Bought a lot of junk silver and these were in there.... Matt helped me determine that my one coin I had looked up is in deed a key date coin. Hard to place a value since I can't find any past sales for this coin anywhere. The Canada one is just a plain 10 cent with a little filed rim so I don't need much help with that one. Haven't dug into the other two yet as I know nothing about foreign coins, so any additional information would be greatly appreciated 1888 Venezuela Gr 2.500, 1/2 Bolivar
Venezuela, 1/2 Bolivar, 1888, Y#21, mintage-230,000 .835 silver grade/value F-$400.00 VF-$600.00 XF-$1,100.00 UNC-$2,000.00 very lucky find. awesome. not sure what grade your coins is in ??? values may vary in the real market vs. Krause catalog.
Venezuela, gram 5 (bolivar), 1935, mintage-5,000,000 , .835 silver grade/value F-VF-$BV XF-$5.00 UNC-$6.00 values may vary in the real market vs. Krause catalog.
Canada, 1911 10 cents, KM#11, mintage-2,737,584 , .925 silver grade/value VG-8-$5.00 F-$12.00 VF-$20.00 XF-$45.00 values may vary in the real market vs. Krause catalog.
It happens more than you think with world coins. I bought an album of world coins just for fun once. On many of them they had "prices", (I didn't bid on this, in fact paid like $120 for about 300 coins total). On one "price" it had listed $650. I thought, yeah right, and looked it up. In the 5 year old Krause book at the time it had actually gone up to about $800 for that coin. World and ancient coins are a much better place to get rewarded for your knowledge than US coins generally. Most dealers in the US don't bother, and only look up very high grade foreign coins, and generally ignore ancients altogether.
Chile, 1907, 20 centavos, KM#151.2, mintage-7,625,000 , .500 silver grade/value F-$2.00 VF-$4.00 XF-$10.00 values may vary in the real market vs. Krause catalog.
Dealers especially ignore non-silver coins. They know silver has a value and will usually look it up, if just to find out the silver content. While they're there, they'll look at the price. If it's a base-metal coin they're not likely to look it up and assume it has no value.
The market for Venezuelan coins has cooled down some over the past year or two, after a huge surge. Still, prices are generally higher than Krause lists. That 1/2 bolivar is in pretty rough shape, well circulated with scratches on both sides. It's still worth a good $150-$200 on the auction block, and can probably get more in a retail situation. Definitely a great find, congrats
Someone must really want it. It's got 7+ days left and were already up to $280 with 11 watchers. I guess you never know when there isn't many of them for sale on the market. I'm just hoping it doesn't stop there lol
I know thet feeling my friend. I recently bought a sheet of 20-coin plastic inserts for $5 a pop and found a nice silver Costa Rican coin worth $125. So yes if you educate yourself on especially world coins you can make a nice small profit. Just FYI. Buy the book before you buy the coin.