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World Colonial

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Posts posted by World Colonial

  1. On 4/16/2024 at 9:33 PM, VKurtB said:

    Yes, there, plus local shows, auctions, and the odd online auction. The last category is mostly larger lots of coins. I have a healthy sized hoard of replaced upgraded stuff. I am pretty sure that Allen Berman can pretty well wipe out my later shilling “holes” if I send him a need list prior to the next show we both are in attendance. I have bought many of my better pieces from him.

    I tend to opt for better examples, very few of which come inexpensive, regardless of alloy. From my experience, the toughest era to find in really nice shape is anything from the beginning of WW2 until the earlier 1950’s.  Almost magically, when Elizabeth II ascended the throne, more shillings tended to be saved. 

    What price range applies here?  Is your quality criteria "gem", a better UNC, or something else?

    With your comparison of the George VI and QEII portraits, some of it is presumably the mintage but mostly I think it's collector preference for the Gillick portrait which resulted in a higher survival rate too.  The Gillick portrait is one of my 20th century favorites.  I find KGVI rather ordinary.

  2. On 4/16/2024 at 8:23 PM, cladking said:

    Repeating things that aren't true has no effect on anything.  You can find fistfuls of Unc and gemmy British silver for every 500 fine coin you can find yet the sterling sells for more.   Then you can find a lot more of the 500 fine than cu can the cu/ ni yet the 500 sells for more.  

    A collector only needs one and most of them don't care if it's UNC either where they will pay meaningful premiums for it.

    I've also told you most of the price differences are trivial.  You're exaggerating trivial price differences which virtually no one cares about, other than you.  Price variances from less than a dollar on tow end to somewhat more than nominal low-cost purchases, approaching 95% to 99% of the time.

    On 4/16/2024 at 8:23 PM, cladking said:

    Mintage and sales are irrelevant.  The only things that count are how many survive and how many want one.  

    I wasn't referring to mintages or survivors.  The sources I listed prove that your claim of this coinage not being collected is wrong, again. 

    On 4/16/2024 at 8:23 PM, cladking said:

    I'm selling.   Not because I have as much profit as possible but because of my age.  

    Then why are you exaggerating such immaterial price differences?  

    That's the underlying source of every disagreement I have with you on these topics, the price.  There is no market significance to the scarcity difference with the coinage we discuss, seldom any market significance with quality differences which you exaggerate even more than US collecting generally, and I don't disagree with your assessment of current demand, only your unrealistic future claims.

  3. On 4/16/2024 at 4:50 PM, VKurtB said:

    As an ardent collector of British shillings, I can confirm that finding high quality British CuNi pieces is taking some time and checking lots of stock boxes. Luckily there is no shortage of dealers at the bigger shows to check. I filled a lot of holes with a single bulk lot at auction. I am enjoying the hunt for the balance. 

    Where are you looking?  Is it mostly at coin shows?

  4. On 4/15/2024 at 9:04 PM, cladking said:

    No.  what I am describing is collectors refusing to pay much less for scarcer coins because they are base metal.  There's a simple reason they won't pay a lower prices for scarcer coins: 

    There is no practical difference to most collectors between the scarcity of this coinage.  I've told you this before, but you won't accept it.

    On 4/15/2024 at 9:04 PM, cladking said:

    They don't collect them because they are believed to be common debased junk.  Part of the reason they are considered such is that mintages are higher and quality is lower on average.  

    So, eBay sales are imaginary?  So are world mint sales?  Sales at however many B&M sell it?  Franklin Mint didn't sell the hundreds of thousands to millions of "Coin Sets of All Nations"?

    On 4/15/2024 at 9:04 PM, cladking said:

    I can find handfuls of nice chBU, XF, and VF British sterling for every "common" mid-'20's .500 fine debased junk.   Then I can find handfuls of high grade .500 fine for the '50's era cu/ ni coins in BU.  

    It's this way in "every" country.  

    The scarcity difference is of no relevance to most collectors.  It's only relevant to a tiny fraction like you, and you won't even pay the prices you think it should be worth.  That's behind your claim that it "isn't collected".

