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Re: Rarity assessment of coins with mint errors.

This coin is a French 2 Euro Cent, minted in 1999. As we mentioned earlier, this calculation failed to calculate the value of a tiny but very valuable coin. Therefore, this only confirms that the real value, as Sapyx already mentioned, arises from supply and demand, and the value grows with high demand and low supply... So… -
Re: Rarity assessment of coins with mint errors.
That's kind of hard for us to do, because as I said in an earlier post, coins with multiple errors on them like that effectively don't exist. If you Google "multiple errors coin" on Google, you will get millions of hits, mostly people on Facebook and elsewhere asking about coins they mistakenly believe have "multiple… -
Rarity assessment of coins with mint errors.

Good day. Well, I submitted my 3 coins, with mint errors, for NGC certification... the coins should be returned somewhere in half a year, that is, around 12/12/2026... Well, while I'm waiting, I should at least calculate the reserve price for each coin for the auction... because given the auctions' approach to these coins,… -
Re: Rarity assessment of coins with mint errors.
A coin is valued as a whole, entire coin, rather than the sum of it's parts. The value of a coin - as with the value of anything else, really - is a result of supply and demand. "Supply" is its rarity - how many of the things actually exist and are available for people to buy. "Demand" is how many collectors actually want… -
Re: Rarity assessment of coins with mint errors.
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Re: Rarity assessment of coins with mint errors.
If a coin has "multiple errors" on it, then it's almost entirely certain that it's not a mint error or variety, but rather just damage. Ockham's Razor says that the most likely explanation for a coin with multiple defects is the simplest explanation: that a single event has caused all of the damage. In the extremely rare…
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