Four of those hits, at least, are me.
I see you got the point Jason. Welcome to the world of casino chips, where todays treasures are just another chip.
The same thing has actually happened to Federal Bank notes and paper money, when someone opens a safety deposit box and finds a stack.
I'll make a suggestion. Run a couple of auctions on eBay and see what happens. It's a pretty fair indicator of what people are willing to pay and for chips as nice as yours, you will get a good idea for direct sales.
Personal experience, and others have much more experience, is that the first time I run a chip, I get a high value. Next time, it drops a little. By the third auction it's about where the price stabilizes.
The people that really want them, bid first and win. After the demand has been filled, it's just a matter of people looking for a good value, good chip, for their collection. That's the price that most will pay, for a direct sale, especially of interest if you want to move the chips.
If you don't mind sitting on whatever you have for years. Auction one every 37 days on eBay. There's one major dealer who does that so people can't look back and see the past prices, or how many sales. (my guess on this one) But the search only goes back 30 days, so that would explain it.
It's up to you whether you want to move the chips or sell them over a long period of time.
Also you might consider a sale of all of them, in one sale and find a dealer who will buy stock for his inventory. All means All.
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