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Southern Coins & Precious Metals - What You Should Know: Rare Coin Valuation

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Southern Coins and Precious Metals - What You Should Know

 

The value of a rare coin, not unlike other collectibles or investments, is determined in the marketplace by the fundamental factors of supply and demand. Additionally, value is determined by the condition or quality of the coin and its rarity.

The supply of investment quality rare coins that is available in the world is fixed. Rare coins cannot be manufactured or produced. In fact, as quality rare coins are placed into permanent collections or are bought by investors for long term holding periods, the supply of rare coins that is available to the marketplace acutally decreases each year.

The demand for rare coins comes from both collectors and investors. Collectors generally buy those coins which they wish to acquire as part of life-long collections, usually without any intent to sell. Investors generally acquire coins to properly diversify their investment portfolios and for the security and profit potential they provide.

Because of the ease of liquidity and increased consumer protection through independent third party grading, the demand for rare coins has been rising steadily for the past several years. Not only has this demand come from the private sector, but also from institutions including several of the major Wall Street brokerage houses.

The United States began minting coins for general circulation in 1793. Coins were minted for two different reasons:

  1. To be circulated in the economy as "money" (MS or Mint State), and
  2. As presentation pieces or to be sold to collectors at a premium over their face value (PR or Proof Coins).

Over the years, the overwhelming majority of these coins were heavily circulated. In addition, many were damaged, mishandled, melted or otherwise lost through attrition. The result of this is that only a very small fraction of the coins that were originally minted exist today in what could be called investment quality condition. Therefore, the higher the quality of the coin, the greater its value. Scarcity also plays an important role in determining a coin's value.

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