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  #51  
Old 01-07-2022, 03:46 PM
Tyruscobb Tyruscobb is offline
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Originally Posted by Republicaninmass View Post
Some of these numbers make me laugh.

If you put an e95 wagner psa 1 on Ebay, youd hardly get 100 (likley 10) watchers, let alone 10,000 people interested. Yet, ebay is the biggest platform collectors have. There is a lot of money at one end of the hobby, very little in the middle, much towards the shallow end of the pool. The speculative buyer on their credit card are running thin, and PSA backlog almost broke more than a few I assume.
Your inability to comprehend and understand a metaphor makes me laugh. I stated, "For every Ryan that can purchase a T-206 Wagner, there are probably 10,000 times more looking for a E95 Wagner in a 1."

What this statement means is that for every wealthy investor/collector searching for a white whale (either a rare card, or a card in a rare grade), there are many more average collectors looking for the same or a similar card in an affordable low grade.
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  #52  
Old 01-07-2022, 03:47 PM
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Originally Posted by Wanaselja View Post
If the money was used for what it was intended (payroll mainly) and you meet other criteria (retaining your employees etc) the loan is forgiven.
So if the government gives you a million that you didn't need, you spend it on payroll, and then take the million you would have spent on payroll and buy cards, the government essentially has bought your cards for you.
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  #53  
Old 01-07-2022, 03:48 PM
Wanaselja Wanaselja is offline
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Additionally, you needed to qualify for the PPP funding by demonstrating a % of loss in revenue from preceding quarters.
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  #54  
Old 01-07-2022, 03:50 PM
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Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth View Post
So if the government gives you a million that you didn't need, you spend it on payroll, and then take the million you would have spent on payroll and buy cards, the government essentially has bought your cards for you.
i personally don't know anyone who bought cards with this $$$$$...I just assumed people did seeing as the people I do know spent theirs on porsches!
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  #55  
Old 01-07-2022, 03:52 PM
Wanaselja Wanaselja is offline
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Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth View Post
So if the government gives you a million that you didn't need, you spend it on payroll, and then take the million you would have spent on payroll and buy cards, the government essentially has bought your cards for you.
Yes. With the big assumption that it wasn’t needed. Every time there is federal aid doled out people tend to focus on the small percentage of people/businesses that abuse the aid rather than the larger majority that need and benefit from it. While some abused the PPP funding I’d be willing to bet that the businesses it helped keep afloat far outnumber the abusers.
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  #56  
Old 01-07-2022, 03:52 PM
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i personally don't know anyone who bought cards with this $$$$$...I just assumed people did seeing as the people I do know spent theirs on porsches!
How do they justify that?
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  #57  
Old 01-07-2022, 03:54 PM
Wanaselja Wanaselja is offline
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I would also say that unless you own/owned a small business in Feb/Mar of last year you can’t possibly understand how frightening things looked. Especially small businesses just getting their feet under them.
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  #58  
Old 01-07-2022, 03:56 PM
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How do they justify that?
its just like the example given...my company gave its owners huge bonuses with the ppp money...another friend i know who has has his own practice got lots of ppp money that was forgiven and ended up with a lot of it.

I also did not get a penny of free money but it seems many did who didnt need it.
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  #59  
Old 01-07-2022, 03:59 PM
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Yes. With the big assumption that it wasn’t needed. Every time there is federal aid doled out people tend to focus on the small percentage of people/businesses that abuse the aid rather than the larger majority that need and benefit from it. While some abused the PPP funding I’d be willing to bet that the businesses it helped keep afloat far outnumber the abusers.
Yes I agree but at the same time that doesn't trivialize the abuse or the lack of ethics.
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Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 01-07-2022 at 04:00 PM.
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  #60  
Old 01-07-2022, 04:04 PM
Wanaselja Wanaselja is offline
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Yes I agree but at the same time that doesn't trivialize the abuse or the lack of ethics.
Certainly doesn’t. But that narrative focus tends to make people anti federal help when at times it is essential even if there are those that will take advantage.
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  #61  
Old 01-07-2022, 04:15 PM
Republicaninmass Republicaninmass is offline
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Your inability to comprehend and understand a metaphor makes me laugh. I stated, "For every Ryan that can purchase a T-206 Wagner, there are probably 10,000 times more looking for a E95 Wagner in a 1."



What this statement means is that for every wealthy investor/collector searching for a white whale (either a rare card, or a card in a rare grade), there are many more average collectors looking for the same or a similar card in an affordable low grade.
There isnt, and you wouldn't even get 100 views for an e95. Your metaphor is literally more like 1 in 10 million people who could buy a t206 v an e95. How skewed a world, when you exist only on a pre war baseball card forum .

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  #62  
Old 01-07-2022, 04:58 PM
Johnny630 Johnny630 is offline
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Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth View Post
So if the government gives you a million that you didn't need, you spend it on payroll, and then take the million you would have spent on payroll and buy cards, the government essentially has bought your cards for you.
Quite the Rip Off isn't it? What Dopes in our Federal Government.
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  #63  
Old 01-07-2022, 05:17 PM
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Quite the Rip Off isn't it? What Dopes in our Federal Government.
All in all, I think the government did a pretty remarkable job given the circumstances in 2020/2021 to safeguard individuals and small business and keep the economy humming. There would have been no way to vet everyone in a timely manner to get the money out to make a difference. The blanket strategy was the only way it could have gone. We'd be in a far worse spot right now if no stimmy was given.
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  #64  
Old 01-07-2022, 08:28 PM
BobC BobC is offline
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There have already been people convicted of abusing the PPP program and now facing/serving prison time, and will likely be more to come. And for a lot of you with criticisms and complaints about what was and wasn't done, isn't it wonderful how 20/20 hindsight is always so much clearer than facing the unknown future in a totally unprecedented worldwide situation that descended upon all of us so fast, it made it seem like it all happened virtually overnight.

The main goal was to keep the U.S. economy going despite the pandemic, and in reality, based on where we are today and after all the problems and issues that have occurred since this all began (as many of you naysayers are so dutifully pointing out), we sure as heck could be in a lot worse shape.

