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-   -   E107 - Entire set (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=77350)

Archive 06-15-2005 07:00 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Hal Lewis</b><p>OK, with the latest "vg" E107 selling for $16,000+...<br /><br />I have to ask whether or not it is true that Scott B. once bought the WHOLE SET from Lew Lipsett many moons ago???<br /><br />And if so, then I have to ask the sales price (if anyone cares to share)?<br /><br />And then... I have to get out my calculator and try to figure out what the entire set (including Wagner and Mathewson and Young) would sell for TODAY!!!<br /><br /><br /><br />

Archive 06-15-2005 07:11 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>leon</b><p>But since we are homey's I can at least say, to the best of my knowledge, there is no known complete set. regards

Archive 06-15-2005 07:21 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Hal Lewis</b><p>Hopefully Andy B. will share with us where it was that he picked up his beautiful Wagner and Mathewson E107's.<br /><br />Maybe he got them from Scott B. and that is what I am remembering.

Archive 06-15-2005 07:33 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Jay Miller</b><p>A virtually complete set went in an auction in the mid-1990s for about $40K. I think Olbermann was the winner.

Archive 06-15-2005 07:37 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>leon</b><p>but I think he got the Matty from Scott (and Scott probably wishes he had it back) and I am not sure about the Wagner. From what I remember there were about 100-150 E107's that Scott got from Lew.....for what would now be considered a steal. It's (pricing)is all ya'lls fault Hal. I had this same conversation yesterday, via email with a board member, about the folks with a relative large amount of money to spend on cards. It's really pushed a lot of us out...and I can only sympathize with folks on a real budget....With all of the lawyers, CEO's, business owners, doctors, entrepreneurs etc....it makes it real hard to collect and have a regular job..But I digress and will just say that it doesn't appear the end is in sight for escalating E107 prices.....regards<br /><br />edited for spelling

Archive 06-15-2005 07:41 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Hal Lewis</b><p>Yeah, we feel REAL sorry for those of you who have been buying cards for 20 years for $2.50 a dozen in flea markets... and are now selling those same cards to us for $13,000 a card!<br /><br />In other words... there might be some people who are driven out of adding anything NEW to their collections...<br /><br />but they have also had the price of their collections driven way up.<br /><br />Tit for tat.<br /><br /><img src="/images/wink.gif" height=14 width=14>

Archive 06-15-2005 07:52 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>leon</b><p>Don't get me wrong. I am appreciative of the escalating prices on the cards that I have gotten so far. I just wish I could sell to you and bid against Lee and Jay all of the time <img src="/images/happy.gif" height=14 width=14> (that was a joke).....regards

Archive 06-15-2005 07:57 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Hal Lewis</b><p>Oh I know. I'm just joking as well!<br /><br />Believe me...<br /><br />don't you think I wish every night that I had started collecting VINTAGE stuff 30 years ago instead of collecting all of the modern Topps stuff??<br /><br /><img src="/images/sad.gif" height=14 width=14>

Archive 06-15-2005 08:22 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Andy Baran</b><p>Hal,<br /><br />There is no known E107 complete set. There are several collectors (5 that I know of) that are relatively close. Scott B bought a large grouping of E107's from Lew Lipset a few years ago. I pre-arranged to purchase several cards from that lot from him, including the Mathewson along with several cards that now reside in your collection.<br /><br />I picked up the Wagner from a private "collector". It was a gentleman who had purchased the card in an estate sale in 1979 for $15. He put it in ebay, and when it didn't meet the reserve, I worked out a deal privately.

Archive 06-15-2005 09:16 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Hal Lewis</b><p>Thanks!<br /><br />I guess I need for these guys to hurry up and COMPLETE their sets...<br /><br />so that then maybe they will move on to something else and decide to SELL OFF their E107's after losing the thrill of the hunt.<br /><br />SCOTT B. (or anyone)....<br /><br />can we PLEASE see some scans of the HOF rookie cards in the set that never seem to surface??<br /><br />Bender, Chance, Clarke, J. Collins, G. Davis, Kelley, Wallace??<br /><br />Thanks!

Archive 06-15-2005 09:29 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>barrysloate</b><p>Hal- Not to burst any bubbles but while there is no question vintage cards are escalating very quickly and E107 HOFers are now red hot, we are reaching the point where vintage cards are becoming so ungodly expensive that soon only a very few very wealthy people will be able to afford them. And who will they sell them to- each other? And the high prices will cause many to sell their collections and drop out, that is inevitable. That equates to more material on the marketplace and fewer collectors. What usually happens in a situation like that? Is the hobby destined to become accessible to the very rich only? Is that good or bad? I guess opinions may vary.

