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-   -   Are people dumping E98's? (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=157094)

ullmandds 09-28-2012 04:41 PM

Are people dumping E98's?
 
It seems lately...there are a lot of e98's for sale on ebay. Tons more than before the "find"...it seems.

Has anyone else noticed this?

And I'm not talking reprints from the national!

cobblove 09-28-2012 05:05 PM

Yes. I have noticed an increase in them as well. Low grade stuff. More auctions than buy it nows as well.

big80s 09-28-2012 06:43 PM

I hope so! There are several that I'd like to pick up.

packs 09-28-2012 07:00 PM

Still waiting for a low grade Wags for my collection.

chaddurbin 09-28-2012 07:22 PM

professional hand models need to eat also.

scooter729 09-28-2012 07:44 PM

The ones I have seen on eBay appear to be getting strong prices for low grades - new collectors pursuing the set because of its popularity maybe?

tbob 09-29-2012 03:32 PM

I think there has been an increased number of E98s for sale lately due to the Black Swamp Find. It is anticipated that so many high grade E98s will eventually be on the market that low grade E98s are being sold with an eye toward future tumbling prices. Personally I think the E98 prices will stay fairly steady on low and mid grade E98s and it will be interesting to see what the high grade cards bring. You may have some bloody battles for some of the cards as Registry guys get involved....

tbob 09-29-2012 03:34 PM

I also think that since almost all the Black Swamp Find cards were red backgrounds with a handful of green, that orange and blue background E98s will continue to be popular and scarce...

Tim Kindler 09-30-2012 09:01 PM

People might be dumping......
 
People might be dumping them, but they sure are getting alot for their trash. The same bidder bought a red McLean, a blue Bridwell, and a blue Tenney on ebay tonight for what I would consider very strong prices. They were all really beat up with wrinkles and pin holes. I think the new popularity of the set , thanks to the Black Swamp Find, will keep the prices where they are at even with the amount of new, high grade cards out there.

shammus 09-30-2012 10:02 PM

Well, McLean and Bridwell went for about what I thought they would. McLean has some wrinkling but was only $33. I was happy with the price on the Tenney though. I was thinking it might go higher just because of the color/player combo. Happy to complete my set of the four e98 Tenney's too!

I think right now there are a few of us competing over certain e98 player/color combos. The good news is some of us are wrapping up our projects though so that might take some of the competitiveness away and lower prices a bit.

caramelcard 09-30-2012 10:25 PM

Can't everyone just let Tim finish his master set?? :)

I sure felt the competition when I was after the E98s.

Hang in there Tim!

shammus 10-01-2012 08:29 AM

I don't want to speak for Tim, but I believe he has the blue Tenney and all the other e98s that ended last night :)

ullmandds 10-01-2012 02:36 PM

Tim's almost there...it won't be long now?!?!

I still think the BS find has caused a lot of e98's to hit the market due to fear of falling prices and it will take many years for things to return to prior levels once the extent of the find hits the marketplace. Just mo!

cobblove 10-01-2012 03:17 PM

Have any others from the find been sold yet?

Tim Kindler 10-01-2012 09:57 PM

Love those E98s
 
I love discussing E98s, so I'm thankful for this thread. Thanks for the kind words Peter and Rob. Yep, only 8 to go, but I'm not fooling myself. It might be awhile yet.... I still need 2 Cobbs and 2 Youngs! Anyway, I guess you are correct Brian in that those on ebay didn't go for too much, but I did think the Tenney was high. But, then again, when it comes to one you really need you will always pay whatever it takes. I will probably pay some pretty stupid prices for what I have left to get as well when they come up for sale:rolleyes:
Brian, Congratulations on that Blue Tenney. It is a tough one. I was fortunate to find one this year at the National. Very thankful for the price on it as well.

I'm really not sure about the prices yet??? I did see that the E98 population report on SGC went up by about 150 cards in the last few weeks. Most of them seem to be realy high grades as well. This has to be some of the Black Swamp cards right???? Are these going to be new to the general public or would the buyers of the big Heritage Auction have crossed them over...which I doubt, but who knows?

