Nick Posted January 7, 2013 Author Posted January 7, 2013 1835 sixpence sold for $1,880 = £1,170. That is just plain bonkers! Quote
1949threepence Posted January 7, 2013 Posted January 7, 2013 1835 sixpence sold for $1,880 = £1,170. That is just plain bonkers!Insanity. Quote
azda Posted January 8, 2013 Posted January 8, 2013 Helloooooo Ladies, were'nt we going to try something. It is insanity, and we wanna join, or have you all forgotten? Quote
1949threepence Posted January 8, 2013 Posted January 8, 2013 Helloooooo Ladies, were'nt we going to try something. It is insanity, and we wanna join, or have you all forgotten?However, if you make money from it, then it's got to be good insanity ~ right ? Quote
Peter Posted January 8, 2013 Posted January 8, 2013 I thought there were custom problems and the next Heritage auction is months away.Slabbed prices are crazy. Quote
Peter Posted January 8, 2013 Posted January 8, 2013 (edited) duplicate Edited January 8, 2013 by Peter Quote
azda Posted January 9, 2013 Posted January 9, 2013 I thought there were custom problems and the next Heritage auction is months away.Slabbed prices are crazy.Which customs problem? Quote
Peter Posted January 9, 2013 Posted January 9, 2013 I thought there were custom problems and the next Heritage auction is months away.Slabbed prices are crazy.Which customs problem?A guy on another forum had to pay customs to receive his coins back.Later I will try to find a link. Quote
Gary1000 Posted January 9, 2013 Posted January 9, 2013 I thought there were custom problems and the next Heritage auction is months away.Slabbed prices are crazy.Which customs problem?A guy on another forum had to pay customs to receive his coins back.Later I will try to find a link.If you send abroad and want it back in the UK you will be hit for VAT on any value you asign to it. A fully insured value could get high. I guess if you send it to Heritage an get them to slab it before auctioning it there would be no duty to pay. Quote
Rob Posted January 9, 2013 Posted January 9, 2013 If you ship on a temporary export licence, there is no duty payable if the returning item matches the exported item. People travelling abroad with equipment for their job (tool kits etc) do this all the time. Contents have to be itemised, but customs are pretty realistic and flexible when large quantities of items worth pence each are involved. The problem arises with the Royal Mail or whatever courier acting for HMRC. In this case you will probably have to appeal against the costs and provide the evidence within the time allowed to avoid charges. Quote
azda Posted January 9, 2013 Posted January 9, 2013 I thought there were custom problems and the next Heritage auction is months away.Slabbed prices are crazy.Which customs problem?A guy on another forum had to pay customs to receive his coins back.Later I will try to find a link.Which part of PCGS in Paris, France is not in the EU where member states don't pay tax? Quote
Coinery Posted January 12, 2013 Posted January 12, 2013 I thought there were custom problems and the next Heritage auction is months away.Slabbed prices are crazy.Which customs problem?A guy on another forum had to pay customs to receive his coins back.Later I will try to find a link.Which part of PCGS in Paris, France is not in the EU where member states don't pay tax?"Thank you for your inquiry. We do submit raw UK coins to NGC, PCGS and ANACS before auctioning. The grading fees typically is between $10 and $30 a coin depending on the value. When you send a consignment in of raw UK coins, please make sure it is noted that you would like any or all coins graded, so we know which you would like sent in. If you have a list of coins you have interest auctioning, feel free to send me an email." Quote
Coinery Posted January 12, 2013 Posted January 12, 2013 Its cheaper than doing it yourself thenAlso gets rid of a lot of expensive postage costs back and forth, notwithstanding the eradication of import/export issues! Quote
azda Posted January 12, 2013 Posted January 12, 2013 Its cheaper than doing it yourself thenAlso gets rid of a lot of expensive postage costs back and forth, notwithstanding the eradication of import/export issues! There would be no Import costs to PCGS in France. Is anyone actually Reading my posts correctly? PCGS have an office in Paris so there is no Tax duty to pay Quote
