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You get that one, and I'll take a 1913 Liberty Head, "V" nickel. We'll buy a couple of places on a stream, go fishing, shooting and detecting - in eastern Europe - whenever we want.Uncle Willy said:All I want is one 1943 copper penny in any condition.
Bill
And a similar leveling is at wrok when you want to sell a coin you find.SteveP(NH) said:One thing that a lot of people who are not serious coin collectors do not realize is that the prices in the Red Book are what a dealer, who operates a brick and mortar store will be likely to charge you if you want to buy the coin from them. You won't get that price from a coin dealer, or from a coin collector on ebay or else where.
That $7 price for a MS-63 1969-s cent is a good example. The PCGS price guide lists it at $7 but you can buy an entire uncirculated roll on ebay for less than $10. In fact there is an auction for an uncirculated roll of 69-s cents up on ebay right now ending in a little over 24 hours and the current price is $1.52 with free shipping. MS-63 is the grade for "average uncirculated" and many of the coins in that roll would score at least a 63. So why does the PCGS price guide list it at $7? Because that is the price you would expect to pay for a 1969-s cent that was in a PCGS slab, graded at MS-63 but it costs $20 to get PCGS to slab a coin. It would be a mistake to send in such a 69s cent for grading because it would be worth less than the cost of the grading. So you probably wouldn't want to send in such a coin unless you felt pretty sure it would grade as a MS-66 or better.
The real street price for an uncirculated, non graded 69-s cent if bought as a single at a local coin show would probably be something like 50 cents.