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What does Bowers mean ?

GazesGazes Posts: 2,315 ✭✭✭✭✭
In coinworld, David Bowers has a column about gradeflation. One part of the article says "one reader told me he lost several hundred thousand dollars by buying most of the top graded certified 1909-S VDB cents years ago, because now many dozens of such coins are certified, many of them upgraded."



I have read this paragraph a few times and don't understand what he is alluding to. Any thoughts ? Thanks

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    TommyTypeTommyType Posts: 4,586 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Does he mean that the "top graded certified" has migrated higher, (i.e. upgraded)? Or that the pops have risen, (i.e. upgraded)?



    I see where your confusion is. If the readers coins "upgraded", that wouldn't necessarily be a loss without something else happening.....
    Easily distracted Type Collector
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    Timbuk3Timbuk3 Posts: 11,658 ✭✭✭✭✭
    If I remember correctly, I heard there was a bunch
    that was recently found !!!
    Timbuk3
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    It is poorly written but he is saying many raw coins or coins in old holders have been re-graded by The Big 2 and deflated the price.

    I am not going to wade into the subject matter Bowers is taking a stance on BUT honestly the fact some random "reader" claims to of invested enough money that he has "lost several hundred thousand dollars" sounds like BS.

    He may be referencing the "loss" much in terms of a loss of expected ROI when this "reader" bought the coins but because of gradeflation (in Bower's opinion) has stifled but even then it would mean some casual reader was buying and hoarding an insane level of 09s VDBs.

    I have plans....sometimes
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    BoosibriBoosibri Posts: 11,867 ✭✭✭✭✭
    There are two issues here....buying top pop thinly graded coins in an era where TPG populations which are not yet mature, and gradeflation. Is this any different than the current modern coin market?
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    TwoSides2aCoinTwoSides2aCoin Posts: 43,849 ✭✭✭✭✭
    "Dave's not here, man " (Sorry, I couldn't help but think of Cheech and Chong)

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    Cougar1978Cougar1978 Posts: 7,638 ✭✭✭✭✭
    As more coins are graded pop swells, bids decrease, and then investors lose money. Some will blame what they call grade inflation.

    In reality he probably would have done better with slabbed world gold. The Mexico 50 Peso one of my favorites.
    So Cali Area - Coins & Currency
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    GazesGazes Posts: 2,315 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Thanks for the responses. One more thought. If the guy did buy a bunch of 1909-S VDB years ago---wouldn't he be in a good position to regrade his coins ?
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    roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,303 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: Gazes

    Thanks for the responses. One more thought. If the guy did buy a bunch of 1909-S VDB years ago---wouldn't he be in a good position to regrade his coins ?




    Exactly. And if QDB's reader were still holding those same top quality coins that were at the top of the pack in 1987-1990, they would likely still be pretty high up in the pack today. So they would get regraded considerably higher...or even just gold beaned. Still, he would have a point that pops have swollen as the 30 year run of certification has brought many coins out of the wood work. Even if you still have top level coin, the overall rise would have been muted by the significant increase in pops. In particular, key dates like 1909s vdb's are still fairly available despite their key date status.



    If you can successfully hoard something and price doesn't rise, or you keep finding more specimens, maybe it's not as rare as you thought. How did the guy do that hoarded 50+ examples of choice/gem 1909 vdb matte proofs? Or how about the guy who hoarded 500-600 "low mintage" 1844 Orphan Annie dimes? I could have told that guy back in 1975 that they were hoarding a fairly available seated coin.
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
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    LakesammmanLakesammman Posts: 17,294 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Boosibri said it best (so far).