Initially the loans were to try and keep as many as possible people working, getting paid, and then spending their money so the economy wouldn't falter. Not knowing how things would turn out, both government and businesses were guessing as to who may or may not need the stimulus money. So if it ended up that some businesses got PPP loans they ultimately seemed to not need, the government wanted them to have it anyway so they'd continue to spend the money on whatever, even if it ended up being on baseball cards. That's the only way to keep the economy going, by having people continue to spend money. Because of the quarantines and shutdowns, the government knew certain industries, jobs, and businesses where going to get whacked more than others, and there was no way they'd be contributing to the economy like they had been. In which case, you would expect the government to be praying these more fortunate people and businesses not feeling the pressure of the pandemic as much, would spend even more of the stimulus money they were getting to hopefully make up for lost economic activity of the unfortunate businesses and people that did get whacked because of Covid.

It was a deliberate and calculated move by the government to give businesses this extra money to spend. I don't know how many of you realized that when the PPP loan forgiveness program was first put into operation, the IRS advised businesses that according to then current tax laws, none of those payroll or other expenses deemed as being paid by the PPP loan proceeds, and then forgiven, would be tax deductible. The government specifically made sure to enact and have signed into law, new legislation so that those forgiven expenses would absolutely be tax deductible. Had the government not done this, businesses and business owners would have been forced to not spend a significant amount of the PPP loan stimulus money they received, and instead hold on to it in contemplation of sending it right back to the government as taxes. And that would have succeeded in significantly crippling the government's main reason for having given out the PPP money in the first place, to stimulate the economy. Why do you think all these various payments, loans, and programs were always referred to as "stimulus" money.

So for those people/businesses possibly being accused of not being of high moral or ethical character for having taken PPP loan money they were eligible for (or any other stimulus moneys for that matter) that it turned out they may not have needed to survive the pandemic after all, and then had the loan forgiven, take heart. You are not bad at all. In fact, the government was totally behind in encouraging and aiding everyone to getting as much stimulus money and aid as they could, so they in turn could spend as much as possible to keep the U.S. economy flowing.

We're still not out of this Covid pandemic yet either. So for all you critics against those who legitimately got and are spending their stimulus money, quit complaining and apparently advocating to potentially damage our economy instead. Maybe you should all take a page out of the old carpenter's handbook, but instead of remembering to measure twice and then cut once, you should all think twice, before speaking even once.
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  #65  
Old 01-07-2022, 08:33 PM
BobC BobC is offline
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Originally Posted by ajjohnsonsoxfan View Post
All in all, I think the government did a pretty remarkable job given the circumstances in 2020/2021 to safeguard individuals and small business and keep the economy humming. There would have been no way to vet everyone in a timely manner to get the money out to make a difference. The blanket strategy was the only way it could have gone. We'd be in a far worse spot right now if no stimmy was given.
+1

AJ, glad to see you get it.

Last edited by BobC; 01-07-2022 at 08:33 PM.
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  #66  
Old 01-07-2022, 08:35 PM
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Originally Posted by BobC View Post
There have already been people convicted of abusing the PPP program and now facing/serving prison time, and will likely be more to come. And for a lot of you with criticisms and complaints about what was and wasn't done, isn't it wonderful how 20/20 hindsight is always so much clearer than facing the unknown future in a totally unprecedented worldwide situation that descended upon all of us so fast, it made it seem like it all happened virtually overnight.

The main goal was to keep the U.S. economy going despite the pandemic, and in reality, based on where we are today and after all the problems and issues that have occurred since this all began (as many of you naysayers are so dutifully pointing out), we sure as heck could be in a lot worse shape.

Initially the loans were to try and keep as many as possible people working, getting paid, and then spending their money so the economy wouldn't falter. Not knowing how things would turn out, both government and businesses were guessing as to who may or may not need the stimulus money. So if it ended up that some businesses got PPP loans they ultimately seemed to not need, the government wanted them to have it anyway so they'd continue to spend the money on whatever, even if it ended up being on baseball cards. That's the only way to keep the economy going, by having people continue to spend money. Because of the quarantines and shutdowns, the government knew certain industries, jobs, and businesses where going to get whacked more than others, and there was no way they'd be contributing to the economy like they had been. In which case, you would expect the government to be praying these more fortunate people and businesses not feeling the pressure of the pandemic as much, would spend even more of the stimulus money they were getting to hopefully make up for lost economic activity of the unfortunate businesses and people that did get whacked because of Covid.

It was a deliberate and calculated move by the government to give businesses this extra money to spend. I don't know how many of you realized that when the PPP loan forgiveness program was first put into operation, the IRS advised businesses that according to then current tax laws, none of those payroll or other expenses deemed as being paid by the PPP loan proceeds, and then forgiven, would be tax deductible. The government specifically made sure to enact and have signed into law, new legislation so that those forgiven expenses would absolutely be tax deductible. Had the government not done this, businesses and business owners would have been forced to not spend a significant amount of the PPP loan stimulus money they received, and instead hold on to it in contemplation of sending it right back to the government as taxes. And that would have succeeded in significantly crippling the government's main reason for having given out the PPP money in the first place, to stimulate the economy. Why do you think all these various payments, loans, and programs were always referred to as "stimulus" money.

So for those people/businesses possibly being accused of not being of high moral or ethical character for having taken PPP loan money they were eligible for (or any other stimulus moneys for that matter) that it turned out they may not have needed to survive the pandemic after all, and then had the loan forgiven, take heart. You are not bad at all. In fact, the government was totally behind in encouraging and aiding everyone to getting as much stimulus money and aid as they could, so they in turn could spend as much as possible to keep the U.S. economy flowing.