Archive 06-15-2005 09:34 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Jay Miller</b><p>Hal--Don't feel bad. Barry said the same thing when Old Judge reached $45/card.

Archive 06-15-2005 09:42 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>barrysloate</b><p>I think my threshhold was a bit above $45, but point well taken. What I am seeing is a major shift in the vintage card market. Ultimately, only the rich will be able to afford the good cards, and whatever crumbs are left will be fought over by the peasants. This is not any great revelation to any of us, but an observation. No more, no less.

Archive 06-15-2005 09:54 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Jay Miller</b><p>And the peasants will rise up and................. How is this different from the art market or the rare coin market, etc? Isn't this just a reflection of the hobby becoming more mainstream.

Archive 06-15-2005 10:07 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>barrysloate</b><p>It's exactly the same, with one difference: the art, coin, etc. markets have been established for a hundred years; what we are seeing with vintage baseball cards in the last year or two is something of a new phenomenon. We are in unchartered waters here. Baseball cards at these levels have no track record, so are the prices real or just a chimera? (today's $50 word)

Archive 06-15-2005 10:18 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Jay Miller</b><p>Barry--What we are seeing in the baseball card market is new to that market but not to collecting in general. I would think that as a hobby becomes more mainstream you see a similar set of events. For rare vintage material supply stays flat or decreases. Even a modest demand increase can really spike prices especially when some buyers may have more money than sense.

Archive 06-15-2005 10:20 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>barrysloate</b><p>How about if high prices cause a lot of collectors to sell out because they can no longer afford to add to their collections. Couldn't supply eventually increase at an even faster pace than the demand? Not impossible.

Archive 06-15-2005 10:35 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Jim F</b><p>Barry, you make a solid point but very pesimistic if i can add my 2 cents. A collector is usually a collector for life. I can't think of any serious collectors that got out and stayed out. Most may sell if they see a good return on thier investment but generally the money will be spent elsewhere in the hobby economy. Some have said they are selling thier collections and do(maybe because of a need for funds in thier real life), but are more than likely to re-enter the market when they are in a better place financially. Jim

Archive 06-15-2005 10:40 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Jay Miller</b><p>That arguement makes sense for items that are not rare. For rare cards it is unlikely that a collector or two selling off a collection will depress prices (and if they are depressed I believe it will be for a very short term). For common material yes; for rare material no. Unless there is a significant change in the collecting world I see prices for rare cards continuing to escalate. What you are saying does not only pertain to the collecting world. With housing prices spikeing in many areas of the country people who work for some towns(police, teachers, etc) can no longer afford to live in those towns. Isn't this all just a function of the percentage differential in wages between the upper class and the lower class being wider today than at any point in history? Look at the ratio of CEO compensation to that of the average worker.

Archive 06-15-2005 10:41 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>tbob</b><p>I don't know if collectors are going to sell out completely. I think there are several like myself who are selling duplicates of cards hoarded away or cards from sets which will never realistically be completed. They are selling now in this market so they can buy cards needed from other sets they are pursuing. <br />Since my job is one of those Leon would designate as a "real job" <img src="/images/happy.gif" height=14 width=14> I have to buy and sell as I go along in trying to accumulate cards.

Archive 06-15-2005 10:59 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>identify7</b><p>I certainly am no spokesperson for the peasants, but last time I heard from them - it was unusual for any of them to spend $250 or above on a card without giving it very careful consideration; from both a collection/investment logistics perspective and from a "gee, should my family tie up this money right now" assessment.<br /><br />So, I do not think that an escalation in the prices for rare cards is going to necessarilly have much peasant impact, since rare cards are rare in their collections. Does anyone think that key e107s going in the $10-20K range is going to effect peasant cards anytime soon?

Archive 06-15-2005 11:01 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Hal Lewis</b><p>Is there any danger of the MODERN baseball card market becoming so worthless that they just QUIT making baseball cards at all??<br /><br />This would scare me, because then the hobby might eventually die from having no new collectors join the ranks as youngsters.<br /><br />I don't follow the modern stuff...<br /><br />but does anyone know if the kids can still afford to buy a wax-pack...<br /><br />and if any of the do?

