Hi Mike, Adam, and List,
Interesting opinions.

You guys touched on a major issue in the Meteorite Community, and there are 
parts of your statements I don't agree with. I would really like to share how I 
feel about the subject.

First of all Mike you said, 

" I thought this was laughable for obvious
reasons and a man who runs an auction house should know that 99% of
COA's are not worth the paper they are printed on.  I can go outside,
grab a rock from my driveway, and print up an official-looking COA for
it."

Mike with all due respect, I don't agree with this. Why would you try to knock 
a dealers reputation? For example a meteorite sold by Mike Farmer or Greg Hupe 
is worth more than a meteorite that is sold without any provenance or COA. 

For example lets say unknown dealer X is selling a Howardite, and well known 
dealer Y is selling the same Howardite. Who do you think is going to realize a 
higher price? The well know dealer. 

Now if that meteorite losses it's COA from the dealer who sold it, what 
happens? Usually the meteorite immediately looses value, how can you explain 
this if the COA is not worth the paper it's printed on? 

For example a meteorite said to be from from the Bob Hagg collection without 
Bob's paperwork has a much lower value than a meteorite from the Bob Hagg 
collection with his COA right? 

So please extrapolate exactly what you mean and how you come to this 
conclusion. I strongly disagree with your opinion. Much of the value in 
meteorites is locked up in the provenance and not the meteorite itself in my 
opinion.

I think what is much too overlooked is that a meteorite dealers reputation is 
the most important factor in meteorite prices. That includes the following they 
create, the friends they make, impressions that collectors get all translate 
into value and that it why most collectors demand individual COA's be issued 
with each meteorite sold. I think this makes a lot of sense because the process 
it takes to build a good reputation takes years. The piece of paper adds value. 
Of course a paper from Hagg is worth more than a COA from Joe Schmo. But to say 
the paper has no value is the most insane thing I ever heard. How else would 
you know if your buying pedigree meteorites from dealers who stand for 
integrity, honor and strive to provide the customer the best experience. A lot 
of new comers think that the value is in the meteorite itself, and then when 
they try to sell them, they are greatly let down and wonder why their 
meteorites don't fetch the same price that
 the other more well known dealers get all day long. Because it comes down to 
more than just the meteorite itself and taking it for face value. You fail to 
consider the amount of friends the advanced dealers had made over the years, 
the networking they have done and the awareness they have created about their 
meteorite and the way they are presented. And most importantly the way they 
make their customers feel is the most important factor to me.

Is it just a roughly cut rock, sloppily thrown in a bag with a sharpie marking? 
OR IS IT A EXPERIENCE FOR THE CUSTOMER? The experience adds value, making the 
customer feel good is an integral part of any business, even meteorite dealing. 
The COA and provenance conveys that feeling to the customer. It makes them say 
WOW! I can't wait to see what this dealer has to offer me next. It gives them 
something to hold onto other than just the meteorite itself. Sure you can put 
on narrow vision goggles and only focus on the meteorite itself, throwing 
everything else away and assigning absolutely no value as to how the meteorite 
ended up where it is, but I don't think that's a very scientific approach. It's 
all part of the story and how you ended up with the specimen is a big part of 
meteorites and collecting.

I for one get very depressed when I buy a meteorite on eBay and it comes with 
no card! What happens if I lose the bag it's in or the marking wears off? what 
happens to the specimen, the value drops to 0. Cant sell it because you don't 
know what it is. And if you ever do want to sell it, how can you prove where it 
came from. The COA answers a lot of those questions, sure you can explain to 
kingdom come what it is, but it wont prove the origin for the 99% of meteorite 
collectors who demand provenance, and I don't blame them one bit. The value to 
any assigned meteorite is less without the papers.

Now I will admit, it can all come down to perspective, when your dealing with 
small micro fragments, I sympathize with your view Mike, it's not worth the 
time or the expense to make a COA, but you can always give something, even a 
little piece of paper I hope, to say it came from you and what it is. Maybe 
comparing a micro to a macro is useless and it's like comparing Apples to 
Oranges... Two totally different perspectives that are neither right or wrong 
just are what they are, each of us our own independent opinions.