We're still not out of this Covid pandemic yet either. So for all you critics against those who legitimately got and are spending their stimulus money, quit complaining and apparently advocating to potentially damage our economy instead. Maybe you should all take a page out of the old carpenter's handbook, but instead of remembering to measure twice and then cut once, you should all think twice, before speaking even once.
The government has given out too much free money. It has bad side effects.
.
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  #67  
Old 01-07-2022, 08:37 PM
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Again I am no socialist, but handing massive sums of money out to the wealthy and encouraging them to spend it on luxury goods doesn't seem like the most efficient way for a government to stimulate the economy in a way that benefits the people who are most in need. Small businesses teetering on the brink, trying to keep their people working, a different matter. Anyhow Ryan, shame on you for not taking the money, you didn't do your part.
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Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 01-07-2022 at 08:43 PM.
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  #68  
Old 01-07-2022, 08:49 PM
Johnny630 Johnny630 is offline
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The government has given out too much free money. It has bad side effects.
.
100% agree
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  #69  
Old 01-07-2022, 08:55 PM
Wanaselja Wanaselja is offline
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The government has given out too much free money. It has bad side effects.
.
I suppose it depends on what end of the economic spectrum you’re on. I’m sure there are many in need that are thankful.
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  #70  
Old 01-08-2022, 01:24 AM
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The government has given out too much free money. It has bad side effects.
.
Leon,

Maybe yes, maybe no. But to keep stimulating the economy and have it keep going so it didn't collapse, that was the main concern. I'm sure a lot of people in the government were looking back to the 2008 economic collapse and thinking, "We're going to have this again AND a health crisis, at the same time?".

We don't know what may have happened had the government done nothing. Of course now we've got a record amount of national debt we're sitting on, an infrastructure that definitely needs maintenance and updating, more expenses and costs we're going to continue to incur and see coming in regards to all the energy and global warming issues, and rising inflation and costs everywhere, coupled with supply chain issues and shortages around the globe. And this pandemic and how that all eventually plays out still isn't known yet.

We're going to be feeling something from this alright, like with all these tax laws changes already occurring that are being made to try and bring in more tax dollars to pay for everything. But in regards to the economy itself, there's even been talk about bringing back more stimulus payments to individuals now. Which just goes to show how worried the government may still be about the overall economy going forward. At least the government is doing something to try and keep things going well in regards to the economy. Would you really rather they do nothing at all and let the fate of our economy be left solely in the hands of Wall Street and the business leaders in this country, and trust they'll somehow band together to put their interests on the back burner to look out for everyone else in all this? And think about that extra hard before you answer!

My gripe was with the people talking about the businesses getting PPP money that may have ended up not needing it to survive the pandemic after all, and how therefore, they were somehow morally or ethically wrong. They were only doing what the government wanted and felt they needed them to do to keep that economy going. If they want to blame someone, blame the government maybe, but why blame the businesses? But before you start blaming the government so much, what would you rather they had done instead? Who knows? But at least for where we are right now after almost two years of this pandemic, we sure could be a lot worse off. Enough of my crap............
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Old 01-08-2022, 03:13 AM
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Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth View Post
Again I am no socialist, but handing massive sums of money out to the wealthy and encouraging them to spend it on luxury goods doesn't seem like the most efficient way for a government to stimulate the economy in a way that benefits the people who are most in need. Small businesses teetering on the brink, trying to keep their people working, a different matter. Anyhow Ryan, shame on you for not taking the money, you didn't do your part.
Peter, I don't disagree with you at all, but when does the government ever seem to get anything completely right? LOL I was in the middle of all this crap with multiple clients, and nobody really knew what was going on from day to day. The government kept trying to adapt and keep up with ever increasing demands and issues from the pandemic's effect on the country overall, and was doing the best they could on the fly. And thank God they did something. Business owners I and colleagues dealt with didn't know what was going to happen, and many were running scared. With the imposed lock downs and quarantines, a lot may have just decided to close the doors and send people home. Which would have vastly increased the number of people getting on unemployment. That's one thing many people never even thought about, without the PPP loans keeping people working, the unemployment costs would have skyrocketed even more. So the government would have likely ended up paying out hundreds of billions of dollars whether they did it by PPP loans or not.

Those PPP loans gave a lot of businesses the economic cushion and confidence they needed to keep their doors open, keep people working, and keep the products and services they provided to the populace flowing. The vast majority of businesses in this country are small, closely held businesses. And they in turn employ a vast majority of the workers as well. Don't forget, PPP loans weren't available to the huge public companies with thousands and thousands of employees. They were specifically geared towards those smaller, closely held companies. And owners of such smaller, closely held companies were much more likely to simply shut down their businesses entirely rather than try to keep them going and maybe run up their business losses and debt (or personal losses and debt as well), to the point they'd go under anyway. This would just permanently displace even more workers into the ranks of the unemployed, and remove even more goods and services such now closed companies would have otherwise been providing to the marketplace.

Those PPP loans gave many, many business owners that cushion and safety net they needed to keep things going. And that was vital to help keep the economy going.

And those extra dollars weren't all spent on Porsches and baseball cards. I would imagine a majority of such excess dollars going to pay down business debts, hiring additional workers, funding expansion and/improvements, covering costs related to more remote working and accessibility, and on and on. And some of it was probably put aside as well as savings for a rainy day, since we still haven't seen the end of the pandemic yet. Was how things done possibly inefficient, hell yeah! What would you expect when everyone was running around like chickens with their heads cut off as the pandemic was raging? But when is our government ever really efficient? It's a "bureaucracy", which I've always thought of as a synonym for "wasteful". LOL Again, at least our government did something that likely needed to be done.
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Old 01-08-2022, 07:21 AM
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Peter, I don't disagree with you at all, but when does the government ever seem to get anything completely right? LOL I was in the middle of all this crap with multiple clients, and nobody really knew what was going on from day to day. The government kept trying to adapt and keep up with ever increasing demands and issues from the pandemic's effect on the country overall, and was doing the best they could on the fly. And thank God they did something. Business owners I and colleagues dealt with didn't know what was going to happen, and many were running scared. With the imposed lock downs and quarantines, a lot may have just decided to close the doors and send people home. Which would have vastly increased the number of people getting on unemployment. That's one thing many people never even thought about, without the PPP loans keeping people working, the unemployment costs would have skyrocketed even more. So the government would have likely ended up paying out hundreds of billions of dollars whether they did it by PPP loans or not.

