Would this be a sleeper?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Detecto92, Oct 19, 2012.

  1. Detecto92

    Detecto92 Well-Known Member

    Another thread prompted this question.

    The 1882 3 dollar gold coin.

    ONLY 1,500 minted.

    The last 3 I saw on eBay sold for $1400.

    Maybe it's just me, but that's a pretty darn low mintage. Why aren't these worth more?
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. coleguy

    coleguy Coin Collector

    Mintage has nothing to do with value. If there's little demand, theres little value.
    Guy
     
  4. Detecto92

    Detecto92 Well-Known Member

    I would rather spend $1500 on a coin with a mintage of 1,500 then $5000 on a coin with a mintage of 150,000
     
  5. lonegunlawyer

    lonegunlawyer Numismatist Esq.

    coleguy's statement is true in the broad sense, however, your thread title question was whether this coin is a sleeper?

    That depends. If you could determine how many of the original existed, that would be very key to a proper determination of whether this coin is a sleeper or not. If original mintage is all to go on, check prices of the other coins in the series. The surrounding dates have mintages of 500-1,000. By comparison, not counting the later years, this particular date has a high mintage.

    Summarily, it is tough to go wrong with an old 1,500 mintage coin. Also, these were not very popular and not used much. Therefore, finding a nice example should not be difficult.
     
  6. Collect89

    Collect89 Coin Collector

    A quick search at Heritage showed 149 examples of the 1882 $3 have sold for between $1,600 to $16,000. The grade & authenticity is obviously affects the hammer price.

    I would recommend only buying this coin if it is slabbed by one of the top 3 TPGs.
     
  7. Demand is key. What if there were no buyers for the $1500 coin, but people were in a bidding war over your $5000 coin and you could double your money? TC
     
  8. icculus

    icculus Member

    I'm about as far from a coin expert as it gets but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night. Just kidding--however, I did just get through reading a thread about 4 below yours where it is discussed that the 1882 is one of the most commonly counterfeited $3 gold pieces. I would be leery if it isn't graded. DYODD

    http://www.cointalk.com/t216050/
     
  9. lonegunlawyer

    lonegunlawyer Numismatist Esq.

    Then, I would want the $5,000 coin.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page