Nick Posted January 12, 2013 Author Posted January 12, 2013 Its cheaper than doing it yourself thenAlso gets rid of a lot of expensive postage costs back and forth, notwithstanding the eradication of import/export issues! There would be no Import costs to PCGS in France. Is anyone actually Reading my posts correctly? PCGS have an office in Paris so there is no Tax duty to payI often wonder the same thing. Quote
Gary D Posted January 12, 2013 Posted January 12, 2013 Its cheaper than doing it yourself thenAlso gets rid of a lot of expensive postage costs back and forth, notwithstanding the eradication of import/export issues! There would be no Import costs to PCGS in France. Is anyone actually Reading my posts correctly? PCGS have an office in Paris so there is no Tax duty to payThere's no import duty into the States either, It's just if you want to get it back into the UK again after slabbing. Quote
Coinery Posted January 12, 2013 Posted January 12, 2013 Its cheaper than doing it yourself thenAlso gets rid of a lot of expensive postage costs back and forth, notwithstanding the eradication of import/export issues! There would be no Import costs to PCGS in France. Is anyone actually Reading my posts correctly? PCGS have an office in Paris so there is no Tax duty to payThere's no import duty into the States either, It's just if you want to get it back into the UK again after slabbing.Well somebody mentioned bloody duty somewhere! Anyway, it's saves nearly £20 on postage by missing out the slabbing process as a first party! Quote
VickySilver Posted January 12, 2013 Posted January 12, 2013 (edited) There is a relevant post on www.pcgs.com (foreign and ancients forum) about what a rarity a 1935 REP crown in proof was at PCGS67 for "only" 2600USD.Thought you fellows would like that! Outrageous in my opinion. So maybe money to be made as the one poster appears to have an offer out!!!!PS Please adjust the linkage for me if you are able. Edited January 12, 2013 by VickySilver Quote
Paulus Posted January 12, 2013 Posted January 12, 2013 I am still in if postage, customs and slabbing charges are less than 10% of the realised price - it looks pretty clear to me that slabbed high grade English silver is getting a huge premium in the States at the moment, from almost any era! Others still in? Quote
Bidask Posted January 13, 2013 Posted January 13, 2013 There is a relevant post on www.pcgs.com (foreign and ancients forum) about what a rarity a 1935 REP crown in proof was at PCGS67 for "only" 2600USD.Thought you fellows would like that! Outrageous in my opinion. So maybe money to be made as the one poster appears to have an offer out!!!!PS Please adjust the linkage for me if you are able.Uh, correction......it must be a PCGS Proof 67 CAMEO.....( and I must approve it in hand).Greeting gents and ladies allow me to introduce myself as 'Bidask'...!I am the one who posted the offer on the PCGS message board World and Ancients and it stands...... Quote
Coinery Posted January 13, 2013 Posted January 13, 2013 There is a relevant post on www.pcgs.com (foreign and ancients forum) about what a rarity a 1935 REP crown in proof was at PCGS67 for "only" 2600USD.Thought you fellows would like that! Outrageous in my opinion. So maybe money to be made as the one poster appears to have an offer out!!!!PS Please adjust the linkage for me if you are able.Uh, correction......it must be a PCGS Proof 67 CAMEO.....( and I must approve it in hand).Greeting gents and ladies allow me to introduce myself as 'Bidask'...!I am the one who posted the offer on the PCGS message board World and Ancients and it stands......This all sounds rather intriguing, what was the link again? Quote
Red Riley Posted January 14, 2013 Posted January 14, 2013 There would be no Import costs to PCGS in France. Is anyone actually Reading my posts correctly? PCGS have an office in Paris so there is no Tax duty to payReading? Have they got an office there? Quote
Gary D Posted January 14, 2013 Posted January 14, 2013 There is a relevant post on www.pcgs.com (foreign and ancients forum) about what a rarity a 1935 REP crown in proof was at PCGS67 for "only" 2600USD.Thought you fellows would like that! Outrageous in my opinion. So maybe money to be made as the one poster appears to have an offer out!!!!PS Please adjust the linkage for me if you are able.Uh, correction......it must be a PCGS Proof 67 CAMEO.....( and I must approve it in hand).Greeting gents and ladies allow me to introduce myself as 'Bidask'...!I am the one who posted the offer on the PCGS message board World and Ancients and it stands......This all sounds rather intriguing, what was the link again?World and Ancient Coins Forum Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.