Shaun, great grading outcomes, well done. I do buy graded coins. In terms of eventual resale it’s a matter of keeping them for the long term to get a return. Having said that QEII proof graded coins have crept up over the last few years so am in the money for those.
Iv just paid just over £900 for a 2002 proof double sovereign, It looks perfect to me, which is good enough for me. I don't want coins in a plastic slabs, I want context, I have a tray of double sovereigns and it needed a centre piece, a 2002 double proof for my centre piece was beyond my expectations.
I think you have priced that 2012 too cheap my friend recent auctions have been a £1000 more than what you are selling at at circa £2300. Just look at coin cabinet past sales. That 2012 get an amazing result glad you are happy with them!
If you want third party certified opinion, grading and slabbing is the only option. I have examples that to me seem faultless, but they don't all have that frosted relief a proof coin has. My question is, if you pay over the odds for a proof coin of limited mintage, it should be perfection by right, so why on earth should anyone need to have it further inspected and arbitrarily graded less than the guy who bought the set before or the set after you bought yours.? Another question, is it worth grading and slabbing non-proof coins and at what level of quality do the graders return the coins unslabbed, because they didn't meet even the minimum requirements?
I think the comment 12 months ago was not Australian against grading. Rather it was NGC basically has no premium over raw in Australia with dealers or retail. PCGS controls the market. (Unfortunately they can't grade sovereigns for sht, which is not all bad...) For longer term investing, I'm sure opensource and decentralised AI grading is very close so slabs will ultmately have no value beyond verifiying genuine or fake.
Grading the 2012 was a great punt!
Shaun, great grading outcomes, well done.
I do buy graded coins. In terms of eventual resale it’s a matter of keeping them for the long term to get a return. Having said that QEII proof graded coins have crept up over the last few years so am in the money for those.
Beautiful collection ❤️❤️❤️
Wow beautiful looking Coins friend!! :D
Thank you kindly.
@@shaunoliver1703 you're welcome friend!!
Nice results - well done.
Yea I was super happy :D
Congratulation on the PF70 for most of your coins.....
Pretty stoked with them tbh, sometimes it goes the other ways but over the moon.
Glad you got some good results
Me too! Thank you :D
Iv just paid just over £900 for a 2002 proof double sovereign, It looks perfect to me, which is good enough for me.
I don't want coins in a plastic slabs, I want context, I have a tray of double sovereigns and it needed a centre piece, a 2002 double proof for my centre piece was beyond my expectations.
How does having the coin in a slab affect the "context"?
Good set of grading results Shaun, did you have the coins conserved?
Love watching your video
Thanks so much, Im glad you enjoy my content :D
I think you have priced that 2012 too cheap my friend recent auctions have been a £1000 more than what you are selling at at circa £2300. Just look at coin cabinet past sales. That 2012 get an amazing result glad you are happy with them!
Thanks for the heads up :)
Great video 👍
If you want third party certified opinion, grading and slabbing is the only option.
I have examples that to me seem faultless, but they don't all have that frosted relief a proof coin has.
My question is, if you pay over the odds for a proof coin of limited mintage, it should be perfection by right, so why on earth should anyone need to have it further inspected and arbitrarily graded less than the guy who bought the set before or the set after you bought yours.?
Another question, is it worth grading and slabbing non-proof coins and at what level of quality do the graders return the coins unslabbed, because they didn't meet even the minimum requirements?
I think the comment 12 months ago was not Australian against grading. Rather it was NGC basically has no premium over raw in Australia with dealers or retail. PCGS controls the market. (Unfortunately they can't grade sovereigns for sht, which is not all bad...) For longer term investing, I'm sure opensource and decentralised AI grading is very close so slabs will ultmately have no value beyond verifiying genuine or fake.
how much would you let your 2022 5 pound sovereign go for
Hello governor
Graded coins are the way to go, cannot trust raw coins, unless you have very good knowledge
It can be an absolute minefield Id agree with that.
1 gram gold giveaway 😝
AAA
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