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The Water Cooler
General Discussion
Coin Collectors--Reverse Proof Questions
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<blockquote data-quote="ratski" data-source="post: 3157779" data-attributes="member: 936"><p>OK fellow Numismatists...sorry to leave you Philatelists' out of this.</p><p></p><p>So this year, the mint put out an "S" mint Reverse Proof set.</p><p></p><p>Supposedly, the mintage was set at 200,000 sets and they were sold out by (I think) May or June. I have seen some figures that claim that they minted 220,000 sets.</p><p></p><p>I heard some guy on HSN the other night (don't ask) say that he personally ordered 10% of the mintage, broke up the sets and had the coins graded to get MS70 coins.</p><p></p><p>I've been watching these on ebay for a while and see A LOT of individual coins that have been broken out of the mint sets and graded, or just offered in lots of 5, 10, and/or rolls.</p><p></p><p>I've seen a definite increase in the price of the mint sets over the past month or so, and a definite decrease in the availability of ungraded coins, and lot sizes of ungraded coins.</p><p></p><p>Just curious. Especially since the 2018-S Reverse proof (in most of the coins) is both the FIRST time the Reverse Proof has been offered (there are I think 14 other reverse proof varieties out there in the Kennedy Halves and Sac dollars) and the lowest mintage of any of the coins in the set. Think about it. The Lincoln 2018-S reverse Proof Cent is less than 1/2 the Lincoln 1909-s VDB mintage. And I'm thinking that only between 50-75,000 coins will be individually available.</p><p></p><p>So I'm wondering...</p><p></p><p>What do you think that these coins will do in the future?</p><p></p><p>How many complete sets are actually left?</p><p></p><p>Do you think that complete sets, due to their decreased numbers from mintage, will increase in value ahead of individual coins?</p><p></p><p>Dave</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ratski, post: 3157779, member: 936"] OK fellow Numismatists...sorry to leave you Philatelists' out of this. So this year, the mint put out an "S" mint Reverse Proof set. Supposedly, the mintage was set at 200,000 sets and they were sold out by (I think) May or June. I have seen some figures that claim that they minted 220,000 sets. I heard some guy on HSN the other night (don't ask) say that he personally ordered 10% of the mintage, broke up the sets and had the coins graded to get MS70 coins. I've been watching these on ebay for a while and see A LOT of individual coins that have been broken out of the mint sets and graded, or just offered in lots of 5, 10, and/or rolls. I've seen a definite increase in the price of the mint sets over the past month or so, and a definite decrease in the availability of ungraded coins, and lot sizes of ungraded coins. Just curious. Especially since the 2018-S Reverse proof (in most of the coins) is both the FIRST time the Reverse Proof has been offered (there are I think 14 other reverse proof varieties out there in the Kennedy Halves and Sac dollars) and the lowest mintage of any of the coins in the set. Think about it. The Lincoln 2018-S reverse Proof Cent is less than 1/2 the Lincoln 1909-s VDB mintage. And I'm thinking that only between 50-75,000 coins will be individually available. So I'm wondering... What do you think that these coins will do in the future? How many complete sets are actually left? Do you think that complete sets, due to their decreased numbers from mintage, will increase in value ahead of individual coins? Dave [/QUOTE]
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