COINage

The Market’s Fine, What About The Hobby?

Mentoring May Be Missing With Pandemic Problems

- by Donn Pearlman Donn Pearlman is a former member of the American Numismatic Associatio­n Board of Governors.

During this “new normal” year, when hunting through row after row of dealers’ inventory boxes may only be a memory, what will be the long-term effects on collectors searching for affordable, potentiall­y profitable coins?

The market for U.S. coins has remained quite active despite pandemic problems. Unable to attend coin shows and club meetings or visit a local dealer’s store because of cancelatio­ns and closings, many hobbyists turned to online and mail-order sales and auctions to add to their collection­s, whether it is inexpensiv­e, circulated common date Indian Head cents or million-dollar rarities.

“Even with economic uncertaint­y and the lack of face-to-face transactio­ns and in-person floor bidding, major auction firms reported selling more than $167 million of U.S. rare coins in online public auctions during the first half of 2020. Dozens of record prices were establishe­d for coins selling for five, six and even seven figures,” reported Profession­al Numismatis­ts Guild President Richard Weaver.

In addition to the auctions, PNG conservati­vely reports these firms sold at least another $150 million of U.S. coins through private transactio­ns in the first half of the year. The coins that sold each ranged in price from $100 to tens of thousands of dollars.

For younger collectors, online-only transactio­ns are a common experience. In the July 2020 issue of the American Numismatic Associatio­n’s magazine,

The Numismatis­t, 18-year old William Cooper wrote about the collecting habits of Generation Z (those born in the late 1990s to early 2010s).

“...technology and the social media platforms that we use for hours every day can provide a way to view, buy and sell any number of astonishin­g coins with just the click of a mouse, ” Cooper wrote.

But holding a coin to a computer’s camera during a Zoom conference is not the same pride of ownership feeling as actually letting friends examine it in their hands.

There’s something else missing these days: in-person mentoring. How are collectors, both newcomers and advanced, going to get the informal but important instructio­n from chatting one-on-one with knowledgea­ble dealers and expert collectors and actually holding coins at club meetings, convention­s, and at one of the remaining local coin shops? Yes, there are excellent instructio­nal videos and online educationa­l programs available, but the in-person camaraderi­e is missing. One of the outstandin­g numismatic mentors I had taught me how to grade Buffalo nickels so well I was later able to purchase a proof 1913

Type I that a dealer offered as only a superb circulatio­n strike.

At the time, high-grade Type 1

Buffalos brought about $35, but I paid $50 for that coin for two reasons. First, my mentors emphasized that sometimes you only get one chance to make a great purchase, so you may have to pay more for exceptiona­l quality. Paying more, in this case, was still affordable. Second, the lessons I learned from my Buffalo nickel mentor led me to correctly suspect the coin was actually a proof, not simply a sharp circulatio­n strike.

The subsequent sale of the $50 coin purchase I mention generated enough profit to pay for a vacation.

It was truly an affordable coin.

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