I wonder why the overcooked nickel planchet (roll/sheet?) was not destroyed or disposed of at the mint. Which is what they are supposed to do.
First impression was AU. Not sure on the number. 53. Is the toning hiding an old cleaning? Is it market acceptable? If the graders are tightening...
Investment bankers/computer trading, mutual fund managers buying and selling huge blocks moves the market in huge swings. With pre market and...
Copper is not super hard. The numbers, and letters etc. are little raised areas. Coins in circulation for 80 years get banged around HARD thousand...
These were common even in the states, when I was a kid. Nicer reverse than the maple leaf I think.
They are both worth 1 cent. The large date is common, and they used copper for most of the year until switching to zinc late 1982. That green spot...
Neo is the The One.
I don't think putting it into rolls helps them. People have put one quarter glued to each end of a round metal bar, and pass it off as a roll of...
Too bad it's a D. Looks like a smallie.
Also the first thing that drew my eye was the die chip. Coin appears cleaned. If it's not cleaned, worth more than $5. (As much as $10. But def 8-9).
A diversified portfolio can be a hedge, so you wouldn't have to give up PM's completely. Stocks, bonds, PM's, real estate, and cash. As for: This...
They appear very grainy and mushy details. Not a bad job on artificial aging.
That's a bit high. $105 is fair. https://www.uscurrencyauctions.com/$100-us-currency-value-price-guide.htm
What does it weigh? Since the 1982-D small date copper is the "one".
The 69-S DD is very rare and very prominent doubling. [ATTACH]
Quick turn around is the best you can do on that note. Good job.
I'm not seeing anything special. The last 2 can go on the Almost thread.
Comparison photos, real one on top. The hair, the mouth, the eyes, the nose, the chin are all different. [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Your Lincoln does not match an actual Lincoln.
Just compare your 2 to this: [ATTACH]
Separate names with a comma.