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<p>[QUOTE="BooksB4Coins, post: 2279546, member: 36230"]I certainly cannot say for sure, but can tell you that once demand for certain lesser varieties cool down, they often die. In 09, due to the popularity of the Lincoln bicentennial cent varieties and the ease of acquiring one type locally, I ended up getting my hands on quite a number of different DDRs and did fairly well with them.... as long as they were popular. Since then I've had tubes of certain varieties, ones Wexler's lists at $5-$10 each at grade, stuffed in drawers existing only as dead weight since there's no way of liquidating short of nickel and diming them out. I also have a number of original rolls somewhere displaying "best of" varieties on the ends, and very productive rolls at that, sitting for the same reason. </p><p><br /></p><p>If there is any present demand for the variety, I would try to get what I can out of it now unless youre okay coming to the point where you can barely give it away. The Wisconsin high/low leaf is simply in another world demand-wise than the great majority of more recent varieties, and is a different ballgame.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="BooksB4Coins, post: 2279546, member: 36230"]I certainly cannot say for sure, but can tell you that once demand for certain lesser varieties cool down, they often die. In 09, due to the popularity of the Lincoln bicentennial cent varieties and the ease of acquiring one type locally, I ended up getting my hands on quite a number of different DDRs and did fairly well with them.... as long as they were popular. Since then I've had tubes of certain varieties, ones Wexler's lists at $5-$10 each at grade, stuffed in drawers existing only as dead weight since there's no way of liquidating short of nickel and diming them out. I also have a number of original rolls somewhere displaying "best of" varieties on the ends, and very productive rolls at that, sitting for the same reason. If there is any present demand for the variety, I would try to get what I can out of it now unless youre okay coming to the point where you can barely give it away. The Wisconsin high/low leaf is simply in another world demand-wise than the great majority of more recent varieties, and is a different ballgame.[/QUOTE]
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