RipOff Sunday - Full Page Ad in today's paper

From the "Antique Roadshow that never leaves town". Heck, I wouldn't leave town if I could buy at these prices, drive down the street and sell for more than 50% more! That would be a good day!

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BTW, what exactly is NY Silver??
Hey, the biggest ripp-off , was they would pay up to $3000 for an 1878-S half. WOW!!
<< <i>Ad in our paper buying silver at 15x face. >>
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<< <i>On the flip side, dealing with these guys could be a fun experience. Could be an ideal place to unload your counterfeit slabs. >>
I think these people are smarter than the ad suggests.
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<< <i>well, not to be defending them, but the ad does say Based on $30.00 NY Silver which means the prices are pretty close. of course NY Silver is a bit higher than that now but why bother with little trivial details. and again, not to be defending them, but in today's world all it takes is a minute or so to look in the Newspaper to see where NY Silver is, so shame on anyone foolish enough to fall for this crap.
BTW, what exactly is NY Silver??
While I agree with what you are saying Al, the sad unfortunate truth is that most folks are tickled pink to get $8.00 or $10.00 for those 1964 Kennedy Halfs which on a bad day might have ended up at the local bank for face value along with all the BiCentennial Halfs that grampa stuck away.
Most folks are aware of the price of silver and now being a good time to sell and all but they just do not have the resources available to put 2 and 2 together. Either Internet wise or Intelligence wise.
The name is LEE!
<< <i>Based on $30.00 NY Silver >>
I wonder if someone sells silver today are they still buying based on $30?
I'd think they would be putting the updated price in the ad.
They might say something like "we only update the buy price on certain dates"
I bet when it's going down they update a lot more often.
<< <i>Most folks are aware of the price of silver and now being a good time to sell and all but they just do not have the resources available to put 2 and 2 together. Either Internet wise or Intelligence wise. >>
If you're smart enough to read an ad in the paper and think "Hey! I've got some of those! Maybe it's time to sell?", you're smart enough to pick up the phone (it's not nearly as newfangled a contraption as the internet and most people have at least a passing familiarity with it) and make a couple of calls to get an idea what your stuff might be worth.
<< <i>Why don't you spend $100,000 and run you own full page ad to offer higher prices? >>
I don't need to do that. I bought most of my melt or junk silver in the late 1980s as a kid around $8-9 per ounce....and I can go down the street to my local dealer and sell junk dimes, quarters and halves for 30x face....just a couple miles from the shop in the ad....but I am waiting for silver to go a little higher before I dump the rest of my stuff. Thanks for the witty suggestion though Frank!
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Somebody advertises buy prices for something, and people either sell or not, as they choose. Why is this a ripoff?
<< <i>Why don't you spend $100,000 and run you own full page ad to offer higher prices? >>
And then post your market report...
<< <i>
<< <i>Most folks are aware of the price of silver and now being a good time to sell and all but they just do not have the resources available to put 2 and 2 together. Either Internet wise or Intelligence wise. >>
If you're smart enough to read an ad in the paper and think "Hey! I've got some of those! Maybe it's time to sell?", you're smart enough to pick up the phone (it's not nearly as newfangled a contraption as the internet and most people have at least a passing familiarity with it) and make a couple of calls to get an idea what your stuff might be worth. >>
Well gosh.
I guess if it were really this simple then these folks wouldn't be making any money now would they?
The name is LEE!
Ron
It doesn't have to be a full page ad, but in today's PM market, if the local B&M dealer wanted to buy, why not put some kind of ad in the same paper? Could even have a special 'Buying Weekend' or something. If the local B&M dealer is just going to sit back and wait for the business to come to them, these hotel sellers will continue to clean up.
There is nothing wrong in reaching out and asking for the business.
<< <i>If you're smart enough to read an ad in the paper and think "Hey! I've got some of those! Maybe it's time to sell?", you're smart enough to pick up the phone (it's not nearly as newfangled a contraption as the internet and most people have at least a passing familiarity with it) and make a couple of calls to get an idea what your stuff might be worth. >>
That says it best. The telephone is a powerful tool when its used.
The full page advertisers are up front about buy prices, fair or unfair, its printed in black and white. If people fail to shop around to establish a true market value for any given commodity then they made a poor decision in selling it. The whole purpose of running these ads is to buy as low as possible.
Good or bad, it's called capitalism.
<< <i>I guess if it were really this simple then these folks wouldn't be making any money now would they? >>
The fact that some people don't bother to do it doesn't mean it's not a simple exercise.
Look up some numbers in the yellow pages, pick up the phone, press seven buttons and... "Hello- coin shop? How much are you paying for XXX?"
Yeah- that's a chore.
Among other things pre-1965 silver coins were wanted. Prices offered were:
dimes up to 60 cents
quarters up to $1.50
halves up to $3.00
The "up to" scares me more than the 6X price. I wonder how much they were really paying.
If you are a silver buyer, and you don't have an ad, why do you complain about those who have one?
Just sayin'.
<< <i>Why don't you spend $100,000 and run you own full page ad to offer higher prices? >>
some want to make a few dollars not give it to them
<< <i>
<< <i>I guess if it were really this simple then these folks wouldn't be making any money now would they? >>
The fact that some people don't bother to do it doesn't mean it's not a simple exercise.
Look up some numbers in the yellow pages, pick up the phone, press seven buttons and... "Hello- coin shop? How much are you paying for XXX?"
Yeah- that's a chore.
It is a chore. You have to put yourself in the shoes of someone who knows absolutely nothing about what they are looking at. And the local B&M is probably going to tell them anyway that they have to bring the stuff in for them to look at. The large-ad-in-the-paper guys create value by making it very easy to sell. No free lunch here - they pay a lot of overhead (or should I say the suckers who sell to them pay the overhead) and probably don't make that much in the end. Otherwise you would see a lot more of these ads.
Insider knowledge is worth something in any biz. The readers of this forum tend to be oblivious to the fact that they have considerably more knowledge than Joe Q. Public. We've all invested time and money to learn about it, and yet somehow we still expect the average citizen to not be "dumb" and fall for the slicksters.
I wonder if doctors and lawyers have their own chat forums, and marvel at the fact that everyone else pays them for advice which is "obvious."