5 Tons of Ikes Found

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by jloring, Dec 6, 2011.

  1. jloring

    jloring Senior Citizen

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  3. abe

    abe LaminatedLincolnCollector

    Littleton will probably sell them at silver dollar price tag...
     
  4. krispy

    krispy krispy

    Coin Update for 12/5 is also linking to the same story published on The Washington Post's web site.

    I was bummed to hear it was Littleton who got hold of these coins. While anything they sell will be a firm grade, the prices will be sky high.

    The article I read used the term 'silver dollar' loosely and without defining if all or just some of these are 40% Ikes. One of the photos of bags shows dates ranging from '71-'77 (most bags visible in the photo are Denver Mint bags), from what I could see. It could really put a dent in some of the rarer dates already on the market if bags worth of finds of the rarer Ikes come rolling out for collectors.

    I'll bet the ikegroup.org guys are excited by these new coins given their hunt for identifying die varieties and having so many more out there to work with potentially. I know I'm excited by this story since I collect graded examples of the 40% Ikes.
     
  5. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    "5 Tons of IKEs Found"

    What is that like 4 bags?










    I keed! :D
     
  6. krispy

    krispy krispy

    LOL! No doubt! :yes:
     
  7. milty456

    milty456 New Member

    Bummed to see Littleton got their hands on these. They will undoubtedly make them up 200-400x their value and take advantage of non coin people trying to buy gifts for their coin collecting family members.
    /sigh
    Can't stand littleton.
     
  8. ratio411

    ratio411 Active Member

    This won't be the last hoard found.
     
  9. gbroke

    gbroke Naturally Toned

    How is this considered "found"? Was it lost? If a bank loses $220,000 in cash, I would think that's a problem and someone should lose their job.
     
  10. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    They weren't lost, they belonged to a private individual who was storing them at a bank. He decided to sell them is all. You can bet Littleton came up with that title for the story just to sensationalize it.

    Can you imagine what it cost to store 200 $1000 bags of Ikes for all those years ? The guy lost big time on that deal !
     
  11. Irish2Ice

    Irish2Ice Member

    Fishy in that most of the banks I deal with send anything "odd" worth more than a few hundred dollars back to the Fed. Now a bank just happens to "hold" $250,000 worth of Ike's for 30 years?

    hmmmm.......

    Just read Dougs post.........now it makes sense and YES Doug, he lost his rear storing those unless he owned the bank.
     
  12. coleguy

    coleguy Coin Collector

    "Rare"...really? Guess I've been collecting the wrong rare coins all these years.
    Guy
     
  13. james m. wolfe

    james m. wolfe New Member

    edited - here they are !!! :eek:
     
  14. TheCoinGeezer

    TheCoinGeezer Senex Bombulum

    :thumb: I'm not fond of Littleton either.
     
  15. CoinCast

    CoinCast Member

    I love Littleton's price estimates....they are unbelievable several hundred for a rare Ike. Is there a rare Ike even worth that much? :confused:
     
  16. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    For the most part, no. In some grades, you bet.
     
  17. CoinCast

    CoinCast Member

    Really? I guess an MS70 or something, but I doubt their a bunch of 70s in those bags, but you never know. Maybe theres some varieties. I still don't like littleton (except for my state quarters map that is really nice)
     
  18. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    Possibly. I mean, if you calculate interest and what not.

    Depending upon date, sealed bags of IKEs can sell for anywhere between $1,750 to $$2,800 or more a bag.
    1971-D might bring $2,200 but a 1972 Bag would bring close to $3,000.

    But......as with anything, a mint sealed bag is only a guarantee of uncirculated coinsof the same date and uncirculated for these coins usually averages MS64.

    I've gone through some bags and never came across an MS66 coins. Maybe 4% MS65's 50% MS64's and the rest MS60-MS63. A big winner would be any error coins which may have slipped through such as clips, missing clad layers, broadstruck, etc.

    Buying them by the bag is an expensive treasure hunt but I expect that Littleton will hype the heck out of these and try selling them at $10 each. I wish them luck.
     
  19. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    Absolutely!
     
  20. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    Kinda like Morgan or Peace Dollars right?
     
  21. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    MS67 is the grade to look for.
     
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