I am at an auction.....and need advice

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by hg4feet, Aug 30, 2012.

  1. hg4feet

    hg4feet New Member

    I am new to coin collecting. I am at an auction. There are several bags of coins. It is difficult to review each coin at this venue. Should I pay melt value for the following coins?

    1. 380 Wheat cents

    2. 310 Indian cents

    3. 50 steel cents

    4. 43 silver war nickels, 13 silver Roosevelt dimes, 6 silver Canadian dimes and one silver quarter

    5. 100 silver Roosevelt dimes

    Any speedy advice would be appreciated.

    Howard
     
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  3. Eps

    Eps Coin hoarder/ lover

    Melt for silver at most, 2 cents each for wheats and I dolnt know about ihc's
     
  4. BUncirculated

    BUncirculated Well-Known Member

    The time to ask for advice is before you go to an auction.

    I wouldn't go over melt on the silver stuff, and would stay away from the bags of cents just because those deals are usually only good for the seller, and rip the buyer.

    The zinc-coated steel Lincolns, a lot depends on condition they're in.
     
  5. ikandiggit

    ikandiggit Currency Error Collector

    hg4feet...how'd you make out?
     
  6. hg4feet

    hg4feet New Member

    I bought 100 Roosevelts (pre 1965) for $165.
     
  7. ikandiggit

    ikandiggit Currency Error Collector

    :thumb:
     
  8. BUncirculated

    BUncirculated Well-Known Member

    Good deal.

    Melt on 100 is $222 at current price of $30.75.
     
  9. hg4feet

    hg4feet New Member

    True. But, I could not find out their exact inventory until I was there. :)
     
  10. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    I would've outbid you. :) Congrats!
     
  11. hg4feet

    hg4feet New Member

    Lol. I am new at this. But , it was like taking candy from a baby.
     
  12. coin0709

    coin0709 CT Supporter

    Very well done. I would have outbid you too. Congrats. You could flip them online right now for a ~$50 profit after all fees etc.
     
  13. hg4feet

    hg4feet New Member

    You read my mind. My son and I will look them over tonight. Thanks
     
  14. Irish2Ice

    Irish2Ice Member

    $165 is a great price ( I 3rd the motion that I would have bid you up), but realistically selling online for a quick profit is not a good option. The OP likely had to pay a buyers premium of 10% plus sales tax. Lets call it 15% average, so the actual price paid was $189.75.........I'm assuming here and would be the likely scenario if it were me, so bare with me...........

    Now to sell on E-bay it will cost 13% of final value with all fees including Paypal. So selling at melt of $222 minus 13% is $193.14 for a grand total of $3.39.

    Doesn't make this game so easy now does it?
     
  15. hg4feet

    hg4feet New Member

    Point well taken. But, the $165 included the 10% buyers premium. What would you recommend?
     
  16. doug444

    doug444 STAMPS and POSTCARDS too!

    Buy Whitman folders and make up the best partial sets you can (and keep improving them in the future), sell the rest on CraigsList, eBay (free) classifieds, or other free local classifieds.
     
  17. rickmp

    rickmp Frequently flatulent.

    Wow, great catch! All of the rich greedy hoarders must have missed that auction.
     
  18. Irish2Ice

    Irish2Ice Member

    ^^What Doug said^^.........

    You could also post HERE on Cointalk.
     
  19. hg4feet

    hg4feet New Member

    Thanks Doug!
     
  20. hg4feet

    hg4feet New Member

    No doubt. The sterling silver jewelry and flatware was a steal as well ( I know, another forum for that)
     
  21. BUncirculated

    BUncirculated Well-Known Member

    If you're thinking of a quick flip on these, I would recommend craigslist.com. No fees, meet the potential buyer in a public place, and add 20% to spot price, which would be $266.40, round it up to $266.50, your profit is $101.50.
     
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