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- Greysheet VS What you pay for coins - Coin Talk
Years ago the Greysheet was designed to be a guide for coin dealers to use for "Dealer to Dealer transactions only" They even placed a disclaimer on the sheet stating that you should expect to pay a premium over greysheet when buying coins from a coin dealer
- Whitman Redbook Prices? Grey Sheet Prices? - Coin Talk
Greysheet is generally considered a wholesale guide for buying coins by coin dealers Said more bluntly, as a collector you can expect to pay Redbook prices and sell at greysheet prices when using a retail dealer
- Greysheet vs Priceguides for Morgans? - Coin Talk
Greysheet vs Priceguides for Morgans? Discussion in ' Coin Chat ' started by bradgator2, Apr 12, 2023
- Are Greysheet Prices Accurate? - Coin Talk
Are Greysheet Prices Accurate? Discussion in ' US Coins Forum ' started by Argenteus Fossil, Oct 20, 2014
- How to properly price coins? - Coin Talk
The greysheet itself is a wholesale price guide for dealers It's not wrong to think of them as collector's buy prices and sell prices if you're talking a nice coin shop, one where the chairs aren't held together with duct tape and the proprietor's shirt only has one mustard stain
- Can anyone explain how CDN (Graysheet), NGC, and PCGS set their prices . . .
I also understand the Greysheet represents sight-seen transactions while PCGS NGC prices are for the sight-unseen market regardless of the coin’s eye appeal representing a ‘floor’ of the lowest prices coins are trading for… but that doesn’t give me any insight into how they set their prices
- Question about Grey Sheet Bid Ask price. - Coin Talk
The Greysheet is routinely used for sight-seen transactions, and the Bluesheet is used for sight-unseen purchases Most dealers make sight-seen purchases somewhere back of Bid, and they hope they can sell it for somewhere close to retail which is usually above Ask, but they will often come down to somewhere between Bid and Ask and still make a
- The Greysheet - is it good for pricing? - Coin Talk
Greysheet September 2014 says a 1909-S VDB Lincoln Cent Red-Brown (key date for series) Bids at $1,350 and Asks at $1,475 Again, looking at auctions for MS63RB for the past few months - sellers are netting (after fees) less than $1,300 so how can a dealer pay $1,350 ever? Also - greysheet is not even for graded certified coins
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