Archive 06-15-2005 11:10 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>barrysloate</b><p>Lots of good points while I stepped out. For Bob, I have seen plenty of people get out of the hobby, it's not right to say that people don't get out. For Jay, Picassos and Van Goghs are extremely rare, but we have seen dips in the art market. And the disparity between the very rich and poor is a sore point with me; I don't like what is happening in this country. But my own personal opinion has nothing to do with the price of E107 HOFers. And Hal, I don't think kids are buying packs of baseball cards today like they did a generation ago, but that doesn't mean they can't be collectors of vintage material when they get older and have money to spend. You don't have to be a pre-teen pack collector to graduate into fine collectibles, so it's tough to see the connection. The nostalgia element won't be there, but that's just one factor.

Archive 06-15-2005 11:10 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Richard Masson</b><p>is dead. The market is now a low end lottery for adults. Spend an afternoon at a local card shop (if you can find one) and you will find it very depressing. Even worse, buy a Beckett magazine and try to figure out what all those listings are. It's all a penny stock market with 50% bid-ask spreads.<br /><br />My vibe is that we skip a generation and hope for a resurgence around 2050. I should complete the E107 set around then.<br /><br />

Archive 06-15-2005 11:14 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Josh K.</b><p>why am I starting to have the same feeling I did after buying all my tech stocks in the late 90s? Anyone want to buy some cisco or sun at 100+ per share?

Archive 06-15-2005 11:17 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Scott Elkins</b><p>is............technology. I still remember wanting to buy T206's and other old cards when I was 8 years old. However, I was limited to the flea markets around where I live. The oldest cards I could find were 1950's (though I did stumble across a few CJ's at one time that were too expensive for me then).<br /><br />To this date, I still have never found a true vintage card within 150 miles of where I live. I, like many others, have now found out that we can find most any card we want on the internet (though we have to wait a while sometimes - like with the E107's).<br /><br />Anyway, the internet has helped vintage card collecting mature much faster than art, stamps, coins etc. did in the past.

Archive 06-15-2005 11:23 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>barrysloate</b><p>Richard- if you are around in 2050, please remember me fondly. And Scott, yes technology has drastically changed the landscape- there's a flea market 365 days a year. But it's still supply and demand. Right now there is a wonderful balance between a large number of sellers and an even larger pool of buyers. But that stasis tends to shift- nobody knows the future and no one can say with certainty that rare baseball cards have nowhere to go but up. I'm not saying they can't go up, I'm just saying they can go down.

Archive 06-15-2005 11:32 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Jay Miller</b><p>I would think that a rough proxy for the health of the modern card market is the performance of the stock of Topps. Over the last 5 years the stock has traded from roughly $7.50/share to $12. Now the stock is at $9.50, smack in the middle of the range. Not a great performance but hardly a need to put it on life support. Card shops are dead--ebay took care of that. Check out the classified section in SCD; it is almost non-existent. This may explain what I see as the slow death of the publication. However, I believe that what we are seeing has happened in other hobbies. How many kids collect coins today? Has this hurt the rare coin market? I don't believe so. Same for stamps. No kids collect art (at least not any I know) but the art market is thriveing. Who knows, maybe this is the baseball card version of tulipmania. Nothing wrong with that--just don't get stuck holding the tulip. <img src="/images/happy.gif" height=14 width=14>

Archive 06-15-2005 11:49 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Richard</b><p>Along with the question about the rising prices of modern day packs and how that will affect new kids and new collectors getting into the collecting market, you could also draw the parallel of how many people (and kids) can afford to go to a ballgame. <br /><br />The days of catching a weekend game for a few bucks are over and now a day at the ballpark can run a family of 4 easily several hundred dollars (tickets, food, souveniers, etc). Watching your favorite player 10-20 times a year is now only reserved for those with a decent amount of expendible funds. What does this mean long term for the game?<br /><br />Compare this to the modern card business . . . how many kids can walk into a store and spend $100 on a pack? Truly only reserved to the "upper class"

Archive 06-15-2005 12:09 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Richard Masson</b><p>Net income has steadily declined over the last five years and now the company is for sale (Shorin agreed to not pass a poison pill). <br /><br />Stamps sell at a fraction of the values they commanded two decades ago.<br /><br />Modern art has been run up largely due to the efforts of one knucklehead hedge fund guy (the rotting shark in a fish tank for $25 million?).<br /><br />Price is determined at the margin: the one card for sale, the one or two top bidders. What leads to excess is when the buyers get the impression that there will always be that cover bid. When that disappears is when every marginal holder decides to sell and prices decline. Will the current buyers at the high end ever need the money? If not, stated prices may decline, but little product will change hands.

