Many of the coins are valued in price close to $10 each. The exact amount will vary depending upon the coin's condition.
There were 58 million of these bronze U.S. Philippines 1 centavo coins minted in San Francisco (S) that year. It may currently be worth about .10 with heavy wear to maybe .25 with light wear. You might also try a library for a copy of the Standard Catalog of World Coins for pictures, values and lots more interesting info. Brad
Cincuenta is the number "fifty" written in Spanish. If you are looking at a coin or a piece of paper money, you need to find out what unit it is 50 of--it might be pesos, centavos, pesetas, reales or bolivares (and these are not the only possibilities). And then it also matters what country it is from. Several countries call their unit of currency peso, but pesos from different countries are not necessarily worth the same.
It contains .2411 of an ounce of gold. Collector value may be a little above that depending on amount of wear and collector demand. You may find similar pieces on Ebay.com for comparison. You might also try a library for a copy of the Standard Catalog of World Coins for pictures, values and lots more interesting info.
The 5 euro cent coin is copper in color, about the same diameter as an American nickel (but slightly thinner), with the number 5 and the words "euro cent" above a map of Europe on one side, and the specific country's design on the other. Each eurozone country has its own set of designs for all euro coins.
The coin would be over 5,000 dollars because I sold one on eBay but I got close to over 20,000 dollars for it my name is bill Taylor I live in organ my brothers Joe Taylor he sale a lot coins on eBay so and you could ask him
First you have to know whether it's really gold or just brass.
Second, the "$" sign is used in Mexico to indicate pesos, not dollars.
If it's brass, the coin has very little value because the peso was revalued in 1992-93 at the rate of 1000 to 1. That would make the coin worth 1/10 of a modern peso, or less than a US cent.
$1,900.00 to $ 2,000.00
Well, a thing is worth exactly whatever you can get for it. There are a few things that will affect its worth.
These tokens, sometimes called "one peso coins" were privately minted starting about 1949. Several artists made dozens of versions. Gold content ranges from 8 karat to 24 karat, with some coins of lesser grade being plated with 22 karat gold. There are also a few brass copies going around, and one version looks like solid silver although the density is higher than pure silver. A genuine coin should weigh about .43 gram. Assuming a 14k coin, the value would be whatever .23 gram of gold is worth.
You need to know the coin's mint mark and condition. The mint mark, if it exists, is found on the reverse under the eagle. No mark = Philadelphia, O = New Orleans, S = San Francisco, CC = Carson City. Retail values for all mints except CC would range from maybe $15 in average circulated condition up to $20 or so if the coin has almost no wear. An 1880 Carson City dollar, however, would run from $90 to $200. If you do have a CC dollar, you'll need to have it examined by a reputable dealer or other expert since the mint mark is frequently counterfeited. Finally, as you may have noticed by reading some of the many, many other posts on this site, the motto E Pluribus Unum appears on ALL U.S. coins so it doesn't really identify a coin.
with dots about a 1.00 dollar with out dots about .25 cents
$ 15,000 if uncirculated $ 10,000 if circulated
I have a 1916 five cents silver coin from Panama. I took it to a coin dealer,
and he said, for coin of Panama has only three grade. Good , Better and best.
He Valued my coin at the middle grade. It is the better and he said it's value
was $150.00.
i hope this information can be useful.
Marcos Of Elk Grove, California.
You didn't say what the 50 stands for - pesos (using a $ sign, like a U.S. dollar) or centavos.
Either way, its value is very low. Mexico's currency was affected by severe inflation during the 1980s and the value of the peso fell to about 1/100 of a U.S. cent. The current peso is a so-called "new peso" worth 1000 old ones. That means your coin is worth 0.05 new pesos, and at current exchange rates one new peso is about a dime.
This coin is valued at $3 in worn condition. It is valued at $7 in average condition. It is valued at $15 in averaged condition. It is valued at $60 if fully uncirculated.