...would you give up your entire collection for? This doesn't have to be a dollar-for-dollar exchange - just give up everything you have - sets, slabs, bullion, individuals, etc. - and receive your choice of ONE single coin in return, which must be a coin struck at a US Mint. My Choice:
That's a tough question because it would mean giving up my avatar, the 1982 DDR that I discovered in 2007. There are only three known to exist making it pretty irreplaceable. As none have been sold it is the only coin in my collection that some millionaire can't say "I have one of those" so i think I would stick with it for now. Richard
Well give them all up for one. Can't say their is a US mint product I would do that for. And I collect mainly US.
Some people here and ebayer ID members already ask me to trade all their collection againts my AVATAR.. But I look for a Dollar Value.. Not Their collections.. SO I KEEP THESE SUPER ULTIMATE UNIQUE COIN Two Full Dates 1995 Obverse, Two LIBERTY, Two IN GOD WE TRUST, P Mintmark, VDB plus Skull break, & PML in some areas < Oberse. Crack Die Variety and many more at reverse..
Unfortunately, too many zeroes here http://cgi.ebay.com/1900-Indian-Cent-Struck-Gold-2-Planchet-PCGS-MS-65-/270717505267
UnFORTUNATELY yours is only Six Figures, Sorry, Mine is 8 Figures and I decline & figures Offered..So I better keep mine for a while....
$10,000,000+ ??? Wow! I'd like to see a writeup that documents that, or your coin itself. Google can't find it.
10 Million wrong.. It is 12 Million on eBay for over Year with over 25,300 views over 105 offered. Just pulled out less than a month ago.. Now the coin is under negotiation... with the real buyer and right price. Sorry for the middleman too..I do not negotiate to middleman..So I keep the coin for a while...
So your saying youve turned down an offer of over 10 million dollars. ALSO if your coin is SOO rare, why is it graded by ACCUGRADE and not PCGS or NGC or something people have actually heard of???
His coin is a nice coin... but I have seen at least 3 others... and I would call B.S. on his huge offers... lol and I made one of the offers when it was on Ebay... I can't believe you didn't take my $100 bucks... He has been spewing that thing for a long time and it only gets funnier... But to the OP.. I would trade my personal collection for a MS65 1856 Flying eagle... or a 1895 proof Morgan
He said he listed it at $12 million and has had 105 offers. If I'm wrong I apologize but I think anyone would sell for $10 million. Obviously, I want the most expensive and desriable coin out there so yeah the 1933 double eagle (if I can sell it) but realistically, a high grade key date morgan dollar or something.
That is easy: an 1804 Silver dollar Although I would have to debate between the Stickney-Eliasberg or the Mickley-Reed Hawn specimens.
This guy is the "Don Quixote" of Numismatics and we have all been ROTFL at his antics for a very long time! I would trade my whole collection for one of the original twelve "22-Karat Golden Sacagawea Space Dollars" that flew on the NASA Mission STS-93 Columbia!!!
I did not said I turn down the Ten Million but below Ten Million US Dollar is automatically declined. With regards of the grading company when I show this to the NGC representative, the man with the pony tail hair what he told me in Baltimore,MD. They are not authorized yet nor allowed to certified error coin which is he is very honest man. And the rest of the TPG representative failed to convinced me ( 1996-1999) for the security and safety of the coin So I wait over 4 years to find the right person and very qualified grader none other than Mr. Alan Hager of ACCUGRADE the Inventor and professional experts in Numismatist World. I think He is the one who introduced the slab coin in the market,. slabbing coin start in 1984 of Accugrade follow by PCGS 1986 after the owner paid 100 K to Mr. Alan Hager to be second slabbing coin, then on 1987 NGC follow. Please read Coin Fact Encyclopedia. DOUBLE DENOMINATION ERRORS One of the most expensive, popular, and desired types of errors are the double denominations. This error happens when a coin is struck on a previously struck coin of another denomination. Examples are a cent on a struck dime, and a nickel on a struck cent. The most dramatic are those with considerable design visible from the original strike. Two Full dates 1995 Key Date obverse, Two LIBERTY, Two IN GOD WE TRUST, P Mintmark, VDB plus skull break, PML in some areas. Reverse a Crack die variety and many more. :thumb::smile :thumb: