PCGS MS70 Silver Eagles - PCGS a NO-NO!

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Silver Striker, Jan 10, 2007.

  1. Silver Striker

    Silver Striker Senior Member

    In another thread I asked the question WHY they won't grade ASE's with MS70?

    A reply I received lead me to this Q&A statement from PCGS.

    Question: Why doesn’t PCGS grade Silver American Eagles in MS-70?

    Answer: The chemical rinse that the U.S. Mint uses on these coins can cause white spots to develop over time. In most cases, the spots cannot be removed. Until that problem is resolved, the responsible choice for PCGS is to stay away from the MS-70 grade, even though some technically perfect examples exist.

    -- Ron Guth, PCGS President


    This statement in my opinion is gobble-de-gook! If the coin they have in their hand and viewed by their graders is an MS70, I do not believe that the coin should be downgraded because of a possible future problem. If "white spots" are a possibility to these coins then why even grade them as MS69? These "white spots" could feasibly cause the MS69 to become an MS65 or lower couldn't it? I have just started collecting ASE coins and get mostly Proof's from the mint. I would like to see an example of these "white spots" as PCGS has described them. Are they absolutely 100% positive that these "white spots" they are talking about are caused by the chemical rinse? Could something else be the cause? Have experiments been done proving it? Why is it that ONLY PCGS is taking this stand regarding ASE MS70 designations?

    I would prefer to see PCGS MS70's given to a perfect coin if they exist and PCGS can create a disclaimer on guarantee where by these "white spots" are not guaranteed against developing on MS silver eagles. This can be done as it has been with copper, bronze or copper nickel coins that NCG regulates.

    PCGS can edit this FAQ statement

    Q: Can my coin change appearance after being placed in a PCGS holder?
    A: It is extremely unlikely that your coin will change appearance within a PCGS holder. The PCGS holder was designed specifically for the long-term storage and protection of your coins. The holder itself is made of inert materials that keep your coin safe. The sealed holder inhibits the entrance of atmospheric gases and contaminants that might harm your coin. Even so, common sense practices should keep your PCGS graded coins safe for a lifetime. Avoid humidity and excessive temperature swings by keeping your coins in a dry environment, preferably at a constant room temperature. If you have a coin that you think has changed in the holder contact PCGS customer service and we can arrange to examine the coin for you.


    Here's NGC's statements...

    After encapsulation, can the appearance of a coin change over time?

    Yes. In independent testing, the NGC security holder has been proven as the most effective grading service holder on the market today in minimizing the effects of oxidation. Even so, the NGC holder is not 100% airtight and therefore oxidation, a normal process where air reacts with the surface of a coin, can continue after encapsulation. To further limit environmental hazards, we recommend storing your coins in a temperature-controlled, low humidity area such as a bank safety deposit box. Be sure to check with your bank for rules & regulations concerning the storage of these items.

    Are all coins certified & encapsulated by NGC covered by the NGC guarantee?

    The NGC Guarantee does not apply to copper, bronze or copper nickel coins graded by NGC prior to April 1, 2000. To the extent that the NGC Guarantee applies to copper, bronze, or copper nickel coins, the NGC Guarantee expires with respect to such coin(s) on the ten year anniversary of the date of encapsulation by NGC. Additionally, any NGC certified coin deemed by us to be representative of a clerical error is not covered by the NGC guarantee. Clerical errors may be returned to NGC for correction of labeling at no charge to the submitter.


    Then there is this PCGS problem with the handling of SILVER and we all know what finger oils can do to silver...

    Q: Why don’t graders and sealers wear gloves while handling coins?
    A: PCGS graders and sealers are experts in the proper care and handling of coins. While gloves offer additional protection, they reduce the tactile sensations necessary to properly manipulate coins during the grading process and could increase the chance of dropping a coin.

    I don't know if NGC handles coins with gloves or not (looking at their web site, I don't believe they do because the photo they show on the grading page shows the person holding the coin without gloves) but under these circumstances, I will be sending my unopened 20th anniversary ASE sets to NGC.
     
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  3. samjimmy

    samjimmy New Member

    I agree and it seems ridiculous. One could easily compare that to not grading copper coins as RED or RED BROWN, because they could turn brown in the future. Or not grading coppers at their current grade because they may corrode in the future.

    "The responsible choice..." my donkey.

    Even though there are many good points about grading, it's things like this that make *all* grading suspect.
     
  4. Speedy

    Speedy Researching Coins Supporter

    That is why I use NGC ;)

    Speedy
     
  5. Midas

    Midas Coin Hoarder

    Of course you should use NGC, they hand out 70 grades for moderns like it is no tomorrow...

