Nay, it wont affect the value much, at least not at pawn shops!!! I The brokers out there do not care very much about these slight break away pieces. So ...chill and whenever you want to sell it off, head to a pawn store. You may check out Cash Pawn, its a good store. ---------- "In the business world, everyone is paid in two coins: cash and experience. Take the experience first; the cash will come later.!!" encil:encil:
I think it is $10 now, plus of course the shipping and insurance both ways. I don't know if you have to pay the $8 per invoice fee on reholders or not. If you do you can figure $10 + $8 + about $20 for shipping and insurance = $38 to get the coin reholdered. Of course you can bring that way down by having several done at the same time. It save on the invoice and shipping fees.
When the damage holder is viewed, the damage could affect the perceived quality of the slabbed coin. The perceived quality may have little or nothing to do with the actual excellence of the product inside the slab. Therefore, the slab damage could affect your price realized. So many slabs are damaged in this manner that I don't think you need to disclose the damage when selling it. Just like you would not necessarily need to describe a slab that was clean and free of scratches. It's just my opinion.