Certified Collectibles Group Bolsters Claim for Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices Against Globant
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SARASOTA, Fla., April 30, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Certified Collectibles Group® (CCG®), which includes eight of the world s leading providers of authentication, grading and conservation services for coins, paper money, comic books, trading cards and other collectibles, announced today that it has filed a second amended complaint in its lawsuit charging international technology firm Globant S.A., along with its subsidiary Globant LLC, with breaches of contract and violations of the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act ( FDUTPA ) arising out of Globant s failed software implementation at CCG.
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NGC-Certified Vintage Coins From the Americas Featured in Sedwick Auction
Latin America are being offered in
One of the top lots is a
Mexico 1730/28/5MO Royal 8 Reales graded NGC AU 58 and pedigreed as the Lazaro Plate coin (lot 287). Spanish coins were a popular currency circulated among American settlements. This is one of the last Royals that was struck before the introduction of the famed
Pillar Dollar in 1732. It has an estimate of $35,000 to $70,000 USD.
The sale also includes a
Colombia 1826 JF 4 Escudos graded NGC MS 64 and pedigreed to the
Lissner Collection and
Esmeralda Collection (lot 805). This high-grade example of the elusive one-year issue also has an estimate of $35,000 to $70,000.
Jeff Garrett: Coin Markets on the Move
The numismatic press has been gleefully announcing the sale of multi-million coins on a regular basis in recent months. I’m sure the
Heritage sale this week will also garner headlines as a few major collections make their way to the auction block.
The sale of the
1787 ‘EB’ on Wing Brasher Doubloon graded NGC MS 65★ for over $9 million was a stunning reminder that billionaires have discovered our hobby. The upcoming sale of the only legal-to-own
1933 double eagle will probably make national headlines. Numbers above $10,000,000 are widely predicted. The 1933 double eagle has one of the greatest stories in all of numismatics. Another chapter will be written later this spring.
Counterfeit Coin Detection: US Gold 1911-D Quarter Eagle
1911-D is the key
Indian Head quarter eagle. Read about two unusual alterations and how NGC experts discovered these two type of counterfeits.
Quarter Eagle Chased Mintmark
There are a number of methods used by counterfeiters to add a mintmark to a coin, but probably the crudest is called “chasing.” Rather than take a mintmark from one coin and glue, solder or emboss it to another, the counterfeiter will use a metal tool to sculpt a mintmark out of the coin’s surface. As a result, there will be prominent tool marks in the field nearby and the mintmark will usually be malformed. This method is most frequently used to alter digits in a date, such as an 8 to a 3, and it is rather unusual to see a chased mintmark.