$97.00 Buy It Now 21d 1h, FREE Shipping, 14-Day Returns, Seller: (15,038) 99.5%, Location: Millbury, Massachusetts, Ships to: Worldwide, Item: 15 You are bidding on a 1835(m) British India 1/12 Anna East India Company Coin (KM# 445). This Coin was Graded an MS 63 BN (Brown) by PCGS and it is sealed within the protective PCGS plastic slab. The PCGS Serial Number is 33041196. You will receive the exact coin pictured. I am a trusted seller with thousands of feedbacks that deals regularly with precious metals and coins, so you can be confident in what your getting. This item is guaranteed to be as described or you can return it for a full refund within 14 days. Shipping for this item is FREE to anywhere in the U.S.
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Feel free to e-mail me with any questions you may have. Circulated/Uncirculated: Uncirculated, Certification: PCGS, Certification Number: 33041196, Grade: MS 63, Composition: Copper, Year: 1835 See More.
Thanks Harry. I agree with your opinion on the rarity. I have not seen this coin offered for quiet sometime through major auction houses or even through eBay in lower grades.
I jumped on the opportunity to buy it when it was offered last month. The situation might be different in India where it might be easier to obtain. Maybe some members from India might chime in. I do not have a fixed criteria for buying coins. It does not matter to to me if the coin is offered raw or slabbed.
My only requirement is the coin should be pleasing/ eye appealing and should be problem free ( without cleaning, dipping or spotting). I'm not very familiar with the coin market in India for BI coins however, I would guess that due to the high humidity in tropical countries like India copper coins would not do very well and hence this coin would prob be even more difficult to find in India. My understanding is, and I may be wrong, that most copper coins that left India by British collectors or British tourists have done much better and these are the coins that are now in the market as high grade BI coins. Same is true for other British colonial coins like Straits Settlements coppers. These coins are now returning back to their home countries as collectors in India/SE Asia are buying them from the foreign markets.