Adam you said,

" A properly papered item will almost always bring in the big
 bucks in an auction house whereas it may not do so well on eBay where
 some dealers tend to print their own COAs and grade items themselves."

Adam, with all due respect, I don't understand this statement, where do you and 
your COA's fit into the picture? Don't you print the COA and describe/grade the 
meteorites you sell and classify? Sounds like you would be hesitant to buy 
meteorites from yourself? I think comparing baseball cards and antiques that 
hold cultural value to meteorites that hold both cultural and scientific value, 
is like comparing Apples to Oranges.

To Everyone,
I would like to go one step further, I urge the meteorite community at large to 
consider standardizing COA's and provenance. Each dealer should still have 
his/her own unique style but there should be a simple standardized field of 
data provided for each specimen. This will promote the science of studying 
them, adding value to all of our collections in the future. 

Thanks for taking the time to hear my opinion, Have a Great Day!
Best Regards,
John Higgins
www.outerspacerocks.com
IMCA # 9822






________________________________
From: Michael Gilmer <meteoritem...@gmail.com>
To: Adam Hupe <raremeteori...@yahoo.com> 
Cc: Adam <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com> 
Sent: Friday, March 23, 2012 11:51 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Auction Kings meteorite - $2000 SikhoteAlin

Hi Adam and List,

Some good points there.

About COA's - even if a COA comes from a trusted grading or
certification firm, the value in the COA is not the COA itself, it is
the name of the grading or certification service on it that is known
to collectors of that particular type of collectible.  If you buy a
rare collectible and the COA says "Confirmed authentic by Acme
Certification Services, Walla Walla Washington, Serial number
#123456", then the value of the certificate is that the buyer or
potential buyer can contact Acme Services, have them check their
database and confirm that the item in question is indeed genuine.
However, anyone can print a piece of paper that looks like it came
from Acme Certification Services and the ruse will only be exposed if
the buyer follows up on the info printed on the COA.   The COA itself
is worthless.

In the world of meteorites, there is no certification service or
central authority that can be relied upon to authenticate meteorites.
Without an authoritative body backing a COA, it's just a pretty piece
of paper.

Otherwise, I agree 100% with the other things you said.  :)

Best regards,

MikeG
-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------
Galactic Stone & Ironworks - MikeG

Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GalacticStone
RSS: http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
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On 3/23/12, Adam Hupe <raremeteori...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> A lot of buyers judge the price of collectable items from eBay.  EBay is
> not known for fetching top dollar, especially on collectables.  A solid
> auction house will almost always fetch more than what would be realized
> on eBay.  The problem with many auction houses is that their commissions are
> out of line, some charging in excess of 40%! Then some fleece the
> buyers with expensive shipping and handling fees.
>
> Don't get me wrong, there are a few great auction companies out there, I
> have used some of them.  One problem I encountered is that if the item
> doesn't sell or the buyer can't pay for the item after bidding on it,
> then the seller can be out of some serious money including catalog and
> no-sell fees.  They need to do a better job of vetting their bidders!
>
> A lot of dealers don't bother with middle men anymore since they can get
> wholesale prices right off of eBay.  Some specialty shops get most of
> there product from eBay, mark it up considerably and put it on their
> shelves. The problem is that a lot the collectable items offered on eBay
> have no expertise behind them and are accidentally or purposely
> misrepresented.
>
> There are reputable independent companies that can authenticate and paper
> items so COAs  are important to me.  I wouldn't purchase a valuable
> coin, baseball card or any other collectable without first seeing that
> it has been papered through an independent grading and certificate
> service.  A properly papered item will almost always bring in the big
> bucks in an auction house whereas it may not do so well on eBay where
> some dealers tend to print their own COAs and grade items themselves.
>
> Kind Regards and Happy Collecting,
>
> Adam
> ______________________________________________
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