V.D.B. Prices Down

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by vnickels, Jul 29, 2011.

  1. vnickels

    vnickels Matt Draiss Numismatics & Galleries

    Has anybody else noticed how after the 2009 craze over Lincoln's Birth that V.D.B.cents are not worth the
    Bid prices as seen in the CDN Greysheet? They start at $10 in Good but translated more like $6-7 on a dealer-to
    dealer level or less; I had one dealer say he had "rolls" of them. Please comment.
     
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  3. rlm's cents

    rlm's cents Numismatist

    A quick (but incomplete) check of the price trends on NGC show that the only changes in the last year have been up.
     
  4. RedTiger

    RedTiger Member

    I haven't observed this. I will say that raw coins often trade at a steep wholesale discount. A collector that buys a typical $20 retail value numismatic coin, might get a $10 cash offer when selling back to a dealer, and that would be a fair dealer. A low baller might offer $5 or $2 or whatever he/she thinks will be accepted. Dealers with a lot of examples of the coin being offered are going to offer lower, that's common sense.
     
  5. vnickels

    vnickels Matt Draiss Numismatics & Galleries

    The problem though is the coins aren't worth FULL Bid in low grades.
     
  6. vnickels

    vnickels Matt Draiss Numismatics & Galleries

    Actually, FAR from it!
     
  7. rlm's cents

    rlm's cents Numismatist

  8. vnickels

    vnickels Matt Draiss Numismatics & Galleries

    Not exactly, I mean that Bid prices aren't currently reflecting the market and what IS realistic on the low-graders.
     
  9. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    This surprises you? It should be expected. The hype is over and they ARE very common coins in almost all grades. As the dealer said he has ROLLS of them. If he has rolls of them what do you think he is going to offer to get another one? It's going to be a small fraction of bid because HE DOESN'T WANT THEM.

    Used to have that same problem in the shop back in the late 80's when we were selling baseball cards. Someone comes in with a recent ball card that the Beckett's says is a $20 card and they want to sell it. We have a stack of forty of them. We don't need forty one, so we offer $2.
     
  10. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Personally, to the extent I am seeing US pricing, I am seeing a lot of softness of traditional collector coins. Just my impression, but unless its a coin that can be slabbed high grade, (for the issue), or a "key" they seem weak. It just feels like a lot of interest in bullion, and high grade coins for NGC or PCGS bragging rights, but the run of the mill collector isn't buying like they used to. When I bum around local shows looking to buy something, I get offered a lot of great coins at discounts to CDN.

    Like the economy, it just feels the "middle class" coins are getting squeezed, but the upper end of the market seems to be doing fine. My question is that if up and coming collectors aren't there, who will be the buyers of these "investment" coins in the future? In the end, any coin is only ever worth over melt or face value from a collector. All the "investors" are doing is assuming a collector will be willing to pay more than they paid at some point in the future. If the collectors never demand these coins, what will that do to the "investors"?
     
  11. vnickels

    vnickels Matt Draiss Numismatics & Galleries

    The investors will be screwed out their money for these "wonder coins" but the fact is most coins are always worth something to somebody.
     
  12. Doug21

    Doug21 Coin Hoarder

    they ain't gold !
     
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