Considering the label says it is a 1964. Is that a "D" I see on the reverse? ....... If PCGS couldn't even get the date and mint mark right on the label ....... It is worth maybe fifty cents .........
Well it is silver. Would that error be enough to give it a few dollars more of value? Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I would pay like 15 dollars for it. I think its kinda cool, but i couldn't imagine it being worth a whole lot.
I have no interest in such things, so I do not know other than there is certainly someone willing to pay top of a generic value for the coin residing inside. Try searching completed ebay listings, or perhaps one of the guys who collects these will chime in.
It's the PCGS 7. Interesting slab. The coin # is even wrong. These were given to dealers only and not the public. Searching Ebay is the best bet on finding a value but the price on these is all over the place. You never know what they will bring at auction.
Around $20, I would say is the average price point of them. Some go a little higher, some a little lower.
I am with Pacecar on this one. I think this would bring about $20 from a sample slab collector on eBay.
Nothing special. As was said, unless one is collecting error slabs. Might be worth $20 to a specialty collector,but definitely nothing of great value.
It should be worth at least buillion value at the bare minimum, and even more than that as other members have implied. I wish I could get something like that for 50 cents.
IIRC, the proof Kennedy's were struck first and the accented hair variety is not the ones that Jackie Kennedy approved of, and that's when they went back and changed the Kennedy design on the obverse.