Archive 06-15-2005 12:24 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Rich Klein</b><p>How many kids collect coins today? Has this hurt the rare coin market?<br /><br />Jay, in reality due to brilliant marketing moves like the state quarters being released a few years at a time, there has been an increase of young people into the coin market.<br /><br />That is because the introductory phase of coin collecting (of which an average person can do 40 years) is based on pocket change.<br /><br />There is much more interest on lower level coins and currency than there has been in years.<br /><br />Regards<br />Rich

Archive 06-15-2005 12:28 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>warshawlaw</b><p>On the actual topic of this thread, while I understand that no one has a complete set has anyone ever assessed the population of these cards to determine whether there is a full set in existence? That would be an interesting bit of info for you collectors/masochists. Might inspire some earthshattering trades <img src="/images/happy.gif" height=14 width=14><br /><br />As far as the card market goes, I have several random thoughts: <br /><br />First of all, I don't share the same pessimism as many do w/r/t the development of future collectors. Kids do collect, they just don't collect what we collect. The days of 12 year olds (like I was) having collections rivaling adults and setting up as dealers at shows is over, just like the days of having people practically throw boxes of old cards at you to get rid of them. My 6 year old nephew and his friends all collect baseball cards but they get the cheapo packs that many of the manufacturers put out right now with no fanfare alongside the richy-rich packs with all the crapola inserted. There are a number of products out there that can give a kid a pack for a buck, retail. Most kids' allowances today allow them to buy a pack a week, at least, which is about where it was when I was a kid. As I recall it was about 25 cents for a pack and my first allowance was around that level. Upper Deck especially has been cognizant of that market and creating packs for it. Are they "worth" something? No. But the kids like them. If they like the cards and are interested and find trading them to be fun, when these kids develop a bit more maturity and sophistication, I am sure that some of them will end up at shows and interested in old cards. As long as they aren't condition bugs or chasing E107 type cards, they can have a rewarding collecting experience as kids. If they go after cards of all time greats like Aaron, Mays, Seaver, Gibson, etc., they can readily score lower grade cards from the 1970s for huge discounts at any decent show or on ebay. Remember too that THE KIDS DON'T KNOW HOW IT WAS BEFORE; to them, everything today is normal. We are the ones who are worried because we recall "how it used to be". <br /><br />Second, we are so far removed from a magnates-only market that the comparison with rare art just isn't accurate. Sure, the headline cards draw amazing money, but what the vast majority of collectors are perfectly happy to collect cost a few hundred dollars. I can never even aspire to own a Van Gough or a Wagner, but I can certainly aspire to 90% of the cards out there. <br /><br />Third, I think you have to look at the revolutions that card collecting has undergone over the last few decades as a progression towards and then through maturity as a hobby, not as a reason to panic about a bubble. The ACC and Sports Collectors Bible were the first two milestones towards systematization of the hobby, which is the first step in creating a base of collectors all talking the same language about the same stuff. The price guides (Beckett, CPU, etc.) took it to the next level, which was quantifying the market. Once those two forces were in place, the next step was creating a trading floor. In our case it was the many card clubs that sprung up. I was in the West Coast Card Club here in LA; we had a monthly meeting, which was held in a church basement. There were dealer tables for members who wanted them, an auction and a lot of socializing. This was followed by the non-club big shows when promotion made sense. Show development culminated in the National formation in the early 1980s. The next step was the formation of additional trading sites in the form of card stores. From these elements, a national collecting movement was formed. Since the early 1980s, the changes in the hobby have been driven by technology and marketing. The first innovation was the autograph show, which dramatically expanded the appeal of the shows, especially when you could get (as I did) a DiMaggio autograph for $12 or could shake hands with Sandy Koufax (as I also did) instead of being churned through an assembly line. It took the existence of shows and stores and hobby papers and guides and counterfeiters to get the manufacturers to begin (a) paying attention to the non-kid customers and (b) innovating like heck. Fleer and Donruss started the marketing and development fight in 1983-84; Upper Deck started the technical boom in new stuff with its 1989-91 issues. The show-store-marketing economy flourished until the late 1990s when the internet and auctions clobbered both old marketing models BY REPLACING THEM WITH NEW MODELS. That wasn't the death knell for the hobby; if anything, it has expanded even more. Slabbing boosted the price effect even further by generating a perception of fungibility and objectivity (yeah, I know... that is why I said "perception"). <br /><br />I am optimistic because we are no longer seen as the weird card geeks trading worthless paper in church basements. I got so much $hit for collecting as a teen that I dropped out completely from ages 15-22. Does anyone realize that the president of a major telecom company was in here yesterday talking about his recent six figure card expenditures? We've gone from a clown act to major investment over the last 30 years. Once investments develop that sort of momentum it is rare that they fall totally out of favor unless technological changes kill them off. <br />

