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What I Don't Understand about Baseball Card Economics
I admit I am no more than a novice when it comes to understanding the general economy and the stock market, but here is one thing I have learned: The stock market rises and falls by processing information. When an interest rate cut is anticipated, the market goes up. If a tariff is instituted on China, for example, the market tanks. These are just two examples, but I recognize how information determines how markets move.
But in the baseball card hobby, the market appears to be absolutely tone deaf. We know grading is subjective and inconsistent; we know altered cards consistently get upgraded and slabbed; we know the card we buy as an 8 might have been resubmitted half a dozen times as a 7 until we find a grader willing to bump. Yet despite all this information that should be a giant warning sign to anyone thinking of investing in baseball cards, the money comes pouring in like an avalanche, and world records keep getting set. We see 7's turn into 8's and increase fivefold in value. We see 8's become 9's and increase tenfold. And we all know it's all smoke and mirrors. Yet buyers don't seem to be processing this information. They can't throw big money at this garbage fast enough. So what am I missing? |
That the vast majority of people - even the "smart" ones with degrees etc. are quite often stupid.
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Not completely Peter. I do understand that the collector who pieces together a VG T205 set one card at a time is passionate about what he is doing, and doesn't care about all this background noise about card doctors.
But we know that recently a whole wave of investors has entered the hobby and is putting big money in high grade cards. Those people are looking for one thing only: making a profit. And given the rickety state of the high end hobby, why aren't they fleeing it? If you bought 100 shares of Apple and then discovered that instead of using computer chips in their smartphones they were filling it with jello, you would bail out in a heartbeat. You would have no emotional attachment with the stock. But these high end players seem to sense that nothing is wrong. No, I don't entirely understand it. |
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Why aren’t pricing tanking? Some possible reasons:
1. I doubt most “high-end” collectors are aware of this issue. 2. If tainted cards are being removed from the hobby, PSA populations will theoretically drop. Prices might increase because of this fiasco. 3. It’s too soon. PWCC hasn’t had an auction since this issue hit. |
The saying isn't..."There's a genius born every minute".
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Zero emotional attachment when investing, all emotional when collection on low end trashed out cards :-) |
I'd bet there are a whole lot less "investors" that previously thought or shown through auctions, Ebay and the like. Most likely people who jumped on the bandwagon due to fear of missing out, are now holding the bag of high graded cards. Albeit not necessarily altered, but comp sales were skewed. I'd assume collectors wont mind, and it would be silly to sell now.
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PWCC has 8,282 listings running right now.
From what I can tell it appears it is 100% business as usual. There is no doubt there is something to this recent scandal and even those wearing the most rose collared glasses will see that but it is going to take much more I believe to derail the hobby. I read someone say that many collectors live by the ignorance is bliss moto and that may very well be true. There are quite a few people out there that have dealt with infidelity in a relationship. Probably said to their friends if that bit++ ever cheats on me she is gone. It happens and just a few months later they are explaining to their friends she made a mistake and we all make mistakes and she is sorry. Humans are very complex that is for sure. I watched the entire Brent interview. He made it out to be like conservation was common knowledge and everyone knows it. Many of the examples we see popping up fit his description and have simply been improved. I think there is a very real chance that many of these cards will be reviewed by PSA and they will deem them to be good because they are grading the card in front of them not the card that used to exist. Brent also indicated he was going to bring in an expert and offer this as a service and if they alter cards where there is no discernible evidence upon inspection this crisis of confidence could easily subside. I don't think all parties will be happy but the market will move forward. |
So if these high rollers who don't know about this message board found out about it, would they bail out? And I think this issue will spread much further than just Net54. I think this is pretty big news for the hobby.
and to Peter- sure some of these people love what they buy. But they don't want to feel that they are being ripped off. You can be passionate about far less expensive cards too. |
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David- I think PSA will deem most of these cards good after review for a very obvious reason.
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The market is so easily manipulated that there's very little disincentive to a deep pocket investor with, shall we say, moral flexibility.
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In light of all the recent happenings in the hobby I still want to further my collection. Maybe at the National this year I will be able to find something.
The large AH's with their BPs, taxes and high shipping costs are drawn out affairs. Too slow for me. Some times 2 to 3 weeks before shipping. I don't understand. Why so long? The straight Ebay auctions are usually shilled. Why don't sellers start the listings with the minimum they are willing to take? I don't understand. Why shill? The Ebay BINS are usually 50 to 300 percent overpriced. I rarely find a card I can use at a reasonable price. I don't understand. Why the "Museum" concept? So Chicago here I come. |
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That said I don't think it will change going forward because they are grading the card in front of them. I do know they are scanning all images of cards sent at the quicker turn around times so perhaps this deters folks but I am not so sure if now this will be an option that Brent offers to clients. I am more inclined to think the market "matures" and just has to deal with the facts. I am not really a cynic by nature but does anyone really think that a card that sat inside with cracker jacks or tobacco was ever 100% clean? I don't. I assume they all have had some stain removal of some kind. I might be wrong but this has always been my belief. |
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Yes David, any one hundred year old baseball card with pure white borders gives me pause. They are generally made with cheap paper, and paper tones over time.