Pete, If you are going after that Blue Chance in Goodwin, good luck my friend!:) That was sincere!:D If you haven't seen Pete's near set on the SGC registry, it is worth checking out. Beautiful cards. My four sets are not updated, but still on there. I need to send some off to SGC!
Tim Kindler

pcoz 10-02-2012 04:26 AM

E98's
 
Thanks Tim, and congrats to be down the homestretch on an amazing collection/accomplishment! Yes, my hat's in the ring on the Chance. We'll see, it's getting up there! Brian, nice work on the Blue Tenney, as another may not come up for years! I don't think there's been a flood in the market of E98's. Putting it in perspective, outside of the National promos, there's less than 20 on ebay. Just went to the Philly show, and there was literally 2(only 4 E94's) that I saw at the whole show. There's a lack of clarity right now with where the market will inevitably be when the rest of the BSF gets unloaded(I heard all of them by the end of the year for estate tax purposes), what the future interest will be in master set collectors and the value of the different colors. It's not a matter of if, but when the caramels heat up again, I'm sure we'll see those that have them without long term collecting intentions sell into strength. Sorry for rambling, but I just don't think we've seen that many recently to say they've been getting dumped.

ullmandds 10-02-2012 12:02 PM

Additionally...does the ranking of difficulty of E98 need to be reconsidered in comparison to other e issues?

pcoz 10-02-2012 05:34 PM

E98's
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by ullmandds (Post 1041096)
Additionally...does the ranking of difficulty of E98 need to be reconsidered in comparison to other e issues?

They have been very tough to find, especially these past couple of years. We can probably all chime in on player/color difficulty, with some really standing out, ie..Red Lajoie, Blue Mack, etc...For both SGC & PSA Pop reports there are just under 2,500 total. So, about 82 cards on average per player, with some in those numbers that have been crossed between each company. Of course there are some ungraded floating around not in those numbers as well. So, let's say 100-120 per player, give or take a few. So, E98's are still somewhat scarce even after the BSF. I'm not sure where they stack up vs. other E sets, but I'd say probably in the middle of the pack.

ullmandds 10-02-2012 05:35 PM

Nice synopsis pete...i for the most part...agree!

Bosox Blair 10-02-2012 06:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pcoz (Post 1041193)
So, let's say 100-120 per player, give or take a few. So, E98's are still somewhat scarce even after the BSF. I'm not sure where they stack up vs. other E sets, but I'd say probably in the middle of the pack.

I don't think so Pete...with those graded pops, E98 is now likely one of the least scarce E sets if you are combining all colors of E98. I'd say only Cracker Jack is as available as E98 now. Maybe E95 too. I believe even E90-1 looks scarcer, based on graded pops.

(Of course there is always the weakness of relying too much on graded pops, as opposed to ungraded cards in collections, but that is true of any such comparison.)


Cheers,
Blair

pcoz 10-02-2012 07:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bosox Blair (Post 1041203)
I don't think so Pete...with those graded pops, E98 is now likely one of the least scarce E sets if you are combining all colors of E98. I'd say only Cracker Jack is as available as E98 now. Maybe E95 too. I believe even E90-1 looks scarcer, based on graded pops.

(Of course there is always the weakness of relying too much on graded pops, as opposed to ungraded cards in collections, but that is true of any such comparison.)


Cheers,
Blair

Blair, I respectfully disagree with them being anywhere near as plentiful as E90-1, Cracker Jacks, E95, E92, E91 or E93's. I'm probably missing some sets too. All of those are without question much easier to find. The National had a gazillion of all of them, and less than 20 E98's/E94's. As I previously mentioned, the Philly show had almost no E98/E94's. There are obviously more E98's now than before after the BSF. But, the BSF cards will end up in high end collections, and the low to mid-grade ones will probably remain extremely difficult to track down. I've been after E98's for years, and I'm sure some of the other fellas on the board can back me up on this.

shammus 10-02-2012 07:34 PM

Thanks for the kind words, guys!

I suppose I'd be in the group that thinks the BSF will eventually cause a drop in prices as supply continues to increase. Yes, I realize all the new BSF cards are highgrade, but many collectors, including all the set registry guys will see all these highgrade cards and pursue them. Then, if theory holds, they'll put their dupes up on the market creating sort of a trickle down effect.

Also, keep in mind, I don't believe we've seen the bulk of the BSF cards released to auction just yet. What, was there in all? 695 cards to be released over 2 years? I think the majority have yet to appear. I don't think they'll get quite to e95 levels in terms of availability but they'll certainly be in around the e93 or e101 level for sure.

pcoz 10-02-2012 08:14 PM

E98's
 
Brian, you could be right on all your points. I consider us both avid E98 collectors, and I can't speak for you, but I have very little interest in the BSF cards. I may pick up a couple along the way, but doubt I'd make a run at more than that as I work towards a Master set. If the prewar market is as strong as I think it is, the BSF cards IMO will be absorbed by new collectors into E98's that have had their interest piqued by the find. I'm not sure they're presently E98 collectors working on a Master set with a bunch to dump. I'm in the camp of thinking the low-mid grade E98's will hold steady and increase over time as those with future interests and less of a budget will be able to afford these...almost two separate markets of E98 collectors. Different color demand, ie...Blues(none in the Find) might spur interest too. Time will tell and I've been wrong before.

shammus 10-02-2012 08:46 PM

Hey Pete! Hope you are well!