Archive 06-15-2005 12:39 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Jim F</b><p>WELL SAID!! And on a side note, how many people would not have been introduced to collecting or collecting a lot less if it wasn't for the internet? Jim

Archive 06-15-2005 01:02 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>barrysloate</b><p>Adam- You had my complete attention until you mentioned that dreaded word: "investments." Investors are a fickle bunch- they buy, and they sell. And they have no problem dumping- be it stock, businesses, art, collectibles, you name it. Investors controlling the market does not warm my heart. If I thought that were the case, I'd recommend for everybody to sell- the quicker the better. Collectors are the only ones who can keep the market stable.

Archive 06-15-2005 01:19 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Richard Masson</b><p>Collectors with money are buying the rare stuff; Investors are buying the PSA 9s and 10s.

Archive 06-15-2005 01:23 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Tom Boblitt</b><p>chit chat between John Maynard Keynes and Adam Smith........<br />How much is the Powerball this week?<br /><br />

Archive 06-15-2005 01:26 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>identify7</b><p>And Jay Behrens is buying the lower grade stuff.<br /><br />My money is with him. I see more collectors buying vintage every day - and most can best afford to put together lower grade collections. You never know, demand could affect prices.

Archive 06-15-2005 01:32 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Hal Lewis</b><p>Rich Masson is correct.<br /><br />Whoever it was that paid $240,000+ for the 1914 Babe Ruth Baltimore News card did so because of how RARE it was...<br /><br />NOT because it was a PSA 4 instead of a 3 or a 5.<br /><br />Same is true for these E107's.<br /><br /><br />To pay RIDICULOUS prices for anything higher than a PSA 8 card is when I think you start to get into the "investment" category. <br /><br />The difference between a PSA 8 card and a PSA 10 card can sometimes be VERY MINUTE... so to pay a LOT MORE for a PSA 10 when there are a LOT of 8's floating around would seem crazy. But what do I know?<br /><br />

Archive 06-15-2005 01:40 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Hal Lewis</b><p>For instance, a collector can get a VERY nice perfectly-centered 1951 Bowman Mickey Mantle rookie card in PSA 8 condition for $20,000. There have been about 50 of these graded by PSA and SGC, with many more certainly lurking out there.<br /><br />Is it "wise" to spend an extra $130,00 just to be able to say that you own the ONLY PSA 10 example of that card???<br /><br />Can that really be considered a good investment??<br /><br />I say "no."

Archive 06-15-2005 01:46 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Jay Miller</b><p>Hal--Is that you or someone using your handle? Aren't you the guy who has to have the highest graded card of each HOFer and who makes a point of listing the cards in that manner on your web site?

Archive 06-15-2005 01:49 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Hal Lewis</b><p>Yes.<br /><br />That is my point exactly.<br /><br />I am 100% a COLLECTOR... NOT an "investor."<br /><br />I am ADMITTING that to make any such purchase could ONLY be done by someone who wants to collect and "possess" and NOT someone who is truly thinking about it solely as an "investment."<br /><br />How I choose to throw away my money is my business!!!<br /><br /><img src="/images/wink.gif" height=14 width=14>

Archive 06-15-2005 01:56 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>identify7</b><p>Investing in a card solely because of grade rarity is a risky investment imho, because you never know how many as good or better cards exist which have not been submitted for verification by a service which may know less than the card owner.

Archive 06-15-2005 02:00 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Jay Miller</b><p>Hal--OK so let me understand. You are saying that you are an irrational collector, not a rational investor. I have no issue with that. I was just trying to reconcile your words with your actions.

Archive 06-15-2005 02:19 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Hal Lewis</b><p>After all this time...<br /><br />do you really think that anyone on this board is going to categorize me as anything BUT an IRRATIONAL COLLECTOR??<br /><br /><img src="/images/happy.gif" height=14 width=14><br /><br />I am the poster child for "Irrational Exuberance" in our hobby!!!