But I want to get back to the idea of processing information. If I am thinking of buying a card in PSA 10, I really have to consider that the card may have been bumped from a 9 holder, or it may have had a slight alteration. I just don't know. As such, while I might deem it to still be worth a premium over a 9, and cannot see any way it could reasonably worth ten times that. Ask the fellow who just purchased the 52B Musial in a PSA 10 how he is feeling right now. Again, I don't think the information that is out there is being calculated into purchases. I understand the idea that people who pay a lot of money to get a 10 are willing to do so because they want to own the best. But in so many instances they are not getting a 10. And nobody likes to feel he was ripped off. Again, I know some disagree but I find all of this unfathomable. I guess to each his own. |
What if you already bought a PSA 10 of a card at $25k that you suspect. The guarantee you bought is based on current market value. If another PSA 10 example of said card is sitting at $15k, do you feel pressure to push the price up, assuming you feel good about the company behind the guarantee?
Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk |
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I have done it twice. Ego and personal satisfaction are the two primary reasons. Money was a distant third. One was $2,500 the other was just over $3,000 so not life changing money but it is all relative. Both were 9's bumped to 10's. I have never looked back with any level of dissatisfaction. |
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It would take a huge sum of money to get me to watch more than 1 minute of that lol.
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Not everyone pays attention to facebook or even card forums. I didn't think much of this till someone said there was an article in wall street journal.
Unless it shows up on national news tv.. I don't know if it causes grading to plummet or not. I've never graded. I'm a junk wax dealer. |
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Not a very well received video that is for sure. 56 up votes and 95 down votes and some blistering opinions expressed. Either way I think he really feels this way and while I totally understand why many disagree I think much of what he is saying has been happening and will continue to happen. I have a client that has close to 20 refurbished 50's collector cars. If they can get the cars to look exactly like they did when they were brand new I don't doubt for a minute there are folks out there who can work magic on cards and go undetected. |
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Restoration has a different level of acceptance in different hobbies. It is understood that cars will be restored. If you want to drive it and the engine is dead, you replace it. If the chrome is rusted you polish it. Collectors know that.
Coins, stamps, and baseball cards are viewed differently. It is best to leave them in their original condition. You can't compare automobiles and baseball cards with regard to restoration. |
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I watched it because I wanted to see what he had to say. Brent is a disrupter and he clearly has one vision and how that plays out remains to be seen. It is very easy to argue he has taken on too much too soon with card indexes, stickers, the vault, investment advice etc. but it is clear he isn't taking advice from anyone and is going for it. |
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Darren Rovell has started tweeting about it so it will slowly start spreading mainstream
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Not condoning just stating I think it is unrealistic to think it isn't possible. A few years back I got some rust stains off my front porch that were on non polished travertine. I tried everything I had at home but it wouldn't work. I went to a stone store and sure enough they had a cleaner that could do it. You would never know the stains were there. I believe a similar solution has probably been created that can remove stains from cards without any after effects. Not saying it is right just saying I believe it is possible. |
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https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-...or-155-million
Steve Wynn Picasso. I am sure many are aware or have read about this. Quote from the article "The restoration seems to be factored into the price," Beverly Schreiber Jacoby, valuation specialist and president of New York-based BSJ Fine Art, told Bloomberg. "If you didn't know that it has been damaged, you would not see it. It's superbly restored." If a painting can be fixed without leaving a trail I believe cards can too. |
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We then get in to a much larger discussion about whether TPG firms have the wan't or the resources to invest in greater technology. I don't know the answer. The general point and I believe you will agree is they are pretty good at it and good enough where Brent plans to hire someone to do it for customers. |
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Just as an FYI, I ran one of small Plano card shows this weekend. Out of the 125-150 people who were in the room at some point, maybe 3 even mentioned this subject and maybe one really cared. This "IS" an important issue but remember we're a very small percent of the hobby as an whole.
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I think investors invest in how they're invested.
If it is known there are irrational variations in grading, but the prices still go along a line, they are investing in that line. Investors have been keeping their heads in the sand about certain issues, because everyone else has been keeping their heads in the sand. Most everyone, including registry mebers with a brain must have already realized the irrational variations and margins in error in the number grades on labels, and many people have already been of the belief that many high-grade cards in holders are altered-- I've been of that belief for many years. Also, what facts don't affect prices today, doesn't mean they won't affect prices tomorrow. I think longterm investment in "high grade" vintage cards is a bad idea. Nice looking cards will still fetch good prices, but I don't believe in the future someone will pay $100,000 for a one grade increment knowing the card is likely altered to get to that grade. I, and of course many others, already thought it looney considering the normal variations (margins of error) in assigning a grade itself. Considerations the margins of error and variations is grading, paying $500,000 more for a 10 over a 9 is, in many people's opinion, silly enough, but paying $500,000 for a trimmed edge in someone's basement is beyond the pale of expectations. My assumption, my opinion, is that the majority of high-grade vintage cards have been altered, or 'conserved' if you prefer. And, if and when that sets in with the hobby as a whole, I assume it will affect pricing. Also, it doesn't take the entire hobby or current 'investors' to give up the ghost on high-grade cards to affect the market. It can just take a substantial minority, in particular, if they are big spenders. |
https://www.ebay.com/itm/1984-Donrus....c100033.m2042
Is this normal for a 1984 Donruss Don Mattingly? I remember when these were in the $600 to $700 range. |
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https://offer.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI....p2471758.m4792 |
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