Coin Collecting and Trading San Jose CA

Legal tender determines how things are governed in many parts of the world. It is almost like a language of its own and can bring both happiness and sorrow. For a coin collector and a numismatic, it is an art and a discipline respectively.


1. Local Companies

Virginia N. Davi, CPA
1 408-942-8800
500 East Calaveras Blvd.
Milpitas, CA
the brenner group inc
408-890-9968
19200 stevens creek blvd
cupertino, CA
Ledwith Financial Inc
408.778.3000
275 Tennant Ave
Morgan Hill, CA
Dan Goldie Financial Services LLC
650-566-1121
750 Menlo Avenue
Menlo Park, CA
Dan Goldie Financial Services LLC
650-566-1121
750 Menlo Avenue
Menlo Park, CA
San Jose Coin Shop
(408) 266-2500
1084 Meridian Ave
San Jose, CA
Austin & Co
(408) 865-1600
1072 S De Anza Blvd Ste A106
San Jose, CA
Continental Precious Metals
(408) 998-4539
1111 Story Rd
San Jose, CA
Ace Loan Office Inc
(408) 295-1488
31 Post St
San Jose, CA
Uncle Sam's American Coins
(408) 363-8568
San Jose, CA

2. Definition

Coin collecting is the trading or collecting of coins or other minted forms of legal tender. This usually involves coins that circulated in the public domain for only a short time, coins with errors made during minting and mostly aesthetic or historically significant pieces. Coin collecting is closely related to numismatics, but different in that the former is leisurely while the latter is scholarly in nature. Numismatics is the study of currency.

3. Brief History

Hoarding or storing of money has its roots from the beginning of the making of coins. The artistic aspect of it began much later and it was christened as the ‘Hobby of Kings’. Today’s form of coin collecting is believed to have been started in the 14th century by Petrarch, an Italian poet and scholar. Numismatics rose to its top in the late middle ages and early Renaissance because of great demand. During this period, many noble men the likes of European Princes and Kings collected ancient coins. Among the most notable collectors were Ferdinand I, France’s Louis XIV, Pope Boniface VIII, Holy Roman’s Emperor Maximilian, France’s Henry IV and Brandenburg’s Elector Joachim II, who started Berlin’s coin cabinet.

4. Coin Value and Condition

Coin collection values are largely determined by condition of the coin. A high-quality coin is often worth several times over a low-quality coin in any coin auction. This is often the case in many variable types of collectibles the likes of stamps and trading cards. This generalization however has some exceptions. Coin collectors have come up with several systems for describing a coin’s overall condition. Older systems described coins within the ranges of ‘poor’ and ‘uncirculated’.

The American Numismatic Association adopted that system. They still use it even today. The system uses a one to seventy numbering scale, with 70 representing the perfect coin specimen and 1 representing a barely recognizable coin. 60 to 70 is a coin in mint state (MS). 58, 55, 53 and 50 is about or almost uncirculated (AU). 45 and 40 is extremely fine (EF or XF), 35, 30, 25 and 20 is Fine (F). 8 and 10 is Very Good (VG). 4 and 6 is Good (G). 3 is About Good (AG). 2 is Fair (FR, FA) and 1 is Poor (PO, PR). These guide the coin price guide.

5. Featured Local Company

Virginia N. Davi, CPA

1 408-942-8800
500 East Calaveras Blvd.
Milpitas, CA

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