Archive 06-15-2005 02:21 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>robert a</b><p>This is an interesting thread.<br />We've talked a lot about the sudden movement by collectors over the last year or so to frantically buy up all of the caramels (and sometimes tobaccos...as if they are going somewhere) without a care. True E107 collectors have to be affected the most by this. Not that E107 collectors aren't prepared to spend the big bucks already for higher grade commons and hofers, but now low grade commons are pretty darn expensive.<br /><br />E107s represent the pinnacle of caramel sets for hardcore collectors.<br />It's not that it can't be completed in my opinion, but rather that it will never be completed by someone who is starting the set right now. Those few collectors that have started on the set years ago might have a chance, but the recent trend will definitely stunt the growth of any collector's E107 additions. I think that a few collectors will sell now due to the nice prices they will receive and the cards will sit in new collections for a couple of years until the new collector decides to resell them. Of course, the type collectors might hold on to a few nicer hofers.<br /><br />I have no doubt that collectors jumping on the E107 bandwagon love vintage cards, I just hope (for their own health) that they don't have any intention of trying to actually finish it.<br /><br />As far as collectors go though, I've agree with the notion, "Once a collector, always a collector." There's no escape. Hopefully, folks who appear to be "getting out" are really just reloading or selling off the overpriced stuff and settling in to a new and less expensive challenge once they realize the market has ruined there hopes of completion.<br />robert<br /><br /><br /><br />

Archive 06-15-2005 04:09 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>warshawlaw</b><p>everyone, or just about everyone, will consider selling. I've sold cards from my "permanent collection" when offered more than I ever expected for them.

Archive 06-15-2005 04:12 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Richard Masson</b><p>You're bumming me out, man. I'm an E107 newbie with stars in my eyes. Now all I want to do is go kill myself.

Archive 06-15-2005 05:10 PM

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Posted By: <b>robert a</b><p>Richard.<br />Sorry man...but welcome to the club. <br />I definitely don't mean to bum anyone out though!<br />If you've got tons of cash, I guess anything's possible.<br />I learned fast that e107 is out of my league.<br /><br />

Archive 06-15-2005 05:27 PM

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Posted By: <b>jay behrens</b><p>Wow, I disappear for a few days and I've been annoited the King of Crappy Commons <img src="/images/happy.gif" height=14 width=14> I like that title. BcD, feel free to use it as often as you like <img src="/images/wink.gif" height=14 width=14><br /><br />Jay<br><br>My place is full of valuable, worthless junk.

Archive 06-15-2005 05:37 PM

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Posted By: <b>warshawlaw</b><p>I wouldn't worry too much about it <img src="/images/happy.gif" height=14 width=14><br /><br />

Archive 06-15-2005 06:42 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Daniel Bretta</b><p>Didn't a lot of 45-50 E107's sell in last December's Mastro auction for about $30,000? How much would those go for today, just six months later?<br /><br />

Archive 06-15-2005 07:03 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Art M.</b><p>I know a collector who has a COMPLETE E107 Type I set. This set includes a couple of team variation cards (not sure if these are listed in the standard catalog). The same collector is only missing 2 cards from having a complete E107 Type II set.

Archive 06-15-2005 07:20 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>scott brockelman</b><p>it appears that several people have been reading this thread and posts' with interest. i am an E107 collector that has owned over 300 E107's and followed them extensivly. there are 6 collectors pursuing the set, DOES THAT SAY ENOUGH ABOUT RARITY! , and we have a couple of newbies as well. <br /><br />NO ONE HAS EVER COMPLETED THE E107 SET, no oldtimers, such as Nagy, Burdick, MacPherson, or others, a few came close, but none completed it, compare that to even RARE sets such as T204, to date over 20-30 have completed that. <br /><br />in modern times we have 1 key collector within 1 card of completing the type 1's. another that needs less than 10, 2 which need 15-20 and a couple others that need 20-30. these numbers are a bit vague for indendity purposes. <br /><br />the recent explosion in prices may or may not hold true forever, however the rarity is concrete. most of the E107's in the above sets are not gems, in fact they would grade vg+/- on most collector scales, but are much cherished by their owners as they represent a time and era unduplicated on any other card issue, save the W600's. in response to one post, when a card comes up for sale or auction we need, we pay whatever it takes to get it, as another may not come up for years!<br /><br />i do not feel that recent sales will hurt the prices of the cards as the number of available copies is very finite. is there an end to madness? no probably not, what we consider high prices, rare coin, antiquity and art dealers would scoff at. in our world 5 figures is extreme, in theirs 6-7 figures is the norm. in reply to some that the price may outpace the buyers ability, the absolute opposite is true, rarity and price draw in the well healed and drive the market even higher. on this board we now have collectors that are quite knowledgable of cards and baseball history driving the market, they are not just investors but historians and keepers of the past.<br /><br />i may try to post some E107 scans later to satisfy that pictoral thirst.<br /><br />scott