  5. On 4/15/2024 at 6:07 PM, cladking said:

    Referring to the debased coinage as "modern" makes sense because its introduction in every case marked the beginning of the cessation of collecting new coinage.  In a few case copper coins that were unaffected by the debasement continued to be collected but in most (such as the US) all coin collecting of new coin ceased.   This happened in this country in 1965 but in most countries it was earlier and in a few it was later.  

    You’re making a generalization which doesn’t describe how most collectors collect non-US coinage.  Collectors don't generally make an arbitrary distinction using the metal content. 

    What you describe is an arbitrary “coin dump” you’ve invented, numbering maybe 50,000 in the 70's to over 100,000 now, using an inconsistent and arbitrary cut-off date.  You’re thinking in the context of how you collect as a US based collector, from your local dealers ‘bargain bin” which doesn’t reflect most collecting of non-US coinage, either in the US or elsewhere.

    You're making this distinction because you exaggerate meaningless price differences.  The price differences between the vast majority of the world coinage you call “modern” and the vast majority of the immediately preceding “classics” are almost always immaterial.  It’s material to you because you're measuring what is actually an alternate low budget consumption expense using percentages.  The relative price is the best indication of collector perception, not an arbitrary definition from the metal content. 

    As an example, I just bought one roll each of 60’s Canadian silver dollars, halves and quarters at $4.75, $9.25, and $18 per coin.  It’s maybe 2X to 3X an earlier dated base metal coin in comparable quality.  That’s a trivial difference and not unusual.

    On 4/15/2024 at 6:07 PM, cladking said:

    Referring to the debased coinage as "modern" makes sense because its introduction in every case marked the beginning of the cessation of collecting new coinage.  In a few case copper coins that were unaffected by the debasement continued to be collected but in most (such as the US) all coin collecting of new coin ceased.   This happened in this country in 1965 but in most countries it was earlier and in a few it was later.  

    Your claim is demonstrably wrong.  What you're describing is collectors refusing to pay the price you think this coinage should be worth.  That's the real disagreement underlying all our differences of opinion.  I've told you this before. You think this coinage should have a higher preference than it does, collectors should assign it higher prices, and since you dislike collective perception, you claim it "wasn't collected", just as you do for US moderns which is equally wrong.

    National mints sales, eBay, Franklin Mint "Coin Sets of all Nations", and thousands of B&M dealers worldwide factually prove you wrong.

  6. On 4/14/2024 at 6:37 PM, GoldFinger1969 said:

    It's almost like you are describing what happened to baseball cards, circa the mid-1960's:  cards destroyed....being thrown out....treated shabbily....and then a demand surge for the next few decades

    I don't know the current state of the sports card market, but it's not comparable to coins other than both are mass produced objects and subject to financial speculation.  I consider modern sports cards a mass-produced piece of cardboard, but the cultural connection is much stronger than coins.

  7. On 4/14/2024 at 12:51 PM, VKurtB said:

    The United States Mint said, years ago, during the beginning of the State Quarter series, that there was an insane number of coin collectors based on how many albums, folders, and maps were being sold for State Quarters. Many were given as gifts. How many survived? We may never know. We know for certain that the number of collectors had been overstated. My son’s maps were completed with all uncirculated coins, and remain “upstairs in the man cave” today.

    Above I mentioned US Mint customers as one indication.  Post above mine mentions registry set members.  There are also registered users at Heritage and GC, though Heritage includes more than just coins and some proportion of non-US-based collectors.

    Then there is eBay which currently has (right now) about 1.7MM US listings, another 1.6MM for world (including Canada), and 175K ancient and medieval.  This is an even less precise measure, because it's not all by US based sellers and it contains a lot of overpriced material that will never sell or coins collectors don't actually want, but it is a data point, imprecise as it is.

    You may know number of coin club members with ANA affiliated clubs.  Number of dealers is another indication, but no idea how this compares to the past.  My assumption is fewer dealers than previously but if not, definitely B&M. 

