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-   -   Thoughts on Population? (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=243127)

T_Hamilton 08-03-2017 08:49 AM

Thoughts on Population?
 
I have long wondered this question and would love your thoughts/feedback/discussion. Let's say Card X has a pop of 30 at PSA and a pop of 25 a SGC. What #, or better yet %, of cards do you assume are non-graded? I always thought it would be cool if I could think wow, I own this card which there are probably only ~XXX copies of.

How do you think about # of ungraded cards vs. total pop of graded ones?

Discuss!

ullmandds 08-03-2017 09:01 AM

I don't think there's really a "science" to guessing the pop of a given card...especially really old cards. Additionally..."guessing" a given pop has a lot to do with what issue of card we are talking about?

Look what the Black Swamp find did to the known pop of E98's?

obcbobd 08-03-2017 09:04 AM

Another thing to consider is the # of cards that have been cracked from slabs and either kept raw or resubmitted. For example I've probably cracked a 100 or so cards and kept them raw. So if PSA says there are 50 graded examples of a card, how many are still in the original holder?

samosa4u 08-03-2017 09:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by obcbobd (Post 1686722)
Another thing to consider is the # of cards that have been cracked from slabs and either kept raw or resubmitted.

My thoughts exactly. So what percentage of cards get cracked out and resubmitted for grading? 25 percent? 50? :confused: The waterfront cards definitely get cracked/resubmitted more compared to the others.

frankbmd 08-03-2017 09:39 AM

1 Attachment(s)
With all the cracking going on, someday we will be collecting vintage holders and the card pops will be irrelevant.

That's why the 00000001 Wagner will never be reholdered.;)

In a hundred years the mantra will be

"Buy the holder, not the card."

I once owned a Beckett holder numbered 0000000021 and let it slip away, how foolish!

Attachment 282687

With 8 zeroes before the 21, no one should consider Beckett a fly by night organization as it would take one billion cards graded to get rid of the first zero.;):D

Bliggity 08-03-2017 10:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by frankbmd (Post 1686735)
With all the cracking going on, someday we will be collecting vintage holders and the card pops will be irrelevant.

That's why the 00000001 Wagner will never be reholdered.;)

In a hundred years the mantra will be

"Buy the holder, not the card."

I once owned a Beckett holder numbered 00000021 and let it slip away, how foolish!

We should start a company to slab the slabs. We'd make millions!

MikeGarcia 08-03-2017 10:58 AM

Not Waiting A Hundred Years
 
[QUOTE=

In a hundred years the mantra will be

"Buy the holder, not the card."

![/QUOTE]

http://imagehost.vendio.com/a/204295...900400_NEW.JPG

...I decided not to wait

..

Stampsfan 08-03-2017 12:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by obcbobd (Post 1686722)
Another thing to consider is the # of cards that have been cracked from slabs and either kept raw or resubmitted. For example I've probably cracked a 100 or so cards and kept them raw. So if PSA says there are 50 graded examples of a card, how many are still in the original holder?

I'm a cracker too... Maybe I just don't care too much on some of the pop reports. I might even guess to say the less valued the card, the more crackin' that goes on.

Aquarian Sports Cards 08-03-2017 03:53 PM

Thoughts on population
 
There's too much of it.

seanofjapan 08-03-2017 09:48 PM

The real question you would need to address is "What is the probability of someone who owns card X submitting it to be graded in the first place?"

Scrolling through PSA pop reports I notice that there are a lot of 1988 Donruss commons with pops of zero (or 1 or 2). This obviously means that the odds of someone submitting a 1988 Donruss common are zero (effectively). We can't draw any conclusions as to how many 1988 Donruss cards there are from the pop reports obviously (actual number: way too many).

At the other end of the scale you have the T206 Honus Wagner. Are there any copies of that which haven't been graded (anyone know)? The odds of that are pretty close to 100% given its scarcity and value, which create a high incentive to owners to have them graded.

Most pre war cards and ones from the 50s fall somewhere in between these two and I think for a lot of them you could actually do some statistical modelling to predict the likelihood of a card being submitted. Some stuff we do know from pop reports:

The relative probability of an individual player's card in a given set being submitted compared with a common card. Like Mickey Mantle cards might be 20 times more likely to be graded, Willie Mays 15 times, Warren Spahn cards 10 times, Richie Ashburn 4 times, etc etc.

The relative probability of a valuable card in a given set being submitted compared to a less valuable card. Like a 100$ card might be 10 times more likely to be submitted than a 20$ card, etc etc.

You could easily identify a number of other variables to measure like that from existing data (rookie cards or not, desirability of specific sets, team populartity, grade of the cards etc etc). From all of these categories you could probably identify the relative likelihood of a card being graded to that of a common from the same set.

This in itself doesn't tell you anything about total numbers in existence, you would still need a key to work back from. That might be found in more recent sets where we do know the number of total cards out there. If you have a set with a print run of 10,000 and 10% of the cards of the key player which is valued at 200$ have been graded, you know that the odds of someone with a 200$ key player card having it graded are 1 in 10.

You could then try to figure out if that ratio is likely to fit a set from say the 1950s. You would have to figure out some way for controlling for differences (ie the fact that the modern set probably has most of its cards still in top condition, the fact that the older set might be more iconic and thus more likely to be graded, etc). This would be indelicate work but you could probably at least get a way of getting a ballpark estimate from it.

Has anybody ever done this before? Way too much work for me to try it.

bnorth 08-04-2017 08:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by frankbmd (Post 1686735)
With all the cracking going on, someday we will be collecting vintage holders and the card pops will be irrelevant.

That's why the 00000001 Wagner will never be reholdered.;)

In a hundred years the mantra will be

"Buy the holder, not the card."

I once owned a Beckett holder numbered 00000021 and let it slip away, how foolish!

Do you remember what card was inside that holder?

I have 0005 and 007 serial #ed Beckett cards from their testing before they graded any cards for the public. I also have a very early SGC slab and some day plan on buying one of the PSA test slabs for my oddball collection.

As far as card population I doubt the # graded by the big 3 could be used in any way to determine how many are out there. Way to many crack and resubs, people that just crack them because they do not collect slabs, and the people that just do not get anything graded.


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