Robarons wrote:Thats a very good deal!
Tulving is selling them for $2.59 Each in 500 oz boxes. Heck I cant think of anywhere you can get any kind of 999 for $3 let alone SAE!
mbailey1234 wrote:$2 in what condition??? If they are BU still in mint tubes that's a really great deal IMHO. Especially with where the spot price is right now. I think I sold some back to APMEX for $1.80 over spot a while back.
Our LCS isn't really known for any exceptional deals but they are usually asking $3.50 or more over spot for their ASE's.
Silver Runner wrote:I visited Charlotte, NC this weekend with my family. We ventured into a LCS with good Google ratings. The staff was very friendly and helpful. While we were looking for bargains in the young queen world coinage my daughter loves so much, a seller entered with 10 rolls of 2010 ASE. The owner paid $27 per coin. $1.63 south of spot. The seller did not haggle one penny. I purchased some overpriced Canadian Junk Silver for my daughter's collection at 22x face. I was completely aware that it was overpriced but my LCS never has any, and my daughter was excited. I then asked the owner (my assumption) what he sold ASEs for. He stated $4.25 over spot for 2010s and $6 over spot for other years.
I felt like since I had seen the "theft" that I would have gotten a better deal on the "stolen merchandise". Why do sellers not check APMEX, Provident, etc buy prices before entering a LCS? Why would the seller assume the premium for their coins would completely vanish when selling? By the way through conversation it was easy to tell that the seller had purchased the coins from the same establishment.
Not to hijack the thread, but am I being too hard on the Charlotte CS owner? I know some forum members own brick and mortar stores...
OneBiteAtATime wrote:
I think you're being too hard on him. If he had offered $20 per ASE and sold them $6 over, that would be theft. Y'know what, that's not even fair. A commodity is worth what someone is willing to pay for it and what someone is willing to sell it for. If a customer walked in and offered to sell them for $10 each, the LCS owner would be an idiot to turn it down. And if a customer came in and offered $50 each for every ASE in the cabinet, the LCS owner would be an idiot to say they're only $34. A commodity is worth what someone is willing to sell it for and what someone else is willing to buy it for.
Silver Runner wrote:I visited Charlotte, NC this weekend with my family. We ventured into a LCS with good Google ratings. The staff was very friendly and helpful. While we were looking for bargains in the young queen world coinage my daughter loves so much, a seller entered with 10 rolls of 2010 ASE. The owner paid $27 per coin. $1.63 south of spot. The seller did not haggle one penny. I purchased some overpriced Canadian Junk Silver for my daughter's collection at 22x face. I was completely aware that it was overpriced but my LCS never has any, and my daughter was excited. I then asked the owner (my assumption) what he sold ASEs for. He stated $4.25 over spot for 2010s and $6 over spot for other years.
I felt like since I had seen the "theft" that I would have gotten a better deal on the "stolen merchandise". Why do sellers not check APMEX, Provident, etc buy prices before entering a LCS? Why would the seller assume the premium for their coins would completely vanish when selling? By the way through conversation it was easy to tell that the seller had purchased the coins from the same establishment.
Not to hijack the thread, but am I being too hard on the Charlotte CS owner? I know some forum members own brick and mortar stores...
IdahoCopper wrote:I am not sure if I agree with this 100%. When I was a noob on here, I posted a score I got. I bought some 90% and war nicks at 2x face. The seller was a cashier at a gas station and had been collecting silver for years. So you would think she would realize the actual value of her coins. She offered them to me and was very happy to get 2x face for her coins.
Man-o-Man, you should have seen all the comments here on RC on how I ripped off the happy seller, by accepting her offering price and paying her so little. It did get me to thinking, and I agree now that 2x face really is too little, no matter how happy the seller is.
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