    Checked in ATL recently and there seem to be about half a dozen in the metro area that I would describe as traditional hobbyist dealers with a similar number of bullion or "investment" sellers.  (World Numismatics, the one with the best inventory here when I was a YN in the 70s, closed about a year ago.)  Not counting pawn shops or "We Buy Gold" outlets.  Number of coin club members for the metro area from a prior review of the ANA website indicated maybe a few hundred.  This is for a population approaching 6MM now.  I wouldn't call ATL a numismatic desert, but it's not the NE US either.

  8. On 4/13/2024 at 6:07 PM, GoldFinger1969 said:

    I define coin collector as ACTIVE...either buying or LOOKING at coins...or reading, posting, learning about coins in between purchases.

    I'm going to say about 5 million with maybe half of them under the age of 21.  That does NOT include bullion investors who might buy AGEs or Saints which are both coins and bullion.

    I think 5MM is way too many.  That would be about one in every 60 to 70 people in the country.  This ratio also incorporates demographic groups which have a much lower to non-existent participation rate (women and currently defined minorities), meaning the participation rate of the primary collector demographic will have to be noticeably higher.

    Are collectors really encountering other collectors that often as this number suggests?

  9. On 4/14/2024 at 9:32 AM, cladking said:

    This market is still in its infancy and how it matures will largely be dependent on things that haven't happened yet. 

    I'm 59, born in 1965 the year clad was first struck.  The coins have been collected my entire life, just not as you think it should be.

    The market is not in any infancy and is already mature. It just hasn't matured to your preference.  In the next few decades, 1965-1998 US moderns will mostly disappear from circulation, never mind that your usage of demographics has no demonstrated predictability on collector preferences, and never did.

    No, this isn't the 1960's when you think US collectors supposedly preferred their circulating change.  In the 60's, US collectors mostly collected at FV and where they didn't, there wasn't a large supply of affordable alternatives.

    Now and recently, there is the internet which makes 95% of all coinage ever made available practically on demand with over half a century of additional coinage previously not available, both circulating and NCLT.  Most of this coinage is affordable by US collecting standards while the collector base will never approach your prior claims and inferences because the non-collecting public doesn't find it that interesting.

    On 4/14/2024 at 9:32 AM, cladking said:

    I would expect some parallels to the 1960's but even more differences.  I expect most collectors to be young and middle aged adults but with substantial numbers of young people putting together their own collections purchased online or gleaned from bank rolls.  

    If this were credible, it would have already happened.  The reason it hasn't is because you're describing 1960's style collecting at scale, not the future.  This type of collecting has virtually no correlation on the price level because it's almost never an actual preference, just as it wasn't in the 60's.

    I don't know if he watches the forum anymore, but a prior poster (Tom) used to write in great detail about the collecting habits of young(er) collectors.  Your description doesn't have any similarity to what he wrote, at all.

  10. On 4/14/2024 at 10:41 AM, samclemen3991 said:

    Finally, I tend to focus on Seated material, but have grown curious as to whether there are any actual dealers, besides individuals on E-Bay , who market modern clad coins circa 1965-say 1999?

    Any information appreciated.  james

    The only one I know is Mitch Stevens who posts as "wondercoin" on the PCGS forum though not as often as previously.  I understand his son Justin is running their coin business now.  He's probably the best source for anyone looking to put together a registry type set of circulating pre-1999 US moderns.

    Otherwise, eBay is good enough for most everything else.

  11. On 4/14/2024 at 9:18 AM, cladking said:

    Yes!  Exactly.  Most collectors hear words like "rare coins" and they're expecting coins with five figure price tags.  But the reality is even rare moderns are not going to have as high a price as comparably rare classics for many decades.  It takes time for markets to shake out.  

    What coins are you comparing now?

    The market does not need any more time.  Relative preference between series is and has been established longer than practically most reading this thread have been alive and definitely collecting.  For any series collectively, it's entirely due to cultural perception from the coin attributes.

    The US moderns which have high prices currently are due to similar reasons as older coinage.  Coins like the FDR "no S" proofs, 1969-S DDO and 1972 DDO cent, and 1982 with NMM dime.  It's more than just some narrow rarity, since the last two in my list aren't even scarce.

    Other US moderns you have claimed as "rare" or "scarce" which most US collectors consider as having (somewhat) higher prices are almost entirely due to the TPG label.