Archive 06-15-2005 08:08 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Scott Elkins</b><p>One Thing I notice as well is that: In the coin market, some coins are conisdered rare, even though hundreds exist in different grades. In my opinion some of the truly rare vintage cards are much more of a value for the money (especially long term), as there are but a scant few known to exist (E107's, T207 Red Crosses, T205 Drums, etc. etc.).<br /><br />Sure, they may not be "One of a Kind" like a particular Van Gogh painting. However, they don't carry an 8 figure price tag either.<br /><br />I also agree that, just as in the past, we are not even close to the maximum prices for the truly rare vintage cards.

Archive 06-15-2005 10:37 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Julie</b><p><img src="/images/happy.gif" height=14 width=14>

Archive 06-15-2005 11:53 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Brian Engelhard</b><p>I have a Van Gogh reproduction hanging on my wall; hand painted and not a foil transfer. Some sweat shop produced it, actually making it affordable. If you really like Van Gogh, you can see most of works in Amsterdam, Paris has several and I think NYC has one or two. I must caution that you won't find any nice "baseball" cards in Amsterdam or Paris, but if you look hard enough you might find some Football cards (ie soccer). <br /><br />Now that I'm off track, I don't think you'll find a collector that has a vintage card and a Van Gogh. <br />

Archive 06-16-2005 12:32 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Paul</b><p>I have been following all the major auctions for at least 20 years, and ebay since almost the beginning. Up until about 3-4 years ago, I had seen exactly two E107s for sale (a McGinnity and a Delahanty). I may have missed a few, but not many. My question is this: until the last 3-4 years, where were collectors buying these things? I assume that the few collectors who are nearing completion have been at it a long time. Where were they buying these cards 5-10 years ago?

Archive 06-16-2005 06:20 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Tom Boblitt</b><p>I've had a few and what's the difference between type 1 and type 2? Is it the back--blank versus printed or something else?<br />

Archive 06-16-2005 07:32 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Andy Baran</b><p>The Type 2's are hand cut and on thicker stock.

Archive 06-16-2005 08:05 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Chuck R</b><p>Unless my calculator blew a circuit, the upper limit on 8 figures is $99,000,000....has any painting ever exceeded that price?

Archive 06-16-2005 09:01 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Max Weder</b><p>A google search for "most expensive painting" turned up a $104,168,000 Picasso --Garcon a la Pipe in May 2004. I haven't seen any e107s exceed that price yet.<br /><br /><a href="http://antiques2.iantiquesguide.com/article.php?story=20040506122442709&mode=print" target="_new" rel="nofollow">http://antiques2.iantiquesguide.com/article.php?story=20040506122442709&mode=print</a><br /><br />Max

Archive 06-16-2005 09:39 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Josh K.</b><p>actually, the upper limit on 8 figures is 99,999,999. <img src="/images/happy.gif" height=14 width=14>

Archive 06-16-2005 09:57 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>tbob</b><p>I agree with much of what has been said about the hobby continuing long after I am gone but I do worry about the kids not buying those Topps packs, reading books about baseball, watching games for the sheer enjoyment, etc. Most of the Gen-Xers don't know Bullet Bush from Dubbya. I worry that the hobby will transform itself in to a chase for the highest graded cards for investment (there's that dreaded word again) purposes. One of the things which distinguishes our hobby from others like coins, stamps, etc. is the thread of history and personalities running through it. Merkle's Boner, The Called Shot, 56 in a row, Gionfriddo's catch, the Black Sox, the list goes on and on. Someone once said that the American experience has only created two truly original and noteworthy things: Baseball and Jazz. If kids quit buying packs of their heroes and wondering about those who came before them will the hobby survive in any form we recognize? No matter what the NASCAR-pro football-NBA fans say, baseball is still the truly American sport. Where else can you say "60," "61," "755," "56," "1919," or ".400" and people will know exactly what you are talking about. Who can name the point total for most points scored in a season in the NBA? Who knows the record for most touchdown passes? Who knows the record for most goals saved in a season. Baseball is America and America is Baseball. Ken Burns was right. I just hope that the younger generations will cherish the game and develop an interest in "Tinker to Evers to Chance" "The Sultan of Swat" and "The Muffed Fly" and it will translate in to a love of collecting those little pieces of cardbaord for more than investment sake...

