Posts Tagged ‘sell gold’

Client Goes Undercover to Compare Augustus Gold Prices with Local Jeweler

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Going through some old emails, this exchange with a client came up. He was not sure where to sell gold jewelry or if he would get the best price for his gold by sending it in to us, so we challenged him to go on a covert mission to secretly price shop his local jeweler. I had forgotten that I made a deal with the client that if we won his business, he would have to allow us to share his testimony like this. For historical reference, the spot price of gold at the time was around $955/oz. Here is his story:

Subject: what to expect?
From: “Ron K”
Date: Sat, August 08, 2009 10:06 am
To:

Hi-

My wife and I are thinking about selling some jewelry we inherited from relatives. We have 2 rings, and a matching gold rope necklace and bracelet. Weighing on my (inexact) kitchen scale, I came up with 3 oz. Here’s the tricky part: The necklace also has a matching pendant with an 1898 gold double eagle $10 piece. I estimated the weight of the gold minus the coin and the stone in the ring that I would remove. I really have no idea what the coin is worth. It’s held in the pendant by prongs, so it’s not permanently in there. It’s in good shape, save for a few nicks and dings. I’m a little wary of storefront jewelers (or should that be “jewelers”) who advertise buying gold. A neighbor went to one and came away with a really bad vibe. But I’m also equally wary of putting the pieces in the mail and sending them halfway across the country.

I understand that you can’t be definitive without seeing the pieces, but would you be able to give me a “ballpark” sense of where I’d stand if I were to send the pieces to you. I’m particularly curious how the coin factors in. I’m writing because I’ve read some good things about your operation on the ‘net. Yeah, it’s the net, so anything should come with a grain of salt/suspicion, but there were some positive responses out there, so I figured…why not throw this out there.

Thanks in advance for your response.

Have a great weekend,

Ron K
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Subject: RE: what to expect?
From: rholley@augustusgold.com
Date: Sun, August 09, 2009 12:25 am
To: “Ron K”

Ron,

Thank you for your email.  It sounds like you’ve got quite a bit of stored value in the items you have to sell, and I’m very glad you contacted us rather than being taken in by some of those TV ads- We’ll get you a much better price for them.

As far as the ‘ballpark price’ you’re asking for, it sounds like the 3oz will be somewhere between $650-1175 depending on the precise karat value, and the bezel around the coin will add some ($40-75?). If the items were all 14k, I would go so far as to say pretty close to $920 plus another $50 for the bezel.

The coin is 90% gold- 1/2 ozt. so the coin itself should be worth about $250-350. The coin could actually be worth more than just the gold value depending on the condition, but we’ve almost always found that coins stuck in bezels like that for decades degrades the collectible value of the coins terribly.

It has been our experience that most jewelers will not offer you estimates like this sight unseen… They will insist that they are doing you a favor by not telling you unless they can see the items in person ‘because they could have more value depending on the possibility of them being suitable for resale.’ It is such a dishonest tactic that it just makes me mad talking about it! These guys just want to get you down to their store so they can size you up to see how much they thnk you know about what you’re doing…. and they want to see if you look desperate enough to take whatever little amount of money they pull out of their cash register. We have even seen jewelers who were prominent and thought to be trustworthy do the same thing…. They look both ways, and if they don’t think anybody else is looking, they’ll buy the items for 15-25% of spot. It has also been our experience that the higher the total value of your items is, the more willing they are to put the screws to you.

I’m sure you already planned on doing this, but this is what I would do if I were you… If you’re up for a good laugh, take all your items to a local jeweler. I tell people this all the time, and hearing the stories they come back with always renews my faith in the retail jewelry community.

Do this for both of us, and we’ll be friends for a long time. Just promise me that we can use your testimonial about this on our new website that should roll out soon…

Best regards,

Ray A J Holley
Co-Founder
Precious Metals Exchange, Inc
c/o Augustus Gold
6324 N Chatham Ave 112
Kansas City, MO 64151-2473
888.839.2851 office
——————————————————————————————————————————–
from Ron K
to Admin AugustusGold
date Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 11:33 AM
subject RE: Ray Holley from Augustus Gold

Hi Ray-

Sorry it’s taken me a bit to get back with you…it’s been a crazy week. Thanks for the detailed (and entertaining) response to my initial query. I did as you said to do and visited a local jeweler that advertises (everywhere—on billboards, in the paper, with a guy spinning a sign outside the strip mall where the store is located) that they buy gold. What an experience.

