He started small. His first win was a 1950-D Jefferson Nickel he’d pulled from a bargain bin for fifty cents. He sold it on an online auction for twenty dollars an hour later. That tiny spark of profit became a flame.
By the end of the year, the cigar box was gone, replaced by a professional safe. Elias realized that in the world of coins, you don't just trade metal. You trade knowledge. 💡 The Hunt : Finding undervalued "raw" coins at estate sales. The Grade : Sending coins to PCGS or NGC to verify value. buying and selling coins for profit
: Moving between high-volume bullion and high-margin rarities. To help you map out your own coin-flipping journey: Starting budget (e.g., $100, $1,000+) He started small
The big break came at a dusty flea market in Ohio. An old cigar box held a tarnished 1916-D Mercury Dime. The seller wanted fifty dollars. Elias’s hands shook; if authentic, the coin was worth thousands. He took the risk, bought it, and sent it to a grading service. That tiny spark of profit became a flame
Two weeks later, the plastic slab returned with a "VF-20" grade. Elias sold it for $2,800.
Elias spent his nights studying strike doubling and mint marks. He learned that a tiny "S" or a slightly rotated die could turn a pocket-change penny into a month’s rent. He practiced the art of the "raw" buy—purchasing uncertified coins from estate sales where the sellers saw only old metal, while he saw unpolished gems.