Friday, June 30, 2017

Protect Exclusive Eclipse Stamp with SAFE Collecting Supplies

Doylestown, PA -- SAFE® Collecting Supplies has been providing premium products to numismatics and philatelists across the globe for over 60 years. The company's top-of-the-line collecting supplies and examining tools offers anything a serious collector could ask for. When it comes to stamp collecting supplies, their catalog is also second-to-none. Those philatelists lucky enough to obtain the new Total Eclipse of the Sun Forever stamp will want it adequately protected using products by SAFE® Collecting Supplies.
This new, exclusive stamp from the United States Postal Service is dedicated to this summer's total solar eclipse, which will take place on August 21. The photo used for the stamp is from the total solar eclipse captured in Libya by retired NASA astrophysicist Fred Espenak (a.k.a. Mr. Eclipse) over a decade ago, mirroring what people can expect to see next month.
The Total Eclipse of the Sun Forever stamp is truly one-of-a-kind. It is the first stamp to ever use thermochromic ink. This method allows heat from a person's touch to change the image. Upon touching the stamp, the solar eclipse will turn into the moon. It was officially unveiled during a ceremony held at The Art Museum of the University of Wyoming, which intentionally took place during the summer solstice.
To properly collect and maintain the new eclipse stamp, as well as large collections, any serious philatelist needs stamp albums from SAFE® Collecting Supplies. For more information on their collecting tools for stamps, coins, and more, please call 877-395-SAFE or visit http://www.safepub.com to see their entire catalog.
About SAFE® Collecting Supplies

Since 1953, SAFE® Collecting Supplies has been the leading manufacturer of high-quality collecting supplies around the world. The company is dedicated to helping collectors find the appropriate collecting and storage system for coins, paper money, stamps, pins, postcards, rocks, minerals and more.
For more information, please visit http://www.safepub.com/.

Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/3394809#ixzz4lXLikaLO 

Australian Financial Review: King Edward VIII stamp, dubbed Australia's most valuable, up for sale


A second example of what is claimed as Australia's most valuable stamp will appear for sale through Mossgreen on June 26 in Melbourne.

The King Edward VIII twopenny scarlet (KEV 8 in shorthand) is especially rare because these stamps were never officially released.

"These don't appear in catalogues" says Torsten Weller, head of philately at Mossgreen. "One isn't held in the Royal Collection, so even the Queen doesn't have an example. And it's not in the Australian Post archive either."

The reason is obvious. Edward VIII succeeded his father George V in January 1936 but famously abdicated the throne on December 10 to marry American socialite Wallis Simpson. This dramatic act sparked a series of bureaucratic headaches, including a severe case of migraine at the Australian Postmaster-General's department.

It was about to release the new twopenny base rate stamps bearing the new King's portrait when news of the abdication came through. The department promptly ordered that any stamps already printed were to be destroyed, along with related proofs, dies and printing instruments.

http://www.afr.com/lifestyle/arts-and-entertainment/art/king-edward-viii-stamp-dubbed-australias-most-valuable-up-for-sale-20170606-gwm0or

Stamp dealer Stanley Gibbons soars 18% after shock takeover bid ...

FINANCIAL TIMES: Disruptive eyes stamp dealer Stanley Gibbons 

Fund run by investor Edi Truell makes unsolicited approach for 161-year-old group

Stanley Gibbons, the 161-year-old stamp and collectibles group, has received an unsolicited takeover bid from Disruptive, the fund run by veteran investor Edi Truell, a former adviser to Boris Johnson.

The news triggered a 25 per cent increase in the Aim-listed company’s share price to 14p on Friday. In a stock market announcement Stanley Gibbons described the discussions as an “unsolicited approach” and said “there can be no certainty that any offer will be made nor as to the terms on which any such offer might be made”.

The takeover bid follows a turbulent couple of years for the stamp collecting group. The company has suffered since a disastrous debt-fuelled acquisition spree, which included its lossmaking investment in The Marketplace, an eBay-style auction website that has since closed.

During the past 18 months, Stanley Gibbons has issued a series of profit warnings, tapped investors for £13m to bolster its finances, replaced its auditors, appointed corporate restructuring specialists and made the chief executive and chief financial officer redundant. In the 12 months to March 31 2016, it recorded a pre-tax loss of £28.9m.

More recently, the company has sold assets to pay off debts, including its interiors division, which makes furniture. It also disposed of a 25 per cent stake in Masterpiece, the operator of the Masterpiece London art and antiques fair, for £1.4m.

The attempt to buy Stanley Gibbons is unusual for Disruptive Capital, which has investments in magazine publisher, Imagine, bioresearch company, IRX Therapeutics and undersea cable group, Atlantic Superconnection.

Disruptive was unavailable for comment.

Stanley Gibbons traces its roots back to 1856 when Edward Stanley Gibbons bought a sackful of rare South African stamps from two sailors........

https://www.ft.com/content/3ae1c26e-4d1d-11e7-a3f4-c742b9791d43

Thursday, June 8, 2017

The Hobby of Kings


Tiny things are becoming the investment stars. People are making handsome returns from collecting rare stamps, coins and notes, objects that are recording higher earnings than shares and gold. 

It may appear as no more than a boring hobby, but Asgarali Kassam who collects stamps, coins and notes knows how satisfying it is.

His face lights up as he talks about his journey of 50 years collecting stamps from different parts of the world.

To date, he has a stock of about three million stamps.