    image
    "My friends who see my collection sometimes ask what something costs. I tell them and they are in awe at my stupidity." (Baccaruda, 12/03).I find it hard to believe that he (Trump) rushed to some hotel to meet girls of loose morals, although ours are undoubtedly the best in the world. (Putin 1/17) Gone but not forgotten. IGWT, Speedy, Bear, BigE, HokieFore, John Burns, Russ, TahoeDale, Dahlonega, Astrorat, Stewart Blay, Oldhoopster, Broadstruck, Ricko.
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    291fifth291fifth Posts: 23,942 ✭✭✭✭✭
    There is always danger involved in "investing" in coins that are popular but not rare. The 1909-S VDB has always been popular but it is not rare. I wouldn't be surprised if several rolls of Unc. examples are still out there in the safe deposit boxes of west coast old money.
    All glory is fleeting.
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    Wabbit2313Wabbit2313 Posts: 7,268 ✭✭✭✭✭


    Crack some of your Rattlers and send them into PCGS right now. It is not grade-flation, it is not grade-deflation, it is grade-destruction!
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    AUandAGAUandAG Posts: 24,539 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I was sitting at the round table with Hall, et al, at a PCGS show in Vegas

    a couple of years ago when the grading room delivered several blue

    boxes to a S. CA dealer, who's name remains forgotten. Inside those

    boxes were a full roll of 1909-s vdb red cents. I was thrilled to see so

    many top pops! He said they belonged to a customer of his and he was

    just getting them graded for him......oh my.

    Population of top dogs when up sky high that day.



    bobimage
    Registry: CC lowballs (boblindstrom), bobinvegas1989@yahoo.com
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    BGBG Posts: 1,762 ✭✭✭✭✭
    As years go by the Pop's increase because these are not rare.



    Every Auction has several listed.
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    northcoinnorthcoin Posts: 4,987 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: BG
    As years go by the Pop's increase because these are not rare.

    Every Auction has several listed.


    Ironically, EBay and the internet have made once rare items (whether coins or anything else) more widely available and locatable. When one can find something with the click of the mouse that may only exist in someone's attic in a far distant state it becomes just as available as if it were at the corner drug store.
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    cladkingcladking Posts: 28,339 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: Boosibri

    There are two issues here....buying top pop thinly graded coins in an era where TPG populations which are not yet mature, and gradeflation. Is this any different than the current modern coin market?




    The reason modern markets are immature after all these years is all the disinformation out there and the perception that all moderns are common.



    These coins have been getting graded for nearly twenty years now. Can you imagine people in 1995 saying it wasn't a good idea to collect 1909-S VDB cents because there was no way to know how many were out there? This would have applied to all coins. The process is merely taking longer for moderns because so many people hate them and consider them a drag on the market that holds back real coins like the subject of this thread!



    Anyone who thinks all the old coins are already graded may be in for a rude awakening. Almost every old coin that has traded in the marketplace since 1986 has been graded but probably fewer than half of the rest (and of course the countless millions of old coins that aren't worth the grading fee). Where are all the '16-D dimes for instance?



    Coin collections are long term. The thirty years coins have been graded are just starting to approach the average age of collections.



    Tempus fugit.
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    cladkingcladking Posts: 28,339 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: Gazes

    In coinworld, David Bowers has a column about gradeflation. One part of the article says "one reader told me he lost several hundred thousand dollars by buying most of the top graded certified 1909-S VDB cents years ago, because now many dozens of such coins are certified, many of them upgraded."



    I have read this paragraph a few times and don't understand what he is alluding to. Any thoughts ? Thanks




    If he was really buying at the top of the grading curve then relatively few of his coins would upgrade.



    I've seen a few really high grade examples of this date and am surprised how rare the pops make these appear.



    Tempus fugit.
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    shorecollshorecoll Posts: 5,445 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Take any semi-key coin (not truly rare), search eBay for PCGS MS-65 and sort by price. Look at the cheapest ones listed. They are PCGS, they are "MS-65", and if you bought a roll of those puppies "years ago" you might have gotten killed. Overlap grade-flation with the cyclical nature of many coins and you can see how the original statement could happen.
    ANA-LM, NBS, EAC
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    mannie graymannie gray Posts: 7,259 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: northcoin

    Originally posted by: BG

    As years go by the Pop's increase because these are not rare.



