barrytrot wrote:I almost busted out laughing when I read this
The FMV is not going to be near what a coin shop owner could AFFORD to pay and still stay in business.
If the coins are high end enough that "melt" is irrelevant THEN you have something that you can sell within 15% or so of RETAIL. Otherwise prepare for something hovering around "melt".
And it's only fair. You know that you couldn't possibly sell beef jerky for only 1.5 x "meet value". You would be out of business in a month.
NDFarmer wrote:List a couple here for the price you want and see what happens. As Barry pointed out the dealers are going to low ball you and the Ebay fees will be even worse.
IdahoCopper wrote:I want to find a coin shop owner who wants to buy numi silver coins to sell in their shop at fair market value. I have coins I want to sell at the midpoint between melt and FMV. Is anyone on here open to that?
IdahoCopper wrote:Lets say I have a numi silver coin worth $10 melt value. Its numi FMV according to the "Book" is $30. I want to sell it to a coin shop owner for $20. Then he sells it to his customer at the "Book" FMV price of $30. I make $10 over melt, and he makes $10 more than he paid.
IdahoCopper wrote:barrytrot wrote:I almost busted out laughing when I read this
The FMV is not going to be near what a coin shop owner could AFFORD to pay and still stay in business.
If the coins are high end enough that "melt" is irrelevant THEN you have something that you can sell within 15% or so of RETAIL. Otherwise prepare for something hovering around "melt".
And it's only fair. You know that you couldn't possibly sell beef jerky for only 1.5 x "meet value". You would be out of business in a month.
It think you mis-read my post.
Lets say I have a numi silver coin worth $10 melt value. Its numi FMV according to the "Book" is $30. I want to sell it to a coin shop owner for $20. Then he sells it to his customer at the "Book" FMV price of $30. I make $10 over melt, and he makes $10 more than he paid.
IdahoCopper wrote:NDFarmer wrote:List a couple here for the price you want and see what happens. As Barry pointed out the dealers are going to low ball you and the Ebay fees will be even worse.
Yes, I want to do that. My problem is I do not know enough to properly grade the coins to establish the true FMV. I posted pics of 2 nice looking coins, a Morgan and a '64 Washington, hoping for some grading advice. So far, 84 views with no advice posted.
Market Harmony wrote:Having a store for 2+ years, I have never once been asked for a single quarter of a common year in uncirculated condition. And, if someone wants to have a nice Morgan, they typically want to pay much below the book value for a common coin. I never knew how common "common" coins were until I witnessed that the vast majority of bullion business is in junk silver... and that stuff can be found in the book for such and such price... but I don't know/have the buyers at that price.
The best bet is to sell it here on Realcent (Is there an echo in here?)
IdahoCopper wrote:It think you mis-read my post.
Lets say I have a numi silver coin worth $10 melt value. Its numi FMV according to the "Book" is $30. I want to sell it to a coin shop owner for $20. Then he sells it to his customer at the "Book" FMV price of $30. I make $10 over melt, and he makes $10 more than he paid.
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