I'm sure a lot of people have a thing for their slabs for nostalgia reasons. Personally I am not a fan, too big and don't fit into the collection slots for my tastes. My question is how accurate their grading was? Lots of experienced experts here, would like their opinions on the latter.
Paramount can be hit or miss. They were chosen to help sell the Redfield Hoard and would put the coins in slabs saying MS 65 or MS 60. Later they did Silver Dollars that weren't part of the hoard and a few more grades were added. NGC will grade the coin in the Paramount holder (put a strip around it, like they do for GSA holders). I've seen the MS 65 get anything from 62 to 66. Given that they originally only had 60 and 65 grades, it figures you will see a range. Unless the coin looks solid, I would not automatically assume it is a 65. The 60 grades might be safer (unless the coin happens to be a problem/details example).
Here are two examples I just found on eBay: 1) Paramount holder say 65 but NGC says 63 2) Paramount says 65 and NGC agrees
Not a very well known TPG big they did make a b m some for themselves. The grading may or may not be accurate but their slabs are collectible.
PCI was a legendary firm with David Akers, Paul Wittlin, etc. They imported tens of thousands of U.S. gold coins, including some of today's finest rarities.
In fairness, at that time, the only MS grades that even existed were MS60, MS65, and MS70. There were no other MS grades.
What did you do then with a legit MS-63 ? Call it an MS-60 and be ultra-conservative or overgrade it as an MS-65 ? I guess it depended on the firm, huh ?
What years did TPG slabbed grading really become a thing? Things have changed a lot in collecting the last 40 years.
1986 (PCGS) and 1987 (NGC). Years of start-up, and then a few years later the promise of "sight-unseen bids" helped lead to the 1989-90 Coin Bubble.
I have seen dealers list these below the grade on the holders and actually say the slab says like 65 but we grade in 63 or even 64. One dealer actually said these were typically over-graded.
Looking at Paramount, they did some of both as you can find the MS 60 and the MS 65 slabs graded MS 63 by NGC. What did they intend to do? That is a question that we can only guess on. Being that they sold these coins, I would guess they would skew in their favor (i.e. call the 63 a 65 and not a 60).
I recall there used to only be UNC or BU. Perhaps this transformed into just 60 or 65 during the early years of numerical grading?
You don't seem to understand what I'm saying, I'm being quite literal - there were no other MS grades back then. MS 61, 62, 63, 64, and MS 66, 67, 68, 69 - did not exist ! If it helps, think of it this way. Today, we have XF (or EF if you prefer but they are both the same thing) 40 and 45. Below 40 is VF, above 45 is AU. Well, what about XF41, 42, 43, 44 ? Or, XF 46, 47, 48, 49 ? Answer they don't exist - there are no such grades.
That is true, there were no numerical grades at all for many decades. The only grading terms used were adjectival. Once numerical grades came along it took quite a few years before all the grades we use today came into existence. Additional numbers began to used only gradually, a few years would go by, they'd add a couple more. And then a few years later, a couple more. It was not until 1986 that we began using all the numerical grades that we have today.
They could add AU56, 57 and 59 or the rest of the AU grades too. In my observation there are many in-between AU coins that they either bump up or down.
I’m guessing it would have depended not on the firm, but whether they were buying (at 60) or selling (at 65)…
Like many older slabs, I think these are cool as they help tell the story of the coin market and grading. I really like these not for the grade but for the time they represent.
Yeah....I see your point GD....but there are lots more coins that are of GRADING INTEREST and PURCHASE INTEREST between MS-60 and 65 than are between XF-40 and 45. More coins....more VALUABLE coins....more people likely to submit with coins between the MS grades. That's why I think "splitting" the grade is more relevant in the MS numbers than the EF numbers (or even the AU numbers).