"MS" stands for Mint State and 69 is a grade number on a scale of 1 to 70. Mint state coins are coins in the same condition that they were in just after leaving the mint, with no evidence of wear or handling.
Mint state coins can still have normal damage from being put in hoppers and bagged, so the degree of damage is evaluated by the number associated with the letter grade. An MS-60 would be the lowest grade of mint state coin, with no wear or handling but numerous "dings", etc. from the minting process. An MS-69 coin would have essentially no evidence of such damage, and be in pristine condition. Assigning a grade that high is a job reserved for trained experts who could recognize and evaluate even the slightest flaws.
Sorry, no known examples exist in MS-69 for this coin, a MS-67 example does list at $930.00
69
yes and its a ms-69 i believe
The N.G.C. Blue Label E.R. MS/69 2010 Silver Eagle's have an average selling price of $35.00. MS/70's are $45.00.
Interstate 69, Southaven, MS 38672
The 1990 Lincoln Cent in circulated conditions has a value of one cent. In uncirculated conditions it has a value of about $1 at MS-65 and as much as $2,700 in MS-69.
To date no 1928-S Peace dollar has been graded MS-69 by a major grading service, a few MS-66 coins have been certified but none higher. Value for the MS-66 coins is about $40,000.00
It means the coin is nearly perfect condition. The rating of MS69 is on a 70 point scale.
"MS" stands for Mint State and 69 is a grade number on a scale of 1 to 70. Mint state coins are coins in the same condition that they were in just after leaving the mint, with no evidence of wear or handling. Mint state coins can still have normal damage from being put in hoppers and bagged, so the degree of damage is evaluated by the number associated with the letter grade. An MS-60 would be the lowest grade of mint state coin, with no wear or handling but numerous "dings", etc. from the minting process. An MS-69 coin would have essentially no evidence of such damage, and be in pristine condition. Assigning a grade that high is a job reserved for trained experts who could recognize and evaluate even the slightest flaws.
Value depends on how many degrees of rotation the coin has, with the grade of MS-69 I assume the coin is in a slab so take it to a couple of dealers or a coin show so some one can see the coin. it's one way of getting a idea of the value.
Assuming grade MS-69, they are worth about $24 apiece.
I've never heard of UCGS (the "name brands" are PCGS and NCG, and to a lesser extent ANACS), so I have no idea what their certification is worth. If the coin actually was MS-69, it would likely be worth several thousand dollars (multiplied by 10 if it is has an "S" mintmark), but I doubt that anyone would pay you anything remotely approaching that based on a "UCGS" certification.