    2006-W Gold Proof Buffalos

    5,893 "1st Strike" Submissions.....3,015 received PR70UCAM (51.2%)
    7,426 "Normal" Submission.....3,690 received PR7OUCAM (49.2%)

    2006-W Gold MS Buffalos

    62,860 "1st Strike" Submissions.....31,400 received MS70 grades (49.9%)
    4,061 "Normal" Submissions....2,042 received MS70 grades (50.3%)

    2006-W Silver American Eagle Proof:

    6,061 "1st Strike" Submissions.....3,114 received PF70UCAM (51.2%)
    16,959 "Normal" Submissions.....9,535 received PR70UCAM (56.2%)

    SWEET!!

    ***************************************************

    Damn...I am going to start submitting my coins to NGC because I have a 50-50 shot of getting a 70 grade for my moderns. Then, I can't wait to sell them so I can hit the "70" jackpot!!

    See for yourself...(NGC population lookup)

    http://ngccoin.com/poplookup/
     
  6. Speedy

    Speedy Researching Coins Supporter

    Midas
    Didn't you even read what the first posted quoted from PCGS???
    They DO get coins graded MS70 but because they are afraid that the coin MAY get a spot and they will have to pay for the coin they don't give out what the coin should be graded---that is just as bad as SGS in overgrading----experts say Undergrading and Overgrading are just as bad.

    Speedy
     
  7. Old Silver

    Old Silver New Member

    What??? You mean NGC and SGS aren't the same company!! I was beginning to think so.:)
     
  8. Old Silver

    Old Silver New Member

    So do they get a "First Grade" or "Early Release Grade" label?:)
     
  9. Midas

    Midas Coin Hoarder

    I am still waiting for those owners of the 5 known 1913 Liberty Nickels to resubmit their coins for a "First Strike" designation.

    First Strike, First Strikes, First Release, Early Release...what a bunch of crap!

    And by the way...SGS is NOT a grading company. They are owned by their eBay seller Aboncom who takes their own coins and MARKETS them in their own plastic with MS70 or PR70 labels. They are not a grading company, they are a "marketing and packaging" venue for Aboncom's loose change.

    It is nothing more than putting "lipstick and makeup" on a pig....(sorry to offend any pigs out there)
     
  10. airedale

    airedale New Member

    Sage! Sorry for any remarks I may have made in the past about your age.
     
  11. Victor

    Victor Coin Collector

    It is nothing more than putting "lipstick and makeup" on a pig....(sorry to offend any pigs out there)[/QUOTE]

    You forgot the perfume!
     
  12. JBK

    JBK Coin Collector

    I agree with a lot of your disgust on this issue, but if you have nevee seen white spots on uncirculated SE then you either don't have much experience with them or have been buying dipped coins. These spots/smears are very common on mint state SEs, especially on some older SEs. The are also called milk spots.

    BTW - it was not too long ago that NO gradig service would give a 70 designation to any coin.
     
  13. samjimmy

    samjimmy New Member

    ...which doesn't make much sense either if you think about it. The highest grade is unobtainable? So that makes the highest grade the one before the unobtainable one. Thus they might not give out 70's but they might give 69's like candy, so what's the difference?

    I can see *no* reason *not* to give a coin a certain grade, should it meet the qualifications of that grade. Problem is, those "qualifications" and the entire system used to grade is entirely subjective, thus it's not overly surprising that it's full of b.s. It's one thing to try to determine wear on an older coin, and another to give points for "eye appeal" and "luster" with any sort of accuracy and consistency.

    Also the NCG submissions, I see it like this...

    2006-W Gold Proof Buffalos
    13,319 Submissions.....6,705 received PR70UCAM (50.3%)

    2006-W Gold MS Buffalos
    66,921 Submissions.....33,442 received MS70 grades (49.9%)

    2006-W Silver American Eagle Proof
    23,020 Submissions.....12,649 received PF70UCAM (54.9%)

    To me that doesn't show that NCG hands out 70's like candy, it shows that NGC found no reason to deduct points for about half the coins submitted. Seems reasonable to say that, after looking at a bunch of them, one could determine what the "best" looks like, and assign the highest grade to coins that match that. (Similar to seeing that some years of certain coins are weakly struck, and thus that knowledge is used to grade those particular coin years.)

    If other companys want to undergrade and/or play the low population and/or resubmit game, so be it. I think every submitted coin should come with a report detailing exactly what *each* of the graders (if more than one looks at the coin) sees and why the coin gets the grade it gets, the calculations, and the grading guide used. In other words, justify it and implement some accountability. While I'm wishing, bring back the dual grades (obverse and reverse).
     
  14. airedale

    airedale New Member

    OK and then comes along PCI. How shall we kick them today?
     
  15. bama guy

    bama guy Coin Hoarder

    A thought I am pondering and thanks to this lively discussion something has come to my inexperienced mind.

    I see the Silver Anniversary selling for all kinds of serious bucks in the NGC 70 grades. Now suppose you lay out the bucks on the secondary market and purchased one the these 1.5k+++ sets . OK now 5 years later you open you safety deposit box and my goodness, spots.