    Every Auction has several listed.




    Ironically, EBay and the internet have made once rare items (whether coins or anything else) more widely available and locatable. When one can find something with the click of the mouse that may only exist in someone's attic in a far distant state it becomes just as available as if it were at the corner drug store.


    +100



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    wondercoinwondercoin Posts: 16,693 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Cladking ... What would you rather have in 100 years ... one of the 264,000 1916-D silver Dimes or one of the 116,000 pure Gold ones from 2016? image

    Wondercoin

    edited to add ... perhaps even a better question for 100 years from now....

    (1) MS67FB or (500)+ of the gold ones;
    Please visit my website at www.wondercoins.com and my ebay auctions under my user name www.wondercoin.com.
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    cladkingcladking Posts: 28,339 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: wondercoin

    Cladking ... What would you rather have in 100 years ... one of the 264,000 1916-D silver Dimes or one of the 116,000 pure Gold ones from 2016? image



    Wondercoin



    edited to add ... perhaps even a better question for 100 years from now....



    (1) MS67FB or (500)+ of the gold ones;




    Tough call.



    Ask me in 80 years. image







    I know one thing though and that is in the long run quality and rarity will always win out in a collectible. Individuals series and coins pass in and out of favor but in the long run people like coins that are scarce, nice, and interesting. In the long run people will have a completely different perspective on what constitutes "interesting". This especially applies to those things we're too close to see in perspective.





    Tempus fugit.
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    joebb21joebb21 Posts: 4,733 ✭✭✭✭✭
    The particular person mentioned (just a guess) is the collector that owned 4/7 of the 09-s vdb's 5 years ago paying hundreds of thousands to keep control of the market and now losing multi hundreds of thousands by the pops rising (there were 4-5 fresh rolls that came on the market about 3 years ago)
    may the fonz be with you...always...
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    IrishMikeyIrishMikey Posts: 1,561 ✭✭✭
    I know they exist (got to see one once), but the idea of a "fresh roll" of 1909-S VDB cents is just SO COOL!!! Even a fresh roll of 1909 VDB cents (P mint) is fascinating to inspect, not to mention the original roll of 1898 Indian cents I saw many years ago.

    What else is out there, just waiting? I love the possibilities.

    Too bad someone lost money "investing" in top pop Lincoln cents, although I can't feel that sorry for them. Doesn't sound like they will go hungry or lose their home or anything real.
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    IrishMikeyIrishMikey Posts: 1,561 ✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: wondercoin
    Cladking ... What would you rather have in 100 years ... one of the 264,000 1916-D silver Dimes or one of the 116,000 pure Gold ones from 2016? image

    Wondercoin

    edited to add ... perhaps even a better question for 100 years from now....

    (1) MS67FB or (500)+ of the gold ones;

    Can I have the equivalent in $5 Liberty or $10 Liberty gold coins? Problem-free AU to MS-62 would be nice. I do not have 100 years left in me, but my grandchildren might.

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    EagleEyeEagleEye Posts: 7,676 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I remember when there was a buzz around 1909 S VDB's and a buyer of all the top pop pieces. Everyone started sending theirs to the auctions to try and get them bought by this whale of a buyer. The prices rose quickly. Then he stopped buying and the prices settled. Maybe he had too many. Sure, many more may have upgraded, but by stopping his little motor on the S VDB merry-go-round, he hurt the values of the coins - and the value of his own inventory.



    He lost hundred's of thousands of dollars on the price drop because he stopped buying.



    Self-inflicted wound.



    Grading inflation is hard to notice on the 1909-S VDB since the populations are rather large. It is much more noticeable on lower population coins.
    Rick Snow, Eagle Eye Rare Coins, Inc.Check out my new web site:
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    Cougar1978Cougar1978 Posts: 7,638 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I used to write it on my price stickers - it means CDN Bid + 50% a sort of code I use.
    So Cali Area - Coins & Currency

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