I don't know if I see collector's dumping their e98s just because they fear dropping prices. I know for myself, I don't really care if they drop or not, I'm in it to finish the set because I'm a collector working on a project...heh...I'm not worried about their resale value because I have no interest in parting with mine. I think there are quite a few others that would probably feel the same way.

But, I do see prices dropping with the raise in supply. I see the highgrade BSF cards going to set registry guys and highgrade collectors for the most part. I don't see new entrants into the hobby really pursuing these, as e98s in this nice of condition, generally speaking, aren't exactly affordable for new collectors. BUT, new collectors would pursue the low to mid grade dupes placed out on the market by the highgrade/set registry guys if they're able to upgrade. My thinking is that eventually, once the bulk of these cards start hitting the market, the high grade guys will upgrade, leaving their low-mid grade dupes on the open market which will create the increase in supply on those levels too...thusly creating that "trickle-down" effect I mentioned - causing prices to drop.

We'll have to wait a couple years for all this to play out of course, but sure, I can easily see e98s falling into levels of availability that are akin to e93s, e101s, e102s, etc...

I'd also agree with you on your assessment of the BSF e98s finding their way into your own personal collection - many of my own e98s are lowgrade and I'd be truly surprised if even one of those nice, fancy BSF examples made it's way over here :)

caramelcard 10-02-2012 09:10 PM

I look at this find as a separate group of E98s. Within that high grade group, some of the cards might not demand as much as others when they're sold off.

The demand is still there for lower to mid grade E98s and collectors like myself and others will never stop watching the market and buying them as they appear at auction. It only takes two of us to push one of these low grade cards over 100 bucks or more. And many of us won't bid on the cards from the find so it won't really affect the values of the other examples that come up for sale.

Not all, but many of the collectors that really pay attention to the set aren't as interested in high grade cards as they are quantity, studying the set, and/or just completing a player set.

You guys may not agree, but if you ignore the new find, I believe there are far more raw E98s in collections than graded cards.

Comparing E98s to E95 and E96s, even with the new find it's still not even close in my opinion. E95s are still 10 times or more plentiful. They may have pulled much closer to say E93 though.

Rob

pcoz 10-03-2012 04:15 AM

E98's
 
Hey Brian, all is well thx and hopefully with you too! Trickle down theory makes sense with more supply, and Rob, there have been equally as many raw as graded when they've popped up. So, you could both be right. I'm really interested to see if the various backs bring different premiums in time, and how many collectors look to pursue E98's in general. It's a great set and one I've really enjoyed collecting.

tbob 10-03-2012 12:33 PM

Good luck to all the E98 master set collectors out there. I know I have picked up E98s in colors I didn't have but I am leaving the master set to guys like Tim and others. I have enough heartache trying to complete the E94 master set although I am close. What is very discouraging to me is that there is a reason certain player/color variations never pop up on ebay or in auctions in the E94, they are (for some unknown reason) damn scarce! :( You also have to deal with the Cobb and Wagner (and to a certain extent) Young collectors out there who don't care if a background is violet or olive green. Frustraing....
Sorry to turn the thread from E98s to E94s...
P.S. I still check the backs of every scan of an E93 Lajoie to see if lightning will strike twice and PSA or SGC erroneously slabbed an E98 red Lajoie as an E93 Lajoie. That's how I found my (now long gone) E98 red Lajoie, in a PSA holder as an E93. That is without a doubt the toughest E98 color/player combination that exists, nothing else is close...

Bosox Blair 10-03-2012 03:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pcoz (Post 1041228)
Blair, I respectfully disagree with them being anywhere near as plentiful as E90-1, Cracker Jacks, E95, E92, E91 or E93's. I'm probably missing some sets too. All of those are without question much easier to find. The National had a gazillion of all of them, and less than 20 E98's/E94's. As I previously mentioned, the Philly show had almost no E98/E94's. There are obviously more E98's now than before after the BSF. But, the BSF cards will end up in high end collections, and the low to mid-grade ones will probably remain extremely difficult to track down. I've been after E98's for years, and I'm sure some of the other fellas on the board can back me up on this.

Hi Pete,

You might well be right. Just to put it out there, I have no horse in this race...I own one nice E98 HOFer as a type card, and I'm not looking to add more.

