That's a really cool find!
Sure. In fact, if it was a single silver dime, they were out even less. But if it was $5000 worth of coin, whether that was a single AGE or a big...
$42.22222222..., right? Didn't the statute specify forty-two and two ninths dollars?
I used to wonder about that on eBay during periods of high volatility. I figured that if someone bid when silver was $35/oz, and it dropped to...
I'm going to say it's worth $50-100 extra for the toning. And that's probably one reason I've never won a coin toned like that.
Makes me wonder what my local "10% over melt" pawn shop is using for a spot reference. Probably the day's high, or the previous day's high, or...
I don't think it would. However, I'm not speaking from first-hand experience here.
There are lots of circumstances that can protect coins from toning. Think of a big bag of Morgans sitting in a bank vault for decades. The ones on...
Well, kudos to them for putting something out there on the record, so we can check how it's panned out a month down the road.
Which direction? I've lost track. :rolleyes:
Not me. (as far as I know...)
They did a better job matching the typeface than most of the folks making fake slabs!
"Serial Numbers Vary"? o_O
I continue to be surprised that influential corporate interests aren't hammering this point more forcefully. Never mind us peons.
I remember in the late 90s when we had budget surpluses, and the tech boom was going to eliminate the debt. I see distinct similarities in the...
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