    I am assuming that the slabbed coin in a 70 grade and now you are looking at probably a 69 on this even with the 70 desingnation . Am I correct on this and the best you could hope for is a free re slab and you can kiss that 70 grade good bye not to mention some major bucks.

    The pig with the lip stick, make up and perfume I am working on now. Heck I have not even figured out what killed the dinosaur yet.

    I have 4 Silver anniversary set in the mint box and was considering sending them out for certification. Think i will now wait. thanks to a lot of good information in here i have got to ask if it is really worth it.

    kind of unrelated but though i would add this . I like to watch the coin Shows on TV. I have learned a lot from them about how you can get stuck for sure. Kind of like a reverse education so to speak. Anyhow some are pushing the NGC first strike as a Limited addition and you should act quick to get them before they are gone. unreal....
     
  16. samjimmy

    samjimmy New Member

    I'm not 100% sure what you mean by that. I'm guessing that you mean a "not so top rated company" -but there's a bunch that probably fit that (PCI, NTC, NNC, etc.) so I'm not sure if mentioned PCI specificially for some reason?
     
  17. Speedy

    Speedy Researching Coins Supporter

    This is one question that I really would like to know---I don't have any idea how to answer it so here it is...
    How does a person get to be a grading company---remember there is not set in stone grading standers...so its just whatever someone uses---PCGS has their own guide--NGC has theirs...and so on...what we put alot of times is that they have to have someone that puts a grade on a coin and puts it in a hard holder---SGS does that---Now I do NOT like SGS at all but there is this question---sure they sell their own coins---but then David Hall sold his own coins too---and they don't only grade coins MS and PF70---as on ebay has been coins with a wide range of grades....
    I just don't get it....IIRC you agree that NTC and NNC and the other such companies are grading companies---but you leave out SGS---what have they done that others haven't??

    Airedale....
    Latly I'm liking PCI better and better---I think JT is doing some good for the company and it seems that their grading is getting better and better....

    Speedy
     
  18. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    Speedy:
    From SGS's own web page:

    (So, apparently they only grade high grade coins, or: "Only coins reaching grades of 60 to 70 will be graded. All others will be simply returned or certified." Whatever this means.

    "An Independent Study has recently found that SGS currently accounts for
    7% of all Graded Coins sold on the internet auction site eBay.

    A coin grading company specializing in grades 60 to 70, both Proof and MS:
    -Proof coins from 1936 and forwards.
    -Uncirculated Coins
    -Circulated coins
    -Currency
    -see announcement below

    Our experts have over 100 combined years dealing with rare and valuable coins.
    America's new Grading Service.

    Services
    Proof coins - 1936 & forward and MS Uncirculated coins
    Only coins reaching grades of 60 to 70 will be graded.
    All others will be simply returned or certified."
     
  19. Speedy

    Speedy Researching Coins Supporter

    Frank
    What gets me is that this is almost what PCGS did....SGS says they won't grade coins unless they grade MS60 or PF60 at least----PCGS says that they won't grade coins MS or PF70 beucase they might change in time---heck...all coins change---and then also PCGS used to say that they wouldn't grade Moderns (I can't remember the date when they started to take newer coins)---so this is what I don't get...
    What must a company do to be a grading company?....and I guess from the market point of view it must be something that PCGS/NGC/ANACS/ICG/PCI/and more do that SGS doesn't do....

    Speedy
     
  20. Midas

    Midas Coin Hoarder

    (Sigh)...

    SGS is not a legitimate grading company. Period. Their main purpose is the market and package coins owned and/or assocaited with their eBay powerseller Aboncom for no other purpose than to drive up prices.

    Bottom line is that they are dupping people to pay over an above what their "loose change" really is worth.

    You will see their ads with an MS70 "grade" stating a PCGS price for a given coin in "only" a MS67 grade is, say $5,000...and you are getting a MS70 specimen!!

    Look at it this way...Imagine advertising a manufactured home as a mansion. Sure it is a place to live and reside, but ask yourself the question is it right? Is it ethical? You show pictures of a beautiful manision, but after you get your coin, it is no way near as they advertise.

    Your attempt to defend/justify SGS's (a la Aboncom) actions is deplorable in my books. It is people like these crooks who are killing the hobby over the internet.

    Face it...the only SGS coins you see at ANY coin shows are from newbies that got taken by these crooks where they feel inclined to unload at a fraction of what SGS/Aboncom got from them...just to avoid embarrassment!

    Never use SGS as a grading company in the same sentence...use marketing, promotion (falsely) and packaging adjectives instead!
     
  21. Victor

    Victor Coin Collector

    Whatever it is- PCGS has already done it. They are riding on their laurels. They don't care that anyone is disturbed over their not giving a MS-70 grade. Their profits are not affected.
     
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