Archive 06-16-2005 10:07 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Julie Vognar</b><p>I was thinking, if you can call it that, that "8 figures" was like "85,000,"--which is obviously FIVE FIGURES. It only takes 7 figures to make a million. Sorry, everyone.

Archive 06-16-2005 10:50 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>barrysloate</b><p>Bob- If the hobby continues to evolve the way it is now, it will become an elitist pastime for the very rich, and knowing the history of the game and its players will be optional. Does everyone who purchases a Van Gogh know about the life of the artist? Probably not, and it doesn't matter. The next generation of card collectors will know what vintage cards cost, although perhaps not really knowing much about the player. Good or bad, the word "hobby" will soon no longer relate to the pursuit of rare baseball cards. Not the end of the world- things always change- but it will certainly be different for the next generation.

Archive 06-16-2005 11:16 AM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Scott Elkins</b><p>I know I don't follow art that closely (unless you count the great artwork on vintage cards). I thought for a moment, prices must have escalated in the art circles dramatically from a few years ago - over $100 Million - WOW! Of course, one would have to assume that if "Stary Night" ever came up for auction, that it would well exceed $100 Million.<br /><br />The $10k or so that Leon spent on the Fan's Cigarettes Baker is a much better investment percentage wise than $50 Million on a painting - Good Eye Leon! Although, with Leon posting his collection for sale, he might be wanting to exit vintage cards and enter the art market???????

Archive 06-16-2005 12:42 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Jay Miller</b><p>Barry---Why do you assume that knowledge is negatively correlated with compensation? I would assume that the opposite is true or at least that there is no correlation.

Archive 06-16-2005 12:58 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>barrysloate</b><p>Jay- I lost you on that one. Could you please rephrase the question.

Archive 06-16-2005 01:22 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>warshawlaw</b><p>Why assume that just because someone has lots of money to spend on cards that they don't or won't care about the history of the game? Isn't it just as likely that someone with the ability to put their cash into anything they want would gravitate towards cards only if they understood and appreciated them? After all, cards aren't as liquid as stocks or bonds, as durable as land, they don't generate any income, and there are many lousy card investments out there.

Archive 06-16-2005 01:48 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>leon</b><p>I usually agree with most things you write about but.....cards aren't liquid? Maybe not in the sense you can buy gas or pay your mortgage with them....but I think they are very liquid. Have you put an E107 or E94 on the BST section lately? I would think that you could have money overnighted to you by many individuals for these types of cards and, at the right price, almost any cards we have. regards

Archive 06-16-2005 03:59 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>warshawlaw</b><p>Cards are semi-liquid as I define it. Will an extremely rare, high demand card sell fast for a market price? Sure. With anything else, however, which is what most of us have, you can get some money out of them quickly if you wholesale them to a dealer but it will take weeks or even months to cash out of a sizable collection at anywhere near market value. To me, liquid means you can sell the item at market instantly via a mechanism that generates an immediate enforceable right to the proceeds. If you have to take a shave and a haircut to move it fast, or you have to wait a week or more before the money is safe, it ain't liquid. Stocks are liquid. Mutual funds are liquid. Bonds are liquid. Sell a stock and it is gone at market immediately, the funds are credited towards your account immediately, and you know you absolutely will get them on settlement day because the market is designed to ensure that the funds needed are on hand (either in cash from the buyer or in the form of cash loan proceeds from the brokerage) before the buyer is allowed to bid.

Archive 06-16-2005 04:04 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>leon</b><p>Fair enough....that explanation makes sense....I agree that when I sell a stock it's instant and the SEC makes sure there is good accounting for the money to be there ( I think ). If I have a vg 52 Topps, and I want full retail, it might not move so quickly.....regards

Archive 06-16-2005 04:06 PM

E107 - Entire set
 
Posted By: <b>Max Weder</b><p>Adam<br /><br />Stocks are much like cards. Many are highly liquid, but many others have low volume and are thinly traded. There may be often be a considerable spread between Bid and Ask. <br /><br />Max,<br />whose vintage baseball card portfolio resembles NASDAQ OTC


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