Those PPP loans gave a lot of businesses the economic cushion and confidence they needed to keep their doors open, keep people working, and keep the products and services they provided to the populace flowing. The vast majority of businesses in this country are small, closely held businesses. And they in turn employ a vast majority of the workers as well. Don't forget, PPP loans weren't available to the huge public companies with thousands and thousands of employees. They were specifically geared towards those smaller, closely held companies. And owners of such smaller, closely held companies were much more likely to simply shut down their businesses entirely rather than try to keep them going and maybe run up their business losses and debt (or personal losses and debt as well), to the point they'd go under anyway. This would just permanently displace even more workers into the ranks of the unemployed, and remove even more goods and services such now closed companies would have otherwise been providing to the marketplace.

Those PPP loans gave many, many business owners that cushion and safety net they needed to keep things going. And that was vital to help keep the economy going.

And those extra dollars weren't all spent on Porsches and baseball cards. I would imagine a majority of such excess dollars going to pay down business debts, hiring additional workers, funding expansion and/improvements, covering costs related to more remote working and accessibility, and on and on. And some of it was probably put aside as well as savings for a rainy day, since we still haven't seen the end of the pandemic yet. Was how things done possibly inefficient, hell yeah! What would you expect when everyone was running around like chickens with their heads cut off as the pandemic was raging? But when is our government ever really efficient? It's a "bureaucracy", which I've always thought of as a synonym for "wasteful". LOL Again, at least our government did something that likely needed to be done.
The problem is that the loans and stimulus were not financed by borrowing it was financed by increasing the quantity of money, and as a result we all have to pay for it now through inflation and higher interest rates. And inflation and higher interest rates hurt poor people first and more severely than wealthy people.

Even further, that higher income that your or your company is currently earning now gets taxed at a higher rate.

If the government actually does increase interest rates and lower the money supply what will surely follow is higher unemployment. It’s just a a matter of time.

You can’t spend your way out of a recession - or a pandemic. I thought everyone knew that from the 1970’s.
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Old 01-08-2022, 07:25 AM
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The government has given out too much free money. It has bad side effects.
.
Out of my parents, my sister and me, I have the most stable income by far (military; I get paid unless there’s a government shutdown where the DoD isn’t funded), and I was the only one who received all three of the stimulus checks.
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  #74  
Old 01-08-2022, 07:29 AM
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Again I am no socialist, but handing massive sums of money out to the wealthy and encouraging them to spend it on luxury goods doesn't seem like the most efficient way for a government to stimulate the economy in a way that benefits the people who are most in need. Small businesses teetering on the brink, trying to keep their people working, a different matter. Anyhow Ryan, shame on you for not taking the money, you didn't do your part.
My clear recollection from when I was working on my MBA was an economics professor saying just this. If you want to use government spending to stimulate an economy, you create more velocity of money by giving it to those most likely to spend it: the working and middle classes. The renters and not the rentiers, if you will.

EDIT: To be clear, the PPP program did work towards this end by helping businesses maintain payroll. But, anytime you filter money through intermediaries, there is going to be shrinkage and opportunities for fraud.

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Old 01-08-2022, 07:59 AM
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The 1970s are not an appropriate analog for the present. The nature of the inflation is entirely different. Then, it was pressure caused by manipulated fuel prices (OPEC) that affected every sector of the economy and a hugely expensive war combined with expanded social programs. Today, it is transitory gaps in the global supply chain due to the pandemic combined with early retirements (a recent study found that 90% of the workers who quit and haven't come back are over 55 and retired early, and that of the retirees, only a third as many as normal came back, primarily due to workplace health concerns).

As for the PPP, Bob C has it right: it was intended to jack money into peoples' pockets immediately. If you spent it on payroll and some other door-opening expenses (like rent up to 25%), the loan was forgiven. If not, it was 1% interest repayable starting after a year.

I also would add that the ethics/morals arguments are meritless at their core because everyone can and does have a different interpretation of the concepts, which renders them amorphous and meaningless for argument. I think healthy people who refuse to get vaccinated are morally responsible for thousands of unnecessary deaths and billions in wasted hospital care. Someone else certainly disagrees. I don't believe in these sorts of squishy non-standards because we are a nation of laws. There is lawful and there is unlawful behavior, period. If someone behaves lawfully and you don't like it, change the law. Hate the game not the player.
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Old 01-08-2022, 08:07 AM
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The 1970s are not an appropriate analog for the present. The nature of the inflation is entirely different. Then, it was pressure caused by manipulated fuel prices (OPEC) that affected every sector of the economy and a hugely expensive war combined with expanded social programs. Today, it is transitory gaps in the global supply chain due to the pandemic combined with early retirements (a recent study found that 90% of the workers who quit and haven't come back are over 55 and retired early, and that of the retirees, only a third as many as normal came back, primarily due to workplace health concerns).

As for the PPP, Bob C has it right: it was intended to jack money into peoples' pockets immediately. If you spent it on payroll and some other door-opening expenses (like rent up to 25%), the loan was forgiven. If not, it was 1% interest repayable starting after a year.

.

I also would add that the ethics/morals arguments are meritless at their core because everyone can and does have a different interpretation of the concepts, which renders them amorphous and meaningless for argument. I think healthy people who refuse to get vaccinated are morally responsible for thousands of unnecessary deaths and billions in wasted hospital care. Someone else certainly disagrees. I don't believe in these sorts of squishy non-standards because we are a nation of laws. There is lawful and there is unlawful behavior, period. If someone behaves lawfully and you don't like it, change the law. Hate the game not the player.
That sounds great Adam. But in reality I would bet almost no one pays back those loans. I know my friend isn't going to and I am sure there are 10s of thousands more. No matter what anyone says the government has totally screwed the pooch on the great cash giveaway. Inflation....not going anywhere soon. The very people at the lower end of the totem pole will have a little more money but it won't matter as inflation has increased faster. These are just facts. Anyone can debate them.. It's a shame our country is making it where you don't have to work to get a handout. NO income? No problem...you get free money too. Illegal? No problem, how many babies to you have so we can know how much free money you get. A bunch of total BS if you ask me.



