thecrazyone wrote:What is the deal with holes in coins anyway? Bored people?
In the mid-1800's or so, I've read and heard that people would wear a holed coin (usually dime, quarter or half) around their neck as a very small way of prepping. If they found that they had no money and were hungry, they could turn in what was around their neck for one last meal.
I'm working (very slowly I might add) on a holed type set, which is actually a pretty cool thing. I've seen a few of them before and they are quite beautiful. For my holed type coins, I want either a key date (for instance, I have a holed 1864 "L" on ribbon Indian Head cent in roughly XF that is a super sharp strike and looks really nice) or a coin that is in nicer condition (say, XF or above). A sample of a nicer holed coin in the set is a beautiful Barber half in AU+++ condition from the 1890's that is an "S" mint. Pretty sure it is either and 1894-S or 1895-S. The coins are in storage at a remote site.
I won't accept just any holed coin for my set. It has to have a hole that isn't a jagged mess or overly huge and I prefer it to be near the 12 o'clock position without having the hole go through the head of the person on the coin (if the head is fairly small- like on the seated Liberty coins). Also, you don't want to have the hole be in the position where the mint mark is- then you might not know where the coin was produced.
Holed coins can often be bought for big discounts versus the retail value of the same dates without holes. I would guess that, generally, you can buy a coin that would cost $100 for $10 to $40 if it is holed. Look at some of those that have sold on eBay and you will get a better feel for pricing.
These sets, when complete can easily be worth several thousand dollars, so you can imagine there are some pretty nice coins in there. One other thing, holed coins from the last 50 years or so are not very easy to find, but that doesn't mean that they are worth much either. So I wouldn't fall for that trap. In other words, if someone wants to sell you a 1972 Lincoln cent with a hole for $5, I'd tell them where they can put their coin (and it wouldn't be in my collection!).
By the way, two coin dealers I know well are also both working on holed type sets. One showed his set to me and I was drooling as I looked at it. So those coins now have both holes and saliva!
I'm also gonna repost this as a new thread with a different title to give it the attention it deserves.
Former stock broker w/ ~20 yrs. at one company. Spoke with 100k+ people and traded a lot (long, short, options, margin, extended hours, etc.).
NOTE: ANY stocks I discuss, no matter how compelling, carry risk- often
substantial. If not prepared to buy it multiple times in modest amounts without going overboard (assuming nothing really wrong with the company), you need to learn more about the market and managing risk. Also, please research covered calls (options) and selling short as well.