  12. On 4/13/2024 at 9:41 PM, Henri Charriere said:

    I am truly sorry you compromised your integrity to acknowledge the likes of me.  I do not wish to jeopardize your station on this Forum by sacrificing your reputation and credibility for me.

    What you say is true. To me, U.S. coinage ceased to exist after 1964.  Gnashing of teeth and wringing of hands over "flaws," visible to the unaided eye, back then, was unheard of. The '43 "copper" penny and '55 DDO "variety" were well known. 

    I did not use the term obsolete because the term has lost its utility. Those coins have attained numismatic value. I do not believe any such coin (or currency for that matter) would be refused by a merchant unless proffered as face value. 

    Your point is well taken. I shall no longer use the term Modern anymore.  One last thing... how will you refer to "any coin from any country introduced after the withdrawal of silver from circulation."

     

    Modern applies to US coinage because it's distinctly part of the collecting culture.

    It doesn't apply in anything close to the same context elsewhere.

  13. On 4/12/2024 at 4:47 PM, VKurtB said:

    The American Numismatic Association has a definition, to which I subscribe. Their exhibit rules (I am a member of the Exhibiting Committee) for Class 4 - Modern Coins and Medals, the John Esbach Award, endowed by the Red Rose Coin Club of Lancaster, PA (of which I am a past President) states that the line of demarcation is 1960, not any other date. It applies to ALL countries, not just the U.S. 

    By the way, Britain went off .925 silver in 1920, and off 50% silver in 1947. 1964 is just soooo Amerocentric thinking 

    Using the metal content as the defining factor is nonsensical.

  14. On 4/12/2024 at 9:26 AM, cladking said:

    I believe a better definition is "modern coins" are any coin from any country introduced after the withdrawal of silver from circulation.  After WW II one country after another quit producing silver coins.  The US was one of the last to do it in 1964.   

    Other than low denominations in no country were the "moderns" saved in significant quantities by collectors.  

    "Modern" in the context of non-US collecting is a US centric term. There is no such thing as world "moderns" and it has zero relevance to how most collectors collect.  US collectors don't even make that distinction either, except maybe in the context of "bargain bin" B&M inventory which isn't necessarily tied to the metal content.  I've never heard a single person use this term or make this distinction other than you.

    It's not used outside the US that I know and if it is, they got it from here, not locally.  It's meaningless in Europe or Asia with up to thousands of years to collect.  In Europe, "modern" is anything after 1500.  In Latin America, the native population never struck their own coinage and in most of it, there is limited if any organized collecting.  In Africa, same thing but not what US collectors would consider organized collecting except in South Africa, where I know as fact their collector base had never heard of the US definition until I mentioned it.

    Maybe a very few countries have coinage that can legitimately be considered to have a distinct separation between series to meet the US definition of "modern" but it's no more than that.  The primary one is Canada, and I can see China PRC as a second.  I can't think of a single other one.

  15. On 4/13/2024 at 7:19 PM, GoldFinger1969 said:

    Even if they are worth 50x FV, what are we talking about ?  We're not talking 3-figure or 4-figure coins even in high-MS grade.

    Most of these coins currently sell for somewhat above or below the cost of grading in MS-66.

    My prediction remains the same as before.  Decades from now, the majority of post 1933 US coinage should sell for nominal premiums to silver spot or near or below the cost of grading in grades up to MS-66.

  16. On 4/13/2024 at 6:12 PM, Sandon said:

     I can provide a scenario that is just as likely and is based upon my own observations.

    I agree with your general theme.

    There isn't any basis to claim that this segment consisting of hundreds of coins is going to experience a future leap in collector preference (not popularity).  

    The price estimates provided near the top of this thread aren't financially meaningful either and the market will never be large enough where more than a very low number or proportion of the collector base will make it up by volume.

    On 4/13/2024 at 6:12 PM, Sandon said:

     Of course, if people who don't know better can be persuaded that they are scarce or rare and to pay high prices for them, as is the case with common date Morgan and Peace dollars, anything is possible. 