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Old 01-08-2022, 08:37 AM
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The 1970s are not an appropriate analog for the present. The nature of the inflation is entirely different. Then, it was pressure caused by manipulated fuel prices (OPEC) that affected every sector of the economy and a hugely expensive war combined with expanded social programs. Today, it is transitory gaps in the global supply chain due to the pandemic combined with early retirements (a recent study found that 90% of the workers who quit and haven't come back are over 55 and retired early, and that of the retirees, only a third as many as normal came back, primarily due to workplace health concerns).
I'm a supply chain manager and it is fairly well known in the field that this problem is particularly acute in the trucking industry, which wasn't really keeping up with retirements prior to the pandemic. I have heard anecdotally that the same thing is happening with longshoremen, which is contributing to backups at major ports like Long Beach and cascading effects back through the maritime cargo industry which was already strained.

PS Yes, I know I am getting way off topic, but my wife really doesn't care to listen to me talk about this stuff and sometimes you just need to get it out of your system. Blame her, not me.

PPS. Since every thread needs a card.

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Old 01-08-2022, 09:07 AM
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That sounds great Adam. But in reality I would bet almost no one pays back those loans. I know my friend isn't going to and I am sure there are 10s of thousands more. No matter what anyone says the government has totally screwed the pooch on the great cash giveaway. Inflation....not going anywhere soon. The very people at the lower end of the totem pole will have a little more money but it won't matter as inflation has increased faster. These are just facts. Anyone can debate them.. It's a shame our country is making it where you don't have to work to get a handout. NO income? No problem...you get free money too. Illegal? No problem, how many babies to you have so we can know how much free money you get. A bunch of total BS if you ask me.



,
I get the loan, I spend it on payroll, I then take the money I WOULD HAVE spent on payroll and buy a Porsche. The money is fungible.
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Old 01-08-2022, 09:47 AM
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I think the point made about the massive number of folks who would be applying for unemployment if no PPP was unavailable is most valid. The states would then become involved, seeking federal aid; it would be a mess.
I do wonder how many of those who received the loans returned the money to the government. There must be stats for that kind of thing.
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Old 01-08-2022, 09:49 AM
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Old 01-08-2022, 11:33 AM
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This thread has gotten way off track. The topic is whether cardboard is a viable fledge to inflation.

I believe that it is, at least the time-tested, vintage stuff, from Cobb-Ruth to 1963 Pete Rose Rcs.
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Old 01-08-2022, 11:55 AM
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This thread has gotten way off track. The topic is whether cardboard is a viable fledge to inflation.

I believe that it is, at least the time-tested, vintage stuff, from Cobb-Ruth to 1963 Pete Rose Rcs.
I agree concerning the topic, Ryan.
I am not so sure about inflation when it comes to expensive cards. Is there inflation on a 1914 CJ Jackson in a 5 holder? Or is it more a collectibles increased value? And I don't know about others but if I pay 4 or 5 figures for a piece of paper I am not thinking about inflation.
That all said, sure, I guess cards can be a hedge to inflation. I prefer to think of them as increased or decreased value. I love collecting but I treat them as a cost basis, liquid asset.

Inflation bit this one hard as it sold for a lot less a half year earlier.
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Old 01-08-2022, 12:07 PM
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All in all, I think the government did a pretty remarkable job given the circumstances in 2020/2021 to safeguard individuals and small business and keep the economy humming. There would have been no way to vet everyone in a timely manner to get the money out to make a difference. The blanket strategy was the only way it could have gone. We'd be in a far worse spot right now if no stimmy was given.
And the national debt only increased by 5 trillion dollars.

With impending inflation, spurred by this massive infusion of newly created dollars, the interest we'll be paying on the pre-existing debt, plus the interest on this new 5 trillion debt, will be a hefty burden on our federal budget forever.

Or, until our currency collapses under the weight of all this reckless debt.
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Old 01-08-2022, 12:10 PM
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Yes I think cards are being used to hedge inflation.

I am easily one of the least educated/experienced persons on this forum, but it doesn't take a genius to see the American Dollar is becoming more and more worthless. Currency is changing, as crypto becomes more and more legitimate. Government is printing money at will, and the basic economic principles aren't there for a healthy economy. The number of "financial gurus" and big time investors coming into the hobby are not by coinkydink. I do believe there is an element of manipulation at play when it comes to modern at the very least, but I think most vintage and especially pre-war are pretty safe places to park money; tangible assets with a huge interest base and limited supply that will only increase in the tiniest of amounts, if at all.
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Old 01-08-2022, 12:15 PM
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And the national debt only increased by 5 trillion dollars.

With impending inflation, spurred by this massive infusion of newly created dollars, the interest we'll be paying on the pre-existing debt, plus the interest on this new 5 trillion debt, will be a hefty burden on our federal budget forever.

Or, until our currency collapses under the weight of all this reckless debt.
As Kissinger famously said, the future has no constituency.
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Old 01-08-2022, 12:19 PM
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I for one think inflation will not be as bad as some have forecasted I say we peak mid q2 this year.
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Old 01-08-2022, 12:23 PM
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The problem is that the loans and stimulus were not financed by borrowing it was financed by increasing the quantity of money, and as a result we all have to pay for it now through inflation and higher interest rates. And inflation and higher interest rates hurt poor people first and more severely than wealthy people.

Even further, that higher income that your or your company is currently earning now gets taxed at a higher rate.

If the government actually does increase interest rates and lower the money supply what will surely follow is higher unemployment. It’s just a a matter of time.

You can’t spend your way out of a recession - or a pandemic. I thought everyone knew that from the 1970’s.

Scott,

See what Adam says in post #75, he's got some great comments and points that are right on the money. Also, I understand your concern about the government pumping more money into the system, but that itself isn't necessarily going to cause runaway inflation. Look back at what happened after 2008 when our economy tanked due to the mortgage crisis. One of the main things they did was to push more money into the system, remember they called it quantitative easing? It took a few years to get things back on track, but it never really pushed us into an inflationary period.