“There are 204 countries that exist in the world today, but the stamps I have are from 406 countries, meaning I hold stamps of countries that no longer exist,” he says.

He started collecting stamps at the age of 13. The hobby grew until he was 17 when he moved to Nairobi to study Electrical Engineering.

After graduation, he picked it up, began to fill the gaps in his collection, and picking coins and notes.

The beauty of rare stamps is that they keep on increasing in value. Sometimes the price either stays firm or goes up, but it never goes down.

According to Stanley Gibbons, the world’s pre-eminent, prestige collectibles merchant, no one can go back and print a new, authentic 1840 Penny Black, the world’s first adhesive postage stamp used in a public postal system that was issued in great Britain. This provides protection of the product and prevents supply manipulation, hence scarcity pushes prices up.

Asgarali says he did not start collecting for the money.

As a collector one has to be patient, persevere and not be greedy. The collector says if he was one who wanted money then he would already have sold his collection and made a sizable amount of money for himself.

“My end goal is to achieve something in my life, because I have put my heart and strength into collecting,” he says.

Oldest stamp

Safely stored in albums, the stamps have dates and years of collection and some of his oldest stamps are from Iran, British East Africa, India among other countries.

In his collection is the first Iranian stamp that is 130- years- old. Its current value is about Sh1.2 million (10,000 euros), he says.
The oldest stamp in his collection is from Belgium, dating back to 1721.

The older the stamp, the higher the value. However, when it is old but in poor condition its value might not be as much.

He says a stamp has to be legible. If one cannot read the postmark, the value of the stamp is zero.

The stamp’s denomination also matters, which is the price written on it.

“The stamp has to be mint with a postmark. If the denomination on the stamp is 2000 riel or it is a 100-years-old the value is high,” says Asgarali, one of the biggest collectors in the country.
Designs

In stamp designs, only a country can create categories. For example, he says, when he was commissioned to design stamps for Kenya during the Kenya at 50 celebrations, he had to include four separate prices.

That means one stamp can have four different designs. One design will be for local use, the second design for Africa, the third for Europe and Asia, the fourth design for China and America and each set will have different prices. Stamps and coins rank among the top 10 luxury investments made by the wealthy globally,

according to the latest Knight Frank Wealth Report. However, very few Kenyans are investing in stamps, coins and notes.

Shera Noorbhai, an investment expert at Alexander Forbes, says most Kenyans are doing it as a hobby and not necessarily hoping to earn cash after 10 to 15 years.

‘‘The problem with such kinds of investments is more of beauty lies in the beholder. So you have to find a buyer who sees more value in the jewellery or coins or stamps,’’ she says.

Stored in banks

But despite the low interest from Kenyans, the value of stamps rose by 133 per cent, according to the latest Knight Frank Luxury Investment Index, while coins recorded a 195 per cent growth.
As the prices keep going up, these tiny objects are now being targeted by thieves. Two years ago, thieves broke into Asgarali’s house and stole some of his notes.

“I was devastated. I told them to take anything they want in my house but not my collection. It was very painful watching them take them,” he recounts the ordeal with tears in his eyes.

As a precaution, he now keeps his collection in a bank.
Some of the most interesting notes that he owns are from countries that no longer exist, such as Aden (now Yemen), Bahawalpur (now Pakistan), Afghanistan as a kingdom (now a republic), German East Africa, Burma (now Myanmar), Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) and East and West Pakistan.

His advice for anyone thinking of becoming a collector is to start early. Start small with the local stamps while in high school. After university, continue to expand the stock by buying from people who want to get rid of their collections or through exchange.

“One needs to have a very good PR system in terms of mingling with people from all over the world. When I meet people, I usually tell them about my hobby and usually one of them will tell me that they have a collection lying around their house (collected by their dads) and they have no use of it... and they end up giving them to me.”

His enthusiasm of being a passionate collector has rubbed off on his grandson who has shown interest in the hobby of collecting, stamps, coins and notes.

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1442403325782130&set=a.1330075460348251.1073741826.100000374286732&type=3

THE GUARDIAN: The red king: how Australia's rarest stamp escaped an inferno


Sale of twopenny scarlet featuring Edward VIII – who abdicated soon after it was printed – expected to spark a frenzy

On 29 September 1936, William Vanneck, the right honourable Lord Huntingfield and governor of Victoria, paid a ceremonial visit to the Commonwealth Stamp Printers in Melbourne to mark the first printing of a new twopenny stamp featuring an etched portrait of King Edward VIII in his naval uniform.

It was the first of a large run due to be released into public circulation by Christmas.

Several weeks later, to mark his appreciation, the printer, John Ash, sent a sheet of the unreleased scarlet stamps to Huntingfield as a memento.

It would have been an unremarkable gesture had the king not abdicated two months later. Instead it became a bureaucratic nightmare and, 81 years later, a philatelic wet dream.

The twopenny scarlets, known in the trade as KEVIII, are the rarest and most expensive stamps produced by the commonwealth of Australia. Neither Australia Post nor the Queen have one in their collections.

There are just six in existence. This month, one of the six has been listed for auction in Melbourne on 26 June. The story of its survival rests with Huntingfield...

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2017/jun/09/australia-rarest-stamp-escaped-inferno-edward-viii

The Philatelic News Roundup For August 7, 2024

STAMP COLLECTING NEWS Compiled By Brian Harrod Bengaluru's philatelic bureau goes high-tech with digital sta...