1988s pcgs ms69 cameo

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by ibuycoinsoffebay, Oct 4, 2017.

  1. SchwaVB57

    SchwaVB57 Well-Known Member

    There is a problem

    CERT VERIFICATION #08771710
    According to the PCGS Certification Database, the requested certification number is defined as the following:

    PCGS Coin Information
    PCGS # 96830
    Date, mintmark 1989-S
    Denomination 50C
    Country The United States of America
    Grade PR69DCAM
    Mintage 3,220,194
    Holder Type Standard
    Population 6,147
    Pop Higher 579
    PCGS Price GuideSM Value: $18
     
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  3. ddddd

    ddddd Member

    It looks like a slab error. These happen occasionally when the people inputting the information for the label make a typo or mixup.

    Some people will pay a small premium for these mistakes.
     
  4. Daniel Jones

    Daniel Jones Well-Known Member

    Ha, I knew it! I must be psychic, or just a good guesser.
     
  5. Wow I never realized there was a slab error how much is it worth?
     
  6. Daniel Jones

    Daniel Jones Well-Known Member

    @paddyman98 also has a slab error.
     
  7. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    Yes but how do you determine if it is a slab error, or if someone put this coin into this empty holder? Is there no way to open it without showing that it has been tampered with?
     
  8. BooksB4Coins

    BooksB4Coins Newbieus Sempiterna

    Why would you assume it's worth anything?

    And just to be clear, I say/ask this as food for thought.
     
  9. Daniel Jones

    Daniel Jones Well-Known Member

    Opening those heat sealed slabs is really difficult without wrecking them.
     
    Michael K likes this.
  10. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    So the coin is PR 69 D CAM, and just the holder says 89 instead of 88?
    I was wondering if someone pulled a switch. Cracking and selling the PR69 D- Cam 89-S, and putting in a lower graded 88-S.
    Although the coin looks high grade to me.
     
  11. Kirkuleez

    Kirkuleez 80 proof

    The 88 and 89 PR-69 sells for generally the same money, why would someone crack one out to replace it with another? Both are found for around $12-15
     
  12. BooksB4Coins

    BooksB4Coins Newbieus Sempiterna

    Sonically sealed... :)
     
    Daniel Jones likes this.
  13. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    Yes. They just input the wrong code or the next year on the date.

    That really not something that should be a concern.
     
    Michael K likes this.
  14. But is this slab error worth more money?
     
  15. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    If it was replaced with a lesser quality coin.
     
  16. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    If you put it up on Ebay as a slab error, it might bring a few bucks more than a normal slab. There are folks that collect these but they don't pay a large premium.
     
  17. ddddd

    ddddd Member

    It would likely sell on ebay for around $25 due to the slab error (without, it's likely a $10 coin on ebay).

    Remember there are still ebay fees (assuming no ebay store: 10% to ebay, 3% +$0.30 to paypal, and ~$3 for shipping...so you would net around $18.48).

    Depending on who is looking, it can sell right away or it might take some time before a sale.
     
    moneycostingmemoney and ldhair like this.
  18. But it takes $16 to grade so how will it be worth $10 without the error
     
  19. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    You never know.
    Many coins sell for much less than the grading fees.
     
  20. SchwaVB57

    SchwaVB57 Well-Known Member

    The big boys also get deep discounts for the volume they submit. Sometimes they might only have a few dollars in the grading fees. They drop off thousands and pick them up reducing shipping costs as well.
     
    Daniel Jones likes this.
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