I was greeted by an attractive young woman who immediately asked if I had anything to sell “today.” I told her that I lived around the corner (true), had seen their signs (how could I miss them), and was curious about what I might get for the pieces of jewelry I had with me. I might note that I did not exactly dress up for the occasion—soccer jersey, shorts, backward baseball cap. She took my envelope beck behind the counter and started weighing the items. She asked if I’d been shopping around (I said “no”), if I was wanting to sell “today” (I told her that I was going to need to talk with my wife first), and whether I’d done any research (I fudged here and said “no” again). She came back with a price of $550…”today.” I then asked whether the coin was more valuable than its weight. She hemmed and hawed and said she needed to get “her boss.” The boss slithered out of his office, gave a limp handshake, asked (again) if I wanted to sell “today,” and then re-examined everything…coming back with a price of “about $1000” for everything. He also said he’d beat any local price and would top it off with a $5 gas card for my trouble if I sold to him. I asked him for a card and if he could write down the estimate so I could go elsewhere and be above board with things. He refused. I told him I’d look around and get back with him. I will on the 1st…of never. I felt like I needed to take a shower when I got home.

So needless to say, I appreciate your openness even more, and am about ready to embark on the process to send my pieces to you. I have someone here interested in buying the coin from me, so I’m going to give him a day or so to think about it, and then I’ll need to get the bezel back from him and get everything packaged and ready to send your way.

You were dead on with this process…way, way worse than trying to buy a car. So again, I appreciate your open and friendly communication. I’ll be sending my stuff your way at the beginning of next week.

Thanks, and have a great weekend!

Ron

————————————–

Now, that’s classic. :)

Cash for Gold: Calculating the Value of Gold Jewelry (How-to)

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Trying to choose the best place to sell gold jewelry can be difficult. It can be like trying to find an attorney- you open up the phone book and there are 10 pages of law firms; some specializing in one thing or another, and many not saying at all what they do. You can get a recommendation for an attorney from just about anyone you know- but there only experience was “that one incident,” and they likely used a lawyer who was a family friend. Yes, gold buyers are not all created equal, either, and like attorneys, the general reputations of both lots are the reason we have jokes like, “What do you call 10,000 lawyers at the bottom of the ocean…?” Yes, so ‘a good start‘ to this article would be explaining what makes Augustus different from all the other hundreds of cash for gold businesses on the internet.

There are 3 differences that we feel differentiate us from our competitors- We Publish Prices! We Pay up to 3X More than THE GUYS ON TV! and, Receive Our Offer Within 24hrs!   …but there is one other difference that is critically important, and that is the proof! We teach our clients how to sell gold jewelry, showing them the way the values of items are calculated and exactly how we arrive at the price we offer.  You can use this How-To to estimate the value of your items before submitting your package. The equipment we use to melt and x-ray metal for purity is obviously a little more sophisticated than this, but if you follow the steps closely, this article will give you a good idea of how much value your items have.

Things you will need:gold jewelry selling gold for cash Cash for Gold: Calculating the Value of Gold Jewelry (How to)

Well-lighted, flat working surface, such as a kitchen table.

Pen and paper.

A calculator.

A magnifying glass or jeweler’s loupe.

Strongest household magnet you can find.

A kitchen scale- preferably one that measures in grams.

Gold and/or Silver Jewelry you want to evaluate.

Look at each piece of jewelry individually for its “Hallmark,” which denotes the karat value of that piece. As you identify the items by the hallmark, place them in separate piles- 10k, 14k, 18k, sterling, and make a pile for the stuff you can’t find any marks on. It is good to generate your estimate based on the things we know, and you can still throw in the other pieces at the end because they could be genuine and just not marked for whatever reason.