I just found the whole Black Swamp thing fascinating (as a lot of other collectors did). Back when that was going on - about 3 months ago - I wrote the following post elsewhere in a discussion of the BSF. You might find it interesting, or not:

I have no doubt collectors will absorb these. But I'm not confident the prices will stay up, or rise later.

Let's stay with Wagner. After the Black Swamp find, the PSA pop report shows 75 E98 Wagners...and 38 of those grade PSA 7 or higher!

In terms of caramel cards, 75 PSA slabbed examples is a very high number. And the grading distribution is almost unheard of for caramels - more than half grading over a 7!

Even using 1915 Cracker Jack to compare (in the world of E-cards, these are some of the easiest to find - and highest graded) when we look at Wagner, PSA has graded 86 examples with 26 of those grading 7 or higher (30%).

People like to mention M116 as a set that has remained low-priced because it is so easy to find high-grade examples (I'm not arguing). But look at Wagner in M116. There are two Honus poses - pastel and blue. Both poses combined, PSA has graded 88 examples. Only 14 of 88 have been graded 7 or higher (16%).

How about some other pretty "easy" Wagner E-cards:

E93 Wagner? PSA has graded 66 with 5 achieving 7 or higher (7.5%).

E95 Wagner? PSA has graded 87 with 2 grading 7 or higher (2.3%).

E92 Dockman Wagner - the easier throwing pose? PSA has graded 46 with 1 grading a 7...none higher (2.2%).

I think these comparisons show how this find has destroyed any thoughts of E98 being generally tough...and certainly not tough in high grade for the cards represented in significant numbers in the find.


Cheers,
Blair

pcoz 10-03-2012 06:24 PM

E98's
 
Hi Blair, thanks for the numbers and we'll see. Your insight is interesting. You're mentioning PSA solely though, and ALL the BSF cards were given to them. SGC tells a quite different story. E98's have been tough to find. With more supply now, they just got less difficult for sure. There's over 100 Babe Ruth RC's, and within that set, no difference in the amount of Babe vs the other cards. But, his RC has quadrupled in price this past year or two. I'm not comparing Babe's RC to Wagner's E98, but neither is rare or abundant. No one knows how collectors will view this set over time. I have a Blue PSA 4 Wagner & Orange SGC 55 Wagner that I would absolutely expect to bring a higher price than it's Red or Green Wagner counterparts found in the BSF. Maybe the prices come down on some, but you may find some that will increase as well due to the BSF.

ullmandds 10-04-2012 07:36 AM

personally...after hearing both sides here...I DO believe the BSF is a game changer for E98...and E98 is now one of the more common caramel issues with an unprecedentedly disproportionate ratio of high grade cards...comparatively speaking.

Touch'EmAll 10-04-2012 08:27 AM

Relativity
 
Looking at all the various E98 population figures posted on this thread, yes, they are tough to come by. So why are 1920's Exhibits of major HOF'ers in mid/high grade so cheap relative to E98's? These Exhibits often have pops like less than 10. I just picked up a 1926 Exhibit Gehrig (head shot) in PSA 5 - bet its lower pop than most of theE98's you discuss - and I got it for a fraction of what you would pay for a higher end E98 major HOFer. Do 1920's Exhibits really have that small of a demand side vs. E98's? The supply side sure is lower.

ullmandds 10-04-2012 09:04 AM

rarity does not equal $$$$$...in all cases?! I think the size of exhibits hurts their values too.

I occasionally wonder about exhibits? It seems the way they were distributed that there should be a lot more of them out there...maybe they're just not graded as readily?

Bosox Blair 10-04-2012 11:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pcoz (Post 1041551)
Hi Blair, thanks for the numbers and we'll see. Your insight is interesting. You're mentioning PSA solely though, and ALL the BSF cards were given to them. SGC tells a quite different story. E98's have been tough to find. With more supply now, they just got less difficult for sure. There's over 100 Babe Ruth RC's, and within that set, no difference in the amount of Babe vs the other cards. But, his RC has quadrupled in price this past year or two. I'm not comparing Babe's RC to Wagner's E98, but neither is rare or abundant. No one knows how collectors will view this set over time. I have a Blue PSA 4 Wagner & Orange SGC 55 Wagner that I would absolutely expect to bring a higher price than it's Red or Green Wagner counterparts found in the BSF. Maybe the prices come down on some, but you may find some that will increase as well due to the BSF.

Hi Pete,

I had not looked at the SGC pops before...so I just did.

Before I looked, I thought (as you did) that there might be a different story at SGC - but now I don't think so entirely.

