May 2010
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London Coins – General Sale – March 6 & 7, 2010
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Coin News
May 2010 - Page 31
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I have never seen so many certified coins in a UK auction before. Some had been slabbed in the US, but the Coin Grading Service UK (CGS) encapsulated most. Top of the slabbed pieces was a 1601 "Elephant and Castle" five-guineas certified by CGS UK as EF 60. Estimated at £5,000-8,000 it found a new home at £6,786. CGS’ range for extremely fine material is 60-79, so this example, while a perfectly respectable coin, was not choice.
When CGS encapsulates a coin, it adds the piece to its Population Reports. This is a published database showing the quantities of coins (by denomination and then date and type) graded at each level (see pages 53-55 (reproduced here) for our updated report on CGS). This allows collectors to assess how good his or her coins are in relation to others graded by CGS UK, which is important, as there is a strong demand for the best or near best specimens. A number of CGS' rated "finest known" were offered at this sale. This included an 1893 proof florin graded by CGS as UNC 91. Anything above UNC 85 is regarded as "exceptionally nice", so one can safely say this is a choice example. Of the three specimens that CGS has graded this is the finest. Interestingly London Coins estimated the piece at a somewhat punchy £400-600. The coin sold at mid-estimate, making it £585 with Buyer’s Premium.
After the sale auctioneer, Steve Lockett pointed out that a good example of slabbing adding value was when ten lots, each comprising a 1927 second reverse proof sixpence were offered. Nine of these were slabbed. Offered in grades from UNC 88 to UNC 93, prices ranged from £32.76 to £152.10, the highest price being for the UNC 93 specimen. An unslabbed uncirculated example sold for £28.08. Steve Lockett commented, "These lots were fought over by new collectors who started their hobby on slabs and only collect slabs and are not affected by traditional paradigms and ’raw' book values and seem to take for granted that a CGS UNC 91 is worth more than a CGS 90." Three vendors with a penchant for CGS certified coins consigned the material.
The excitement of the slabbed coins to one side, there was plenty to interest potential bidders at this sale. Indeed the sale was notable for its all-round strength. As Steve commented "As usual we had a varied mix across our 14 sections such as paper money, Roman and ancient, modern proofs, slabbed coins, English, world milled, hammered – everything fought over and selling, whether it was a £150 or £5,000 lot". Indeed there were surprises everywhere. For example, in the UK bronze there was an 1860 toothed border (Freeman 15 dies 4 + D) but with the I of BRITT struck over a T. Described as NF/VG the piece was estimated at £50-100, but was fought over to £702. Another penny of the same date but with a beaded border (Freeman 1 dies 1 + A) described as VF/GVF was offered at the same estimate, but cost its purchaser £655.
A silver penny of Coenwulf, King of Mercia (796-821) was offered in very fine state. From Group IV struck at Canterbury from 810-20, it was struck by the moneyer Tidbeart. The estimate was a very undemanding £450-550 (against £2,100 in EF in the price catalogues). The piece sold for a very healthy £2,457. An equally healthy price was the £409.50 paid for an 1852 Maundy set. Apart from a few light hairlines, this set is in uncirculated state and has the benefit of a light grey tone. This made the most sought after Maundy set of the current reign - a 1953 set - look on the inexpensive side at £515. The sale totaled £489,000. London Coins' next auction will break with a long-standing tradition and be held on a Monday and Tuesday. The dates for your diary are June 7 and 8.
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May 2015
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Coin News
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This 3,000 - lot sale set a new record for the company as it was their first March sale to break through the £ 1 million total. With such a huge sale there was literally "something for everyone", with prices ranging from under £ 20 to over £ 20,000.
The sale... Continue reading
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February 2015
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Coin News
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Top lot at this event was an 1839 plain edge proof crown. Its reverse contains much brilliance while the obverse has a choice blue and gold tone. Slabbed and graded by CGS at 82 (choice uncirculated), documents with the piece
shows that it was graded at MS65 by ICCS, the Canadian... Continue reading
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May 2014
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Coin News
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The highlight of this event was a 1953 UK proof set comprising the 10 coins from the crown to the farthing. I expect that after that opening statement, readers will think that this sale went downhill from there. However, it was not one of the 40,000 sets issued by the... Continue reading
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August 2013
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Coin News
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The highlight of this sale was a 1643 Oxford Mint Charles I triple unite in very fine state. It had an excellent provenance from Sir K. Vaughan-Morgan (Sotheby's 1935), through R. C. Lockett (Glendining's 1961), Spink (1990) to more recently Bonham's (2006). The estimate of £40,000 - 50,000 brought mutterings... Continue reading
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May 2013
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Coin News May 2013
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This sale not only attracted bidders from all over the UK, but others travelled from further afield, including the Far East, Portugal, Russia, Spain and the USA.