For gold jewelry, they will typically say 10k or 417, 14k or 585, and 18k or 750.  Almost all gold jewelry that is real has one of these more common markings on them. There are some exceptions, though. In the US, any gold jewelry must contain at least 41.7% gold (10k) to be eligible to receive a hallmark, but in handling some foreign jewelry, you may run across some that is marked 9k- usually very old. More commonly you may come across jewelry from the Middle East where higher karat gold and hand-made jewelry is much more common, and a large portion of these pieces have no markings on them at all.  Typically sterling silver items will be marked “Sterling” or “Ster” or 925 or sometimes 950.  Flatware that is marked “Silverplate” or “Deep Silver” or anything else, is most likely not real sterling silver. And for sterling silver butter knives, only the handles are sterling- the blades are typically made of stainless. And the handles are filled with cement, the silver portion usually being about the thickness of an aluminum drink can. These knives have to be destroyed to obtain their actual silver content, but it is usually about 15g per knife (about half  of a troy ounce).

During this step, you will also want to test each piece by holding it up to your magnet to see if there is any attraction. The clasps on chains will almost always stick to the magnet because they have a steel spring inside, but otherwise, there should be no attraction to the magnet. Gold and Silver are non-ferrous metals, and do not have any attraction to magnets. If an item sticks to the magnet (besides the clasps), throw it in a separate discard pile.  Important Note: If an item sticks to the magnet, it is not genuine gold or silver- but if it DOES NOT stick to the magnet, that does not mean that it IS GENUINE GOLD OR SILVER. More commonly, counterfeit gold items are gold-plated copper, which is also a non-ferrous metal, and is the primary alloy in karat gold. Rarely does one come across any actual counterfeit sterling silver, but we have seen some that is hallmarked coming from China in the last couple of years.

Once the items are all in piles for their respective karat values, weigh each pile individually on the scale and write down the number of grams in each pile.  Then obtain the most recent ‘spot price’ of gold and/or silver from the “What We Pay” page of our website. At the time of this writing, the prices for gold and silver are $1,086.60 and $16.60, respectively.  This page on our site actually shows the prices for each different karat of scrap gold and silver, in addition to many of the most popular gold and silver coins, bars and bullion rounds.  The prices listed are the net payable prices, which means that they already have the payout percentage of the scrap factored into the prices, and they are listed in grams, pennyweights, and troy ounces (one troy ounce = 31.1g).

cash for gold selling gold jewelry Cash for Gold: Calculating the Value of Gold Jewelry (How to)Here is how the math works: First you take the spot price per troy ounce and divide by 31.1 to get the Gram Price. $1086.60 / 31.1 = $34.93

Next you must determine how much “net gold” you have. This is done by multiplying the weight of each pile by its respective gold percentage, or karat value. Ex. 134g @ 10k = 134 x .417 = 55.87g Net Gold. Figure the amount of Net Gold for each pile, then add all the amounts of Net Gold together.

Then you multiply the total amount of Net Gold by the Gram Price: 55.87 x 34.93 = 1,951.53 Gross Price

Finally, you multiply the total Gross Price by the percentage your chosen gold buyer pays. Augustus Gold and Silver pays at least 55% for gold and 65% for silver.  1,951.93 x .55 = $1,073.34 Net Payout. If your math is correct up until this point, you may try to reconcile it with the amounts listed in the tables on our website.

Welcome to Augustus Gold’s blog!

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Thank you for visiting our blog! Augustus Gold and Silver is a nationwide buyer of precious metals in the US- The Gold Buyer You Can Trust! Augustus has claimed its stake in the market by changing the paradigms of the industry. We are the first company to publish our prices and actually teach our clients how to evaluate scrap gold jewelry to estimate its value. Learning how to sell gold can be beneficial to you whether you choose to sell your items to Augustus or not! Satisfaction is guaranteed, and we pay up to 3X more cash for gold than the GUYS ON TV! From an open and transparent process to getting more cash for gold and silver- this is why Augustus is The Gold Buyer You Can Trust!