    Totally different kind of buyer.  Given how common many Morgan and Peace dollars are, my assumption is that most of the (most) common dates are owned for financial reasons.  There are very unlikely enough collectors buying it for sets or as type coins.  eBay has tons of it.  This isn't ever going to happen with a base metal coin in volume because "investors" don't buy this type of coin.

  17. On 4/13/2024 at 4:58 PM, cladking said:

    It's a drop in the bucket for a mass market. 

    You can interpret my reply as you wish, even telling me the coins don’t actually exist if that's what you want to do

    I’m not interested in getting into another pointless debate with you to experience Ground Hog Day, so don’t even start that.  It’s not even entertaining.

    So, carry on financially promoting this coinage.

  18. On 4/13/2024 at 1:04 PM, cladking said:

    Nobody has 500 1969 mint sets and if they did nobody is going to go to all the work to restore the dimes and sell them for 20C wholesale.  

    1969 UNCIRCULATED Genuine U.S. MINT SET ISSUED BY U.S. MINT | eBay

    572 sold so far by this seller with more than 10 still available.

    1969 U.S. MINT SET. ISSUED BY US MINT. Envelope Sealed / Unopened | eBay

    Another 170 sold by the same seller, also with more than 10 still available.

    No, I don't know what these sets look like.  It's good enough for whoever bought it.

  19. On 4/13/2024 at 12:17 PM, GoldFinger1969 said:

    Then the question becomes:  does demand surge for some reason such that the price RISES which is what we normally associate with a "rare" coin ? :|

    For that to happen, the supply must be short relative to demand.  As some of you have said here, the MCMVII High Relief is not "rare" but on price it does trade as a rare coin even at the AU and low-60's MS levels.  That is in part from demand from people who are absolutely NOT coin collectors (they might not own any other coin).

    The question then becomes:  if out of those surviving mint/proof sets ONLY (nothing from regular mintage), how many are collectors seeking them ?  It's not the 1950's or 1960's when most kids were collectors.  Add in sales by existing holders (mint/proof sets, regular mintage collectors over the decades, etc.) and the question is how many NEW collectors meet that supply and if not, how big is the demographic imbalance ?

    That's how I see it, if not from a veteran or expert collector perspective, but a simple supply-demand analysis. (thumbsu

    Collectors don't collect in a vacuum.  The idea that collectors will suddenly find a series so interesting to leave all others which compete with it in the dust price wise isn't plausible.  We're not talking about crypto or some share of stock.  It's a collectible.

    This isn't just true of US moderns, but practically all coins.  It happens with the most expensive highest preferred coinage because the few buyers are more prone to ignore the prices of other coins.  Also for specific dates or segments for the same reason.

    Generally though, if the price increases by a "meaningful" multiple, it will be priced to compete with coinage with a much higher collector preference where it isn't competitive because preferences aren't an accident.

  20. On 4/12/2024 at 8:03 PM, cladking said:

    Things like rare '84 cents that no one knows about and no albums are EVIDENCE.  Coins routinely selling at 15X catalog are EVIDENCE.  You have nothing but contention and opinion where I have experience and EVIDENCE.  

    So VKurt's and zadok's observations aren't evidence but yours is, right?  Are you going to call their experience "hearsay" again like you did earlier in this thread? 

    What about wondercoin's in the "raw moderns" thread on PCGS?

    Why is your experience any better than theirs?  Am I supposed to believe you over them?  Am I supposed to believe it's only them and no one else who has this experience?  Out of all the collectors in the world, your experience is uniquely representative?

    Ever heard of comparative analysis?  Read up on it.

    Throughout this thread, I've been using criteria which accounts for the survival and quality distribution for coinage generally, not using premises like yours which have nothing to do with anything in coin collecting.

    That's how I conclude this coinage is more common than you infer, since you haven't even given an estimate.  I already gave you mine, likely 200,000 minimum for any date in TPG MS-64 or better.  Why would I believe this is either scarce or it's less than that?

    It's possible (key word) the survival rates are lower on US moderns than one or more examples I gave earlier in low or very low proportion.  As a general principle, there isn't any reason to believe it's more than that, regardless of what you saw.