Was this monster worth the premium it went for?

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by goldrealmoney79, Apr 16, 2022.

  1. goldrealmoney79

    goldrealmoney79 Active Member

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  3. ToughCOINS

    ToughCOINS Dealer Member Moderator

    I believe you are mistaken. The seller may even have lost a little money.

    After the 7% eBay final value fee and the 2.7% eBay managed payment fee, the seller got back 7269.15 of the $8030 sale price.

    The coin was offered with free shipping which for a coin like this should probably cost $30 or so (assuming affordable insurance too). That leaves $7239.15 in hand from the sale.

    The hammer price was originally $7050, and appeared to be auctioned, so a buyer's fee would have been applied, plus a shipping charge, both of which surely exceeded the meager $219.15 difference.

    If I had to guess, the seller took about a $1000 bath.

    As for whether the coin is worth that sort of money . . . it is apparent that a few bidders thought so, but I don't. I don't mind paying a large premium for beautifully toned coins, but only when it makes sense to me. This coin is a common date, one for which beautiful toning is not all that uncommon, and one on which the toning is on the reverse, rather than the all-important obverse.
     
    Last edited: Apr 16, 2022
  4. Inspector43

    Inspector43 More than 75 Years Active Collecting Supporter

    "Monster" is a term that is thrown around too much.
     
  5. Morgandude11

    Morgandude11 As long as it's Silver, I'm listening

    It is a pretty coin. The reverse toning is beautiful. Is it worth it? That is a subjective judgement. I prefer a toned obverse. However, it is unusually beautiful toning. I would think if I were buying it, I would not have paid more than $4,000, because of its limitations.
     
    longshot likes this.
  6. Santinidollar

    Santinidollar Supporter! Supporter

    The prices that toners bring in general often blow me away. This one is no exception. But then again, I don’t collect these.
     
  7. Long Beard

    Long Beard Well-Known Member

    Wow! Someone way over paid. There have been multiple auctions thus far this year, Stacks-Bowers, Heritage, David Lawrence, where the same grade (non-toned) sold between $200-300. In 2021, the second highest grade of MS67 sold for just under in the $6,000 range at a few auction house. Now I understand the whole buyer appeal and what one is willing to pay for it, but this is just nuts.
     
    Jack D. Young likes this.
  8. spirityoda

    spirityoda Coin Junky

    Probably someone doing a registery set of toned Morgan dollars and had to have it.
     
  9. okbustchaser

    okbustchaser I may be old but I still appreciate a pretty bust Supporter

    The thing is the buyer wasn't bidding on an 1883-O Morgan; he was bidding on what to him was a beautiful work of art. The book price of the coin is irrelevant in this case.
     
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