As Adam also mentioned, this current inflationary situation seems by to be fueled mostly by the supply side issues we've had. It will likely take some time before things hopefully start settling down from the effects of the pandemic, and the supply chains and returning workforces will eventually catch up to the current excess demand that exists, and also allow for reserves and backup inventory all throughout the production and building industries to return to their more normal, pre-pandemic levels. In the meantime, we've got the classic supply and demand formula working against us.

Look at cars and housing for example. Their production and building were crushed because of the pandemic, and so to were their suppliers unable to continue providing parts and materials to them at pre-pandemic levels. But fortunately, everyone involved in those industries had reserves and backup inventory to keep providing what the market needed and demanded. But they blew through the backlogs and reserve inventories they had, till the demand finally exceeded what could be provided. And then, the lack of sufficient numbers of new cars and homes carried over to the secondary used car and rental markets, which also got quickly overwhelmed. And that's why we've seen new and used cars prices go through the roof, along with housing values and rents. But since it took a while to reach that point where our demand so overwhelmed the supply (and started pushing up all the prices), I think a lot of people have mistakenly thought it was all this government stimulus spending that inflated the prices instead, because it seems to fit the timeline for these rising costs perfectly.

To tie this all into our beloved hobby, this is exactly what's happened with PSA. Demand jumped, overwhelmed processing, services got shut down to work on the backlogs and get caught up, while also trying to find and train additional graders to get the work done. In the meantime, grading fees skyrocket so PSA can stop the overwhelming influx of work, yet allow them enough income to get the backlog under control, pay to find and train these new graders so desperately needed, and also pay and finance whatever other expansions or improvements PSA needs to facilitate everyone and remain in business till they can get operations, and fees and services, back to be more like they once were. Even PSA knows they can't simply leave things as they recently were, without eventually damaging the core business,potentially beyond repair.

And this highlights another reason the government would possibly want to make it look like they were overpaying businesses with these forgiven PPP loans. So these businesses would have additional funds to address problems along the lines of what PSA faced, and maybe not have to result to shutting operations and services down, and then severely jacking prices up and making the inflationary effect even worse, instead of better. So this demonstrates at least one way these excess PPP loan monies that everyone's complaining about being handed out and becoming the cause of our current inflationary issues, may actually be working to prevent inflation in many of these businesses.

Now before you go calling me out and questioning my logic about how if PPP loans may be able to stop a business doing what PSA had to do, why didn't the PPP loan monies help PSA? I don't know enough about their finances and internal operations to be able to give anyone a definitive answer, but if I'm speculating........

First off, PSA's surge in demand for them could have just been so unexpectedly fast and huge that they were one of the rare outliers where almost no amount of extra stimulus loan money could have saved them from what they've had to go through. Secondly, don't forget when the pandemic started PSA was part of a larger publicly traded company, and therefore may not have even been eligible for a PPP loan to begin with. And lastly, even if they were eligible and got a PPP loan, they got sold right at the beginning of 2021, not long after they would have the PPP loan forgiven, but just before everything blew up for them. I know none of the financial details of the sale, but it is possible that cash from the PPP loan went out to the prior owners as part of the sale, or was otherwise tied up in the sale or the business to where it couldn't be used to help the business under the new ownership.

Not sure what you mean by businesses getting taxed at higher rates, none of these forgiven PPP loans are taxable.
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Old 01-08-2022, 12:43 PM
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That last point is correct--it made a really weird line item entry on my 2020 corporate return.

As for budget busting, the 2017 tax cut (made in the face of a deficit; funny how the so-called deficit hawks seem to go deaf, blind and dumb when they like the president who jacks up the deficit) skewed benefits to the richest population. If you're going to bitch out working people getting relief money during the pandemic at least be intellectually honest about all of the handouts to the richest 10% of the population over the preceding 50 years that increased asset and income inequality to levels not seen in 130 years. That section 199 deduction in 2017 was so dramatic in its impact on pass-through entities that the first year it was implemented I thought the CPA must have made an error calculating my taxes. I researched the law and found that the return was accurate, the law is just bizarre.

Oh, and back to the OP, not only is it an inflation hedge, look at the artwork:




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Old 01-08-2022, 11:32 PM
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Originally Posted by Rhotchkiss View Post
This thread has gotten way off track. The topic is whether cardboard is a viable fledge to inflation.

I believe that it is, at least the time-tested, vintage stuff, from Cobb-Ruth to 1963 Pete Rose Rcs.
Thanks Ryan.

I have enjoyed the comments posted, but I we took a turn somewhere along the way....🤔
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Old 01-09-2022, 07:58 AM
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The original question: are cards a hedge against inflation can't really be answered without discussing economics, can it?

I will just say to Bob C and Adam, I disagree with most of what you say, but time will tell. "Jacking up the deficit" is not a big issue - it's how that deficit is financed. Inflation is primarily a monetary phenomenon, produced by a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output. It's caused by government - every time, and it's actually a sneaky way to pay down the debt without increasing taxes.

And this line: "all of the handouts to the richest 10% of the population over the preceding 50 years that increased asset and income inequality to levels not seen in 130 years." is pure political tripe that is simply false and very blatantly crosses the "no politics" line.

We can look back a year from now and see what happened. If the government attempts to curb inflation by reducing the quantity of money and raising interest rates we will see unemployment rise and slower growth, and I think card prices will probably be stagnant.

I think cards are a pretty good hedge against inflation. If they can just hold their value for the next two years, I'd feel pretty good.

I got this just from a member before things went off the rails. I love this card!

1909 Cobb E95.jpg
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Old 01-09-2022, 08:25 AM
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The original question: are cards a hedge against inflation can't really be answered without discussing economics, can it?

I will just say to Bob C and Adam, I disagree with most of what you say, but time will tell. "Jacking up the deficit" is not a big issue - it's how that deficit is financed. Inflation is primarily a monetary phenomenon, produced by a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output. It's caused by government - every time, and it's actually a sneaky way to pay down the debt without increasing taxes.

