Low ball registry sets

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by lovecoinswalkingliberty, Feb 25, 2018.

  1. lovecoinswalkingliberty

    lovecoinswalkingliberty Well-Known Member

    Does any body like them, because it just seems they driven up the price of Poor-1 coins
     
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  3. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    They only exist because people kept asking for them to be created. So yes some people that are into they type of collecting seem to enjoy them. The price of 01 coins went up before the registries were ever made
     
  4. lovecoinswalkingliberty

    lovecoinswalkingliberty Well-Known Member

    Why did poor 1 coins go up?
     
  5. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    Because they’re top pop and in some series very hard to find. They’re just as tight giving out a 01 as they are a new top pop
     
  6. physics-fan3.14

    physics-fan3.14 You got any more of them.... prooflikes?

    I don't understand them, but I know some people love them. Why would you try to find a coin in the worst condition possible?
     
  7. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    It's cool to have a coin that worn but I can't see collecting them.
     
  8. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    They bug me because they may encourage people to make lowball coins -- jingling or shuffling coins to decrease their grade, instead of preserving them. Yes, I realize it's not that easy to make a straight-grade P01 coin, but it's possible, and probably not even considered "doctoring".
     
  9. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    I look at a PO-01 set as a fragile market.
    Someone who invested in them will NEVER recover their investment when interest in them is lost.
    And IMO that's not too far in the future.
     
    TypeCoin971793 likes this.
  10. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    It may take longer than you think. I knew people trying to collect worst known pieces years before the third-party grading services existed. Today there are a lot more people trying to collect them. If interest in trying to collect very worn pieces hasn't waned in close to 50 years, why should suddenly change now?
     
    baseball21 likes this.
  11. physics-fan3.14

    physics-fan3.14 You got any more of them.... prooflikes?

    Any investment will loose money if the interest collapses.

    But, I think that Conder is correct here - because the registry has brought this type of collection to people's minds, they have increased in popularity. Now, you could argue that the Registry may only be a temporary fad as well.... but that's been going for a couple of decades and shows no signs of slowing.
     
  12. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    Didn't realize it's been around that long.
    I've only been aware of it for at most 10 years.
     
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