Why I Never Sell Coins

Forty some years ago, in the late 60's, I bought a blue Whitman #1 folder of Lincoln Cents, maybe half full, from a dealer at the coin club meeting. I looked at the coins and there was a 24-D, maybe AG at best in the 24-P hole. A friend I worked with wanted to buy the rest of the cents. He said he wanted to get into coin collecting. I sold it to him for the $10 I paid for it and thought nothing more about it. Someone else we worked with told me he was going around bragging that he had sold the folder for $20 to someone else. Now back in those days we made around $2.35 an hour. $10 was a lot of money. Now this really ticked me off as I was just trying to help the guy get started and got taken advantage of by him. That was the last coins I ever sold. By the way, I kept the 24-D.
Ron
Ron
Collect for the love of the hobby, the beauty of the coins, and enjoy the ride.
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<< <i>I sold it to him for the $10 I paid for it... By the way, I kept the 24-D. >>
So you sold it for the $10 you paid for it, and got a free 24-D?
It'll be all right.
"Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working" Pablo Picasso
Ron
Edited to add:
I rewalize that once he bought them they became his property and he could do with them as he pleased. It was just the principle of the thing. I would still have that folder to this day had he not wanted them.
Maybe $2.35 an hour for you, not me. I was making 75¢ an hour working at a Drive Inn Restaurant.
Regards your thread, it's always wise to sell a coin or two from time to time. That way you're living in reality about what your coins are really worth.
I'm only 33 years old and I'm currently getting rid of a huge amount of 'junk' I've accumulated over the years and reorganising my collection so that other won't have to stress as much over it. There will still be a huge amount of work if they want to sell it however.
Andrew
and it sets us apart from practitioners and consultants. Gregor
Maybe you can find comfort in knowing that, without your help, they ended up needing a tutor that ended up costing their father - - your ex-friend - - way more than the $10 profit he made off you and your friendship!!
- - Dave
move on dude. if this has been eating at you for 40 years i can't imagine how something really significant would affect your psyche.
Sure, it’s aggravating when someone takes advantage of your better nature and pulls a stunt like that guy did with the partial Lincoln set. That’s why I rarely give breaks to so-called “beginners,” and I don’t believe in giving coins to kids. I think that they should do something to earn them. Then they will have more of an appreciation for them.
Years ago when I was active in a regional numismatic organization, they used to go after the dealers at their show for donations to their YN program. Nothing would gall me more than to see those kids out selling the coins, which had been given to them, on the bourse floor as soon as the YN program was over. Those kids were not becoming collectors; they were working the system; and that’s not the kind of values that we should have been teaching them.
<< <i>good post, Bill. >>
I disagree. It was an excellent post.
I certainly agree that it doesn't do any good to give coins to kids that don't appreciate them. But my experience, on both sides of the gifts, is that there are many wonderful and smart ways to give coins to kids that do appreciate them.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
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"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
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<< <i>If I sell someone a coin and they are able to make a profit on it, I say "good for them". But, that's just me. >>
End of story.
Same applies when I buy a coin. It's no business of mine to know the seller's cost. Who cares if they paid $1 or $100 for it. If the price is worth it to me, I buy it.
"“Those who sacrifice liberty for security/safety deserve neither.“(Benjamin Franklin)
"I only golf on days that end in 'Y'" (DE59)
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
The main thing is I wouldn't have sold them to the other party for the $20 he offered and would have kept them myself. I would have probably bought a few coins to go in the folders as I ran into them and had them for posterity.
Ron
I think the bigger problem was a friend lying to you, not the sale of the coins per se.
All that said, I always felt a bit uncomfortable when someone would give me a steep discount because I was young. Sometimes I was buying for resale, or figured that while the coin was going in my collection then, it might not stay long, and I didn't want to abuse their kindness.