The highest price at this sale was the £15,795 paid for an 1826 proof five pounds. Apart from some hairlines on the portrait and... Continue reading
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February 2013
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Coin News
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As the proverb goes, "Two swallows don't make a summer", but it was nevertheless good to hear that after a long absence two buyers from financially distressed Greece made a reappearance at Bracknell. Other overseas buyers included Russians and Spaniards. Bidders had to contend with a commotion outside the rooms... Continue reading
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November 2012
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Coin News
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What was fascinating for me with this sale is that it included a good collection formed in the 1980s. It was an eclectic cabinet embracing Roman, English hammered and milled. It was not sold as a named collection, but was offered in the relevant sections of the sale.
Now I have... Continue reading
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August 2012
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Coin News
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During the first weekend in June, there may have been plenty of fireworks in London as HM Queen E1izabeth II celebrated her Diamond Jubilee, but there were also plenty of fireworks at this sale. There were gasps from the audience before bidding on one lot got underway. As is the... Continue reading
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29th May 2012
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Money Market UK
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While for many such coins may really be a sentimental purchase, just how do they shape up as investments?
The Royal Mint has issued a range of coins, including special sets, to mark the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee this year. The latest issue is a range of silver, gold and platinum versions... Continue reading
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February 2012
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Coin News
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Top price at this weekend auction was for a stunning 1732 proof crown. Examples are extremely rare. Graded as about FDC, the cataloguer added, "This piece is virtually free of contact marks, has an even grey tone and shows just a hint of friction on the points of the obverse,... Continue reading
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23rd February 2012
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Rare Coin Auction Market in Great Britain
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Coin Week
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Auction continues to be a popular method to sell coins in Great Britain. Stephen Lockett shares what items have been selling and how prices are faring. He talks about what sales his company has coming up in the future. Continue reading
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November 2011
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Coin News
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Prior to the event, the team of London Coins Auction (LCA) thought that this was a routine sale. However, with the buoyant market, when they analysed the results they realised the sale total was the company's second highest to date. To say that some prices were astounding is no exaggeration.... Continue reading
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19th November 2011
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Coin Auctions & Third Party Grading in Great Britain
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Coin Week
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Mr. Lockett operates London Coins Ltd, a coin business that trades in numismatics and includes an auction service. He is also founder of Coin Grading Service UK, Britains first encapsulating grading service. He shares his perspective on the collector market, how auction functions in the sale of coins, and the... Continue reading
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August 2011
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Coin News
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This was a landmark event for auctioneer Stephen Lockett. Potential bidders could not have failed to notice that his regular auction has now been extended from two to three days and that paper money now has it's own catalogue, This auction house has been chipping away at the market and... Continue reading
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May 2011
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Coin News
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The best place to see what is going on at an auction is from the auctioneer’s podium. The results of this sale reflect the strength of the market, but the thing that struck Stephen Lockett in his role as auctioneer is that a year or two ago the then relatively... Continue reading
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February 2011
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Coin News
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Just prior to this sale, the snow fell in Kent for 72 hours. The sale was held in Berkshire and Stephen Lockett not unnaturally was concerned as he was snowbound in Kent. The van hire company could not promise to supply a vehicle, but remarkably they did - after digging... Continue reading
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November 2010
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Coin News
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London Coins auctioneer Stephen Lockett commented after this sale: “The sale was notable in my view for its all round strength with an overall hammer total of £580,000 with the vast majority of items selling. It seemed that dealers, collectors and new faces are all in the scramble for new... Continue reading
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August 2010
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Coin News
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This sale was held on a Monday and Tuesday as opposed to a weekend, which means that the coins were available for viewing at the London Coin Fair on the Saturday. At one of its regular clinics, the auction house was approached by a member of the public with a... Continue reading
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May 2010
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Coin News
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I have never seen so many certified coins in a UK auction before. Some had been slabbed in the US, but the Coin Grading Service UK (CGS) encapsulated most. Top of the slabbed pieces was a 1601 "Elephant and Castle" five-guineas certified by CGS UK as EF 60. Estimated at... Continue reading
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February 2010
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Coin News
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This £500,000 plus sale took London Coins' turnover for 2009 to a record £2m for this auction house—an increase of 30 per cent over 2008. Because this was a bumper sale of 2,500 lots over two days, the usual convention of having papermoney and bonds exclusively on the Saturday, meant... Continue reading
