bucks (pounds?) a few years ago.
1792 birch cent sold for $2,585,000 in 2015.
I will have to say the sale of the unique 1943 D copper penny at $1,700,000.00.
My Instagram
Sweet !!!
Wait until a certain someone's double ear Lincoln hits the open market.
This J-4 MS-65 RB appears to be the auction record for price/face,
but the overall record looks like the J-1 silver center SP-67 BN which reportedly sold for $5m in a private transaction, January 2012.
http://www.pcgscoinfacts.com/Coin/Detail/11001
Ooooh, there were some scary looking women models back in the day...this and the Chain Cent design.
BST transactions: dbldie55, jayPem, 78saen, UltraHighRelief, nibanny, liefgold, FallGuy, lkeigwin, mbogoman, Sandman70gt, keets, joeykoins, ianrussell (@GC), EagleEye, ThePennyLady, GRANDAM, Ilikecolor, Gluggo, okiedude, Voyageur, LJenkins11, fastfreddie, ms70, pursuitofliberty, ZoidMeister,Coin Finder, GotTheBug, edwardjulio, Coinnmore...
I just checked my own records just for fun..... 50,380 x face value. That makes me feel like a millionaire!
I would've guessed the 1943-D copper cent too but now I see others that are way higher.
Great transactions with oih82w8, JasonGaming, Moose1913.
$3M for the SP65 1793 large cent
....further down the list would be
the 1794 Half Cent that went
for over $1Million.
....the one I bought in Europe for $1,000
back in 1978
for PCGS. A 49+-Year PNG Member...A full numismatist since 1972, retired in 2022
I thought it might be the 1794 pattern mill (or 1/10 of a cent), Judd 15, Pollock 19. But then I checked the prices realized and it sold for a mere $74,750.
Pacific Northwest Numismatic Association
PCGS MS 67 RB No Pole 1796 Half Cent: D. Brent Pogue Collection - Stack's/Bowers 2/2016:3008, $763,750. That's a multiple of 152.75 million. To beat this multiple, you'd need a large cent to sell for over 1.5275 million, which looks like it's happened based off some of the posts here.
Successful transactions with: wondercoin, Tetromibi, PerryHall, PlatinumDuck, JohnMaben/Pegasus Coin & Jewelry, CoinFlip, and coinlieutenant.
We need a "yikes" option in the smiley section.
...put me down for the 1909 VDD cent that's now forever part of the Mars rover Curiosity...2.5 billion was the cost for that baby...game over
When you tell of these prices to non coin collectors, they look at you as if you had green hair and a third eye in your forehead.....'They paid what for a cent? (though they usually say penny)"....Cheers, RickO