Recent cents graded by NGC or PCGS

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by carly, Dec 26, 2009.

  1. carly

    carly Member

    I was just looking at some eBay Lincoln cent auctions earlier--a 1999S graded by NGC, a 2007 and 2008S graded by PCGS.

    All of them sold for $5 or $6 each. I've been to the NGC web site, and the absolute cheapest grading is $12.50 a coin. So why are people grading and slabbing such new coins, when they can't even get their money back?
     
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  3. Defiant7

    Defiant7 Enjoy the Insanity

    I believe its because some dealers send them in bulk in hopes of getting a MS70. One coin can sell for hundreds of dollars. The rest get sold to try to recoup what ever they can. They probably get additional discounts as well when they send them in bulk
     
  4. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Or - a collector submits them, absolutely positive that the coin is a 70 and that he has just struck it rich. And the TPG doesn't see it that way.
     
  5. HULL COINS

    HULL COINS Member

    sellers like lccoins and coindiva sent them in huge lots to the grading service, get a reduction in price, and then get a handful of 70s back which is actually quite profitable
     
  6. malak1

    malak1 Junior Member

    Correct. Their generosity to you helps their bottom line. As I've stated so often, "It's all about the Benjamins".
     
  7. carly

    carly Member

    Ok, that makes sense now. The ones on ebay were really nice, and graded 67 and 68.

    I was at a coin show recently where a dealer had a whole bin of them for $7 each, but I don't remember who the grading service was. Now I wish I had taken a better look.
     
  8. Just Carl

    Just Carl Numismatist

    I go to coin shows all the time and aways wonder why there are so many coins worth only a few dollars and in a slab. And then too, some are graded as MS-62 or even less. I've seen coins of all denominations and dated as recently as the 2009's in slabs and selling for a few dollars. I suspect some people are just slab happy and think having coins in a slab will make them worth more. At almost every show I see about 40% to 50% of all coins in slabs. One dealer always tells me to igore his slabbed coins since he sells them as if they were raw since most should have been. He too pays practically nothing for many of them. People are just slab happy.
     
  9. rlm's cents

    rlm's cents Numismatist

    You cannot see one. It is for dealers only, but if you submit 100+ coins with other qualifiers, they will do them for $7 each.
     
  10. buzzard

    buzzard Active Member

    Some of my coins Like Silver Eagles I like to have slabbed for the grading and the protection, And if you send one in for grading and you get that 70 grade it makes it a lot better if you sell the coin down the road. I am no expert just a normal blue collar worker trying to learn about coins.
     
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