And this line: "all of the handouts to the richest 10% of the population over the preceding 50 years that increased asset and income inequality to levels not seen in 130 years." is pure political tripe that is simply false and very blatantly crosses the "no politics" line.

We can look back a year from now and see what happened. If the government attempts to curb inflation by reducing the quantity of money and raising interest rates we will see unemployment rise and slower growth, and I think card prices will probably be stagnant.

I think cards are a pretty good hedge against inflation. If they can just hold their value for the next two years, I'd feel pretty good.

I got this just from a member before things went off the rails. I love this card!

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Old 01-09-2022, 08:27 AM
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What seems to be telling to me with collectors is of recent that kind of has me concerned. If a card comes along say it’s $10,000 or more and a collector really liked the card and wants to purchase. What I have been finding over the last several months is the person that wants to purchase this card cannot purchase the card without trading or selling another card that they have, I feel they have a low level of liquidity where they’re not able to purchase the card with cash.

If they believe their cards are worth more than they are and the card market drops, or pulls back from ridiculous inflated numbers of 2021 they’re not going to be able to sell these cards for a perceived price they think they’re worth the power, They may have bought during the FOMO of last year. I believe the liquidity in assets other than cards In the next coming years will be more powerful than the sad cards. This is just me

I’m not a rich wall street or white-collar Six figure man those guys will always have the power to pay up in the auctions. I’m just a blue-collar guy and from what I’ve observed in the trenches from shows, Facebook, IP, and eBay is a lot of blue-collar guys have too much money tied up in cards and not enough in liquid assets.

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Old 01-09-2022, 09:50 AM
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Interesting views, cool topic. My take is that of a struggling collector as myself. Sports cards have a fiat value, measured in a falling fiat currency. Because I’ve no residual income or disposable income, i must do as most collectors do, and buy only what i’m willing to be buried with. If i had 100K to invest in the last few years or so, i’d most certainly have ‘invested’ in some rare high dollar vintage cards, but be super tempted to sell off quickly.

Even though i’m optimistic the card market will fall, i still believe there are many, many cards that i will never legally own. I have to be okay with that.

I remember what happened in the last card boom, and i hold several opinions on today’s card market. First, i believe the wealthy underwrite eachother’s investments.

Second, hardly any kid knows what kind of fish Mike Trout is, even fewer know what a Mickey Mantle is used for, and the only people that know what language you say Tris Speaker or Cy Young in, are likely reading this paragraph at this very moment. When we die with our cards, those kids will be adults, and i’m not willing to bet $10,000 on a piece of crap condition Jackie Robinson rookie, that ANY of our youths will give a rat’s behind what a Frojoy Babe Ruth is for….

Baseball cards: you can’t feed it to your family, they won’t keep you dry. They don’t transport you across town. They are not accepted as currency in any Costco or 711. They are poor self defense weapons. They are even worse for amphibious assaults on a food and ammo cache. You can’t use them to build a shelter, or a boat. In the end, if kept dry, are great for starting a small cooking fire.


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Old 01-09-2022, 10:00 AM
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Lots of folks financing new boxes of panini treasures or whatever at 2k a pop, busting itnopen and hoping to pay off the credit card date and psa fees with the profits. I think that came to a grinding halt. I'd have to think a major deflation in modern would be coming. Goldin had 3 of those 'tom brady season ticket" cards. I realize its limited, but I dont see how rare or demand for a card like that Carries the insane premium. Even still, jordan fleer rcs in psa are thousands? Limitless supply, and demand is due to "them going up". Modern is going to end badly and will spill over into some vintage. I would hedge with cards, try commodities.
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Old 01-09-2022, 10:02 AM
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What seems to be telling to me with collectors is of recent that kind of has me concerned. If a card comes along say it’s $10,000 or more and a collector really liked the card and wants to purchase. What I have been finding over the last several months is the person that wants to purchase this card cannot purchase the card without trading or selling another card that they have, I feel they have a low level of liquidity where they’re not able to purchase the card with cash.

If they believe their cards are worth more than they are and the card market drops, or pulls back from ridiculous inflated numbers of 2021 they’re not going to be able to sell these cards for a perceived price they think they’re worth the power, They may have bought during the FOMO of last year. I believe the liquidity in assets other than cards In the next coming years will be more powerful than the sad cards. This is just me

I’m not a rich wall street or white-collar Six figure man those guys will always have the power to pay up in the auctions. I’m just a blue-collar guy and from what I’ve observed in the trenches from shows, Facebook, IP, and eBay is a lot of blue-collar guys have too much money tied up in cards and not enough in liquid assets.
I have sold cards to help fund others many times. I feel they are very liquid.
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Old 01-09-2022, 10:39 AM
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Great points.

I especially agree with your last statement. Many collectors say, well, my card is worth x, so I should be fine. A card is only worth something when you sell, so until then, it holds no dollar value. And the fact is collectors always overvalue their cards, so they may be in for a rude awakening when they try to sell.





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Originally Posted by RedlegsFan View Post
Interesting views, cool topic. My take is that of a struggling collector as myself. Sports cards have a fiat value, measured in a falling fiat currency. Because I’ve no residual income or disposable income, i must do as most collectors do, and buy only what i’m willing to be buried with. If i had 100K to invest in the last few years or so, i’d most certainly have ‘invested’ in some rare high dollar vintage cards, but be super tempted to sell off quickly.

Even though i’m optimistic the card market will fall, i still believe there are many, many cards that i will never legally own. I have to be okay with that.

I remember what happened in the last card boom, and i hold several opinions on today’s card market. First, i believe the wealthy underwrite eachother’s investments.

Second, hardly any kid knows what kind of fish Mike Trout is, even fewer know what a Mickey Mantle is used for, and the only people that know what language you say Tris Speaker or Cy Young in, are likely reading this paragraph at this very moment. When we die with our cards, those kids will be adults, and i’m not willing to bet $10,000 on a piece of crap condition Jackie Robinson rookie, that ANY of our youths will give a rat’s behind what a Frojoy Babe Ruth is for….

