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Why did the 2021 D shoot up so high in value?
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<p>[QUOTE="jb10000lakes, post: 8216803, member: 102967"]Now, I got the 2019-s ASE and the V75 on the luck of the draw, purely for the thrill of the chase; haven't bothered sending them in for slabbing (no account or experience) and really don't care. The "1st Day" moniker is simply ridiculous for coins that sold out in 15 minutes. I guess the difference that I 'feel' is that the prized coins of yester-year were plentiful and common for the most part at the time of their introduction, and it is their rarity of being found in good condition after a huge period of time that is driving the prices, similar to baseball cards. That market has also gone the way of adding tons of 'artificial' rarity cards to drive the market; foil this, patterned that. Those cards are never handled, played with, etc. And 50 years from now, there will be roughly the same amount, and all in basically BU condition. Their low numbers in general will help hold the price, but those numbers will stay essentially the same forever. To some degree, with these mint releases, I have a hard time even considering them as true coins. Is anyone actually going to use them as face value, legal tender? Of course not. So, are the number and quality of the 'coins' minted going to decrease over time, making the high graded ones rarities? No, they are all in stored collector's collections.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="jb10000lakes, post: 8216803, member: 102967"]Now, I got the 2019-s ASE and the V75 on the luck of the draw, purely for the thrill of the chase; haven't bothered sending them in for slabbing (no account or experience) and really don't care. The "1st Day" moniker is simply ridiculous for coins that sold out in 15 minutes. I guess the difference that I 'feel' is that the prized coins of yester-year were plentiful and common for the most part at the time of their introduction, and it is their rarity of being found in good condition after a huge period of time that is driving the prices, similar to baseball cards. That market has also gone the way of adding tons of 'artificial' rarity cards to drive the market; foil this, patterned that. Those cards are never handled, played with, etc. And 50 years from now, there will be roughly the same amount, and all in basically BU condition. Their low numbers in general will help hold the price, but those numbers will stay essentially the same forever. To some degree, with these mint releases, I have a hard time even considering them as true coins. Is anyone actually going to use them as face value, legal tender? Of course not. So, are the number and quality of the 'coins' minted going to decrease over time, making the high graded ones rarities? No, they are all in stored collector's collections.[/QUOTE]
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Why did the 2021 D shoot up so high in value?
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