Again, with Honus Wagner, SGC pop report shows:

E98 - 52 graded, with 7 at a grade of NM 7 or better

'15 CJ - 50 graded, with 13 at a grade of NM 7 or better

M116 - 58 graded, with 1 at a grade of NM 7 or better

E93 - 63 graded, with 3 at a grade of NM 7 or better

E92 Dockman fielding - about 45 graded (tough to say exactly because some flips did not specify the pose)

With SGC, the only real standout difference I saw was with E95 - there are a lot more E95, but the huge bulk of them are low-grade.

E95 - 108 graded, with 2 at a grade of NM 7 - none higher (and 89 of the 108 were graded VG or lower!)

Cheers,
Blair

Bosox Blair 10-04-2012 02:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pcoz (Post 1041551)
I have a Blue PSA 4 Wagner & Orange SGC 55 Wagner that I would absolutely expect to bring a higher price than it's Red or Green Wagner counterparts found in the BSF.

I agree that colors will always provide an intesting differentiation within the set (especially given the composition of the BSF), and prices should continue to reflect that in some way.

Cheers,
Blair

pcoz 10-04-2012 05:06 PM

E98's
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Bosox Blair (Post 1041716)
Hi Pete,

I had not looked at the SGC pops before...so I just did.

Before I looked, I thought (as you did) that there might be a different story at SGC - but now I don't think so entirely.

Again, with Honus Wagner, SGC pop report shows:

E98 - 52 graded, with 7 at a grade of NM 7 or better

'15 CJ - 50 graded, with 13 at a grade of NM 7 or better

M116 - 58 graded, with 1 at a grade of NM 7 or better

E93 - 63 graded, with 3 at a grade of NM 7 or better

E92 Dockman fielding - about 45 graded (tough to say exactly because some flips did not specify the pose)

With SGC, the only real standout difference I saw was with E95 - there are a lot more E95, but the huge bulk of them are low-grade.

E95 - 108 graded, with 2 at a grade of NM 7 - none higher (and 89 of the 108 were graded VG or lower!)

Cheers,
Blair

Blair, a ton of E98's were just crossed over from PSA, hence the new high grades SGC never had before. So, no new cards were found. I've crossed at least 20 over through the years myself. I see your point in the "pop reports", but it's not reality. They are very tough to find, and the ones available soon(BSF), will be expensive when they are made available. Just look on ebay...less than 20 total E98's taking out the National promos, with 150+ for both E93/E95's and 300+ Cracker Jacks. I know the BSF dilutes the set to a point, but maybe it's also made it more accessible and popular as well. I think the jury is still out on all points of the set IMO.

Bosox Blair 10-04-2012 05:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pcoz (Post 1041826)
Blair, a ton of E98's were just crossed over from PSA, hence the new high grades SGC never had before. So, no new cards were found. I've crossed at least 20 over through the years myself. I see your point in the "pop reports", but it's not reality. They are very tough to find, and the ones available soon(BSF), will be expensive when they are made available. Just look on ebay...less than 20 total E98's taking out the National promos, with 150+ for both E93/E95's and 300+ Cracker Jacks. I know the BSF dilutes the set to a point, but maybe it's also made it more accessible and popular as well. I think the jury is still out on all points of the set IMO.

Hi Pete,

I definitely don't view pop reports as the gospel on anything (more often, I point out the weaknesses in these things). In terms of absolute numbers, I would not rely on them at all.

However, I do think these things are very useful for relative comparisons - especially now that the sample sizes are significant after years of the TPGs tracking/recording.

I don't really understand why cross-overs factor into a discussion like this. There would have been just as much incentive for a collector to cross his CJ Wagner, his E93 Wagner, etc - and especially high grade ones - over the years. I think cross-overs are a wash when it comes to relative number comparisons of pop reports. I accept that crossovers inflate absolute numbers - I just think they would do so roughly equallly for all sets of similar value. So relative comparisons remain valid.

Of course one thing that skews our view of the availability of CJs is the size of the set. With 176 subjects, you are 6 times more likely to see any old CJ compared to any old card from a much smaller set like E98 on that basis alone.

I'm not trying to discount your personal experience. I don't see that many E98s either. (I could say the same of many other E sets.) But one thing is that AFAIK 75% of the BSF hasn't even hit the market yet...finding E98s will no doubt only get easier.

I agree the jury is still out on values - we'll only know what the future holds...in the future!

Cheers,
Blair

pcoz 10-04-2012 06:20 PM

E98's
 
Blair, I agree across the board on your thoughts. They'll get easier to find in the future and we'll have to see what their values will bring. It will be interesting to see how well received the BSF cards will be when they hit the market soon.


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