Baseball cards: you can’t feed it to your family, they won’t keep you dry. They don’t transport you across town. They are not accepted as currency in any Costco or 711. They are poor self defense weapons. They are even worse for amphibious assaults on a food and ammo cache. You can’t use them to build a shelter, or a boat. In the end, if kept dry, are great for starting a small cooking fire.


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  #97  
Old 01-09-2022, 10:55 AM
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Rhotchkiss Rhotchkiss is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RedlegsFan View Post
Baseball cards: you can’t feed it to your family, they won’t keep you dry. They don’t transport you across town. They are not accepted as currency in any Costco or 711. They are poor self defense weapons. They are even worse for amphibious assaults on a food and ammo cache. You can’t use them to build a shelter, or a boat. In the end, if kept dry, are great for starting a small cooking fire. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
If that is your measuring stick, then stock (especially if manifested by a paper certificate) and debt/bonds, are a bad place to put money too. I assume you are spending all your excess cash of lighters and matches, lumber, bullets and military rations.... When shit hits the fan, and it just may (in all seriousness), you can tell me you told me so. Until then, here are Tris Speakers, you know, for the kids.....
Attached Images
File Type: jpg T206 Speaker, Drum - Front.jpg (75.3 KB, 117 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Speaker, Drum - Back.jpg (70.2 KB, 117 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Speaker, Broadleaf 350 - Front.jpg (71.6 KB, 116 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Speaker Broadleaf 350 - BAck.jpg (69.4 KB, 116 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Spearker, American Beauty 350 w Frame - Front.jpg (55.6 KB, 116 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Spearker, American Beauty 350 w Frame - Back.jpg (57.4 KB, 114 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Speaker, Cycle 350 - Front.jpg (79.8 KB, 115 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Speaker, Cycle 350 - Back.jpg (79.7 KB, 113 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Speaker Tolstoi - Front.jpg (77.9 KB, 114 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Speaker Tolstoi - Back.jpg (77.4 KB, 112 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Speaker, Polar Bear - Front.jpg (75.3 KB, 113 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Speaker, Polar Bear, Back.jpg (77.1 KB, 113 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Speaker, Sovereign 350 - Front.jpg (43.3 KB, 115 views)
File Type: jpg T206 Speaker, Sovereign 350 - Back.jpg (49.2 KB, 115 views)
File Type: jpg T214 Victory -- Tris Speaker - Front.jpg (6.9 KB, 110 views)
File Type: jpg T214 Victory -- Tris Speaker - Back.jpg (7.1 KB, 109 views)
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  #98  
Old 01-09-2022, 11:15 AM
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ValKehl ValKehl is offline
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Ryan, I'd say your Tris Speaker back run is nice, if it included a T215 card!
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Seeking very scarce/rare cards for my Sam Rice master collection, e.g., E210 York Caramel Type 2 (upgrade), 1931 W502, W504 (upgrade), W572 sepia, W573, W575-1 E. S. Rice version, 1922 Haffner's Bread, 1922 Keating Candy, 1922 Witmor Candy Type 2 (vertical back), 1926 Sports Co. of Am. with ad & blank backs. Also T216 Kotton "NGO" card of Hugh Jennings. Also 1917 Merchants Bakery & Weil Baking cards of WaJo.
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Old 01-09-2022, 12:34 PM
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Originally Posted by Johnny630 View Post
Exactly ! It seems many are emotionally attached to their cards, investments and emotions don’t mix!
Not that you said it was but I don't look at any of these as absolutes. If cards are something you see as an investment, it's an asset class just like 401k, savings, IRA, real estate or what have you. You allocate your resources in those buckets as you see prudent.

Personally I view my PC as both a hobby and investment with a hobby lean and I'd guess I'm not alone. The difference between cards and "savings" to me is that I can hold a t206 Green Cobb but the more traditional investments are more of a number on a computer screen or statement. Neither are wrong but man it's way more fun holding the Cobb than the monthly statement....haha!!
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Old 01-09-2022, 12:40 PM
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Originally Posted by Rhotchkiss View Post
+1.

I don’t think those stimulus checks a year+ ago are the reason auction houses regularly have many $100k+ cards in every auction or why/how Goldin’s current auction has over 200 lots currently sitting at $10k+ BEFORE Buyers premium. Goldin is almost 100% ultra modern and likely less than 20% baseball, which is a different animal from what we normally dig on this forum, and I do believe modern and vintage are two different beasts. But I agree with Peter that, for whatever reason, a new waive of entrants have come into the “hobby”, except they view cards as assets. This applies to both vintage and modern. And, perhaps people view the asset as an inflation hedge.

To me, the real question is how “sticky” are these new entrants. If they are fickle, than card prices could go down steeply if the “market” turns. But I feel the the VINTAGE “card investor” is not fickle and is more sticky. I think investors who invest in t206, e90-1, goudeys, Ruth’s, 1952 Topps, etc, on whole, grow to enjoy the cards and start to morph into somewhat of a collector.

Cards are cool because you can hold them, they have a culture and fellowship (forums, shows, etc), they are dynamic and diverse, they have history, the players have stories and personalities. Cards are not bars of gold, mutual funds/stock, Bitcoin, or other more available investments. They can become much more personal, and it’s this quality that I believe makes the new entrant-investor sticky and insures many cards will retain real value. In other words, the supply is pretty fixed for vintage and the demand recently has been off the charts, and values have skyrocketed. Gross Supply won’t change much (bc cards are 100+ years old) and I don’t think demand goes down too much because the new demand is stickier. Thus, I think cards have unique qualities that make them a relatively safe investment, probably especially in times of inflation- I think the cards go up as inflation persists, but because of sticky investors, not stimulus checks, extra money bc of lockdown, etc
agree w/all of this. My family isn't into cards but when we talk about the tobacco era of cards, they are absolutely into the discussion and enjoy looking at some of my PC stuff. Far different than if/when we talk about savings, crypto or anything like that as there's nothing really interesting to see.
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