never new how one letter could be so important on a coin till now. cant tell if its Vespasian or Titus cant tell if the obv has a T in the begining or not. I can see (?) IMP CAESAR VESPASIONVS AVG P M--- its a sestertius, looks like clasped hand on the rev.
I was wondering about this coin when you uploaded it to your gallery. The portrait style doesn't seem to fit, it seems a later style than Vespasian. Coinarchives didn't turn up any results for "titus sestertius clasped hands" or "vespasian sestertius clasped hands". Post it on the Forvm Identification Board.
here what i go from forum "Looks like Vespasian, first issue of 71 with full name VESPASIANVS: IMP CAESAR VESPASIANVS AVG P M T P P P COS III, bust laureate r. with aegis on shoulder and resting on globe FIDES EXERCITVVM S C, clasped hands before legionary eagle on prow. The obverse die is A23 in Colin Kraay's unpublished Oxford dissertation, the rev. die P75. Kraay didn't know this die combination, but it is recorded by RIC 70 from a single specimen in the Termopolio Hoard from Pompeii, published in 1997. These are rare types: only one other obv. die of the issue shows this combination of aegis and globe for the bust, and this is the only rev. die of the FIDES EXERCITVVM type used in the issue, though a second such die was used later in the year with Vespasian's name abbreviated VESPASIAN (no -VS). To see what your dies looked like before the corrosion, see RIC pl. 18, 117 and pl. 16, 71 for the obv. and rev. respectively! There are the same two dies on well preserved specimens in other die combinations."