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November 2009
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Coin News
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"We kicked off the season in a very robust and exciting way", said Stephen Lockett after this sale. It was certainly an extraordinary event setting a new record for a Victorian bronze penny. The piece is dated 1863, but needless to say this was not the standard coin but an... Continue reading
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August 2009
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Coin News
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The first weekend in June is clearly popular for coin sales. Stephen Lockett commented after the event, “The market is still good and we are pleased with a £373,000 total". Top price was for an 1841 London sovereign, which is the key date rarity (as opposed to variety) in the... Continue reading
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May 2009
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Coin News
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Prices for copper and bronze material was very strong. For example, an 1843 penny with no colon after REG was offered in uncirculated state with around 70 per cent lustre. Estimated at £750—1,500, the piece was contested to £4,212. Interestingly, the same coin but with the colon was also offered... Continue reading
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February 2009
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Coin News
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As I browsed through this catalogue, I was drawn to a rather splendid example of a Charles I shilling struck at besieged Newark in 1645. By the very nature of these specimens I being an emergency coinage, surviving examples are not always the best creations to emanate from a mint.... Continue reading
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November 2008
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Coin News
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“There is no sign of the credit crunch here", remarks Stephen Lockett from his base south of London. He continued, “I asked a Russian buyer, who had journeyed from Siberia to our sale, how the credit crunch was affecting the Russian market. He looked at me seemingly astonished by the... Continue reading
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August 2008
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Coin News
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This sale broke with tradition and was held on a Friday and Saturday as opposed t0 a Saturday and Sunday. The top price was for an impressive Charles 1 1643 Oxford mint triple unite. This is an example of the large bust without a scarf. The piece has some minor... Continue reading
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May 2008
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Coin News
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This has to be a first – the successful bidder’s car broke down while removing his newly acquired “bulk lot” from the sale’s venue. To be fair, it was perhaps one of the mightiest coin bulk lots offered at a coin auction. Consisting of 22 boxes of British and world... Continue reading
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November 2007
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Coin News
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This was London Coins’ best ever sale, both in the number of lots offered and the realisation. The 2,640 lots resulted in a total of 580,000. There was another record for the auction house too – the highest realisation for an individual coin. So congratulations all round to Steve Lockett... Continue reading
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August 2007
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Coin News
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As usual, the sale started with an offering of banknotes. However, just over 100 of these lots had very unusual provenance. Known as the “Organ Pipe Hoard”, they were found when a church organ at an undisclosed location was being restored. When three of its wooden pipes were thrown into... Continue reading
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May 2007
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Coin News
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This was the first sale held at The Grange Hotel at Bracknell in Berkshire as opposed to The Dartford Hilton in Kent. The auction house’s former venue was unable to provide the required accommodation. Stephen Lockett of London Coins said after the event, “I am convinced more business can be... Continue reading
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February 2007
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Just over 500 lots of banknotes were featured on the first day of the sale. English notes were strong with a Bradbury first issue type 1 Treasury £1 with the serial number letter A selling for 50 per cent above the estimate at £1,650 in almost extremely fine state. A... Continue reading
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November 2006
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Coin News
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There were many new faces at this event. Banknotes were in great demand with dealers commenting that the prices for English notes were “sky high”. As usual, there was a strong demand for Scottish material. The highlight of the coins was a 1706 five-guineas in very fine/nearly extremely fine state.... Continue reading
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May 2006
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Coin News
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There was a good offering of UK bronze and copper at this sale. The highlight was a potentially unique 1922 penny variety. Unrecorded in any of the standard references, the coin is dated 1922, but the Britannia featured on the reverse is the one used for pennies struck from 1927... Continue reading
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February 2006
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Coin News
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This event was held on the weekend that parts of the UK suffered very early snowfall. Road travel was very difficult in some parts of the country. However, this did stop one bidder battling his way from Cornwall, the county worst affected, to attend the event – en route he... Continue reading
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May 2005
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Coin News
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This is not a central London sale as it is held at the Hilton Hotel at Dartford Crossing. The venue is just off the M25, London’s Orbital motorway, in Kent. The organisers must have been somewhat concerned in the week leading up to the sale as the county of Kent... Continue reading
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Articles on A128
Auction Prices
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