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-   -   Fun Poll: What % of Net worth in SportsCards and Memorabilia (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=295709)

joshuanip 01-30-2021 10:27 AM

Fun Poll: What % of Net worth in SportsCards and Memorabilia
 
Fun anonymous poll. That is the percentage of your net worth in sports cards and memorabilia. Sports cards only, no pokemon or star wars collections... haha

And net worth includes all assets including cash, stock, home, and other stores of values (like your pokemon cards and star war figurines).

joshuanip 01-30-2021 04:46 PM

I would love to see those collections that are 30+%. I thought I was nuts at a shade under 20%

Exhibitman 01-30-2021 05:03 PM

No married man is going to take that poll...

joshuanip 01-30-2021 05:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Exhibitman (Post 2062164)
No married man is going to take that poll...

That’s why is anonymous. Hahaha

Exhibitman 01-30-2021 05:15 PM

Won't help; bitches be IT savvy...

itjclarke 01-30-2021 05:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by joshuanip (Post 2062152)
I would love to see those collections that are 30+%. I thought I was nuts at a shade under 20%

Not so sure why any number is "nuts" given how cards' values have inflated over the years. Seems several cards I'd bought 10-15-20-25 years ago for $100, $500, $1000, are now worth $5000+, $10,000+, $20,000+, or more. So % worth may skew far more heavily towards cards than the proportionate amount of cost one originally invested in them.

Similar to spending a few bucks on Apple stock in 2008-2009, as compared with today's value.

joshuanip 01-30-2021 05:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by itjclarke (Post 2062175)
Not so sure why any number is "nuts" given how cards' values have inflated over the years. Seems several cards I'd bought 10-15-20-25 years ago for $100, $500, $1000, are now worth $5000+, $10,000+, $20,000+, or more. So % worth may skew far more heavily towards cards than the proportionate amount of cost one originally invested in them.

Similar to spending a few bucks on Apple stock in 2008-2009, as compared with today's value.

Fair point... married men, don’t answer this poll... haha

Fred 01-30-2021 05:24 PM

0%

None of my cards are part of my "net worth". I don't consider this stuff an "investment". It's only cardboard.

Fred 01-30-2021 05:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Exhibitman (Post 2062164)
No married man is going to take that poll...

I've been married a long time... I've been collecting this stuff longer than I've known my wife. Somehow, I've always inherently known to keep my collecting life separate from my married life. I guess it's like guys that have a "piece" on the side. They wouldn't even think about telling their wife about her. Pathetically, my extra "piece" is cardboard, but there's something to be said about guys that can admit that they like looking at pictures of dead guys on cardboard, right?

troutbum97 01-30-2021 07:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fred (Post 2062178)
0%

None of my cards are part of my "net worth". I don't consider this stuff an "investment". It's only cardboard.


If it's "only cardboard" to you, I'd be happy to take all of your cardboard off of your hands.
I'll even haul it away for free. :cool:

todeen 01-30-2021 08:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Exhibitman (Post 2062173)
Won't help; bitches be IT savvy...

Funniest post of 2021! I even showed this to my wife and she was ROFL. Uncontrollable laughter.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk

Fred 01-30-2021 09:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by todeen (Post 2062246)
Funniest post of 2021! I even showed this to my wife and she was ROFL. Uncontrollable laughter.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk

OMG - Your wife knows about this site/board??? :eek::eek::eek: :p

todeen 01-30-2021 09:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fred (Post 2062257)
OMG - Your wife knows about this site/board??? :eek::eek::eek: :p

My wife simply refers to Net54/eBay as the other woman. She's a jealous woman. She once told me she would gauge out Natalie Portman's eyes when I told her she was my Hollywood crush.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk

Kenny Cole 01-31-2021 12:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fred (Post 2062178)
0%

None of my cards are part of my "net worth". I don't consider this stuff an "investment". It's only cardboard.

if they have value, they are part of your net worth whether or not you want to acknowledge it.

carlsonjok 01-31-2021 05:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Exhibitman (Post 2062164)
No married man is going to take that poll...

My wife is an equestrian, so there isn't really much need to hide anything from her. The most I have ever spent on a card was a bit shy of $300. I write a $230 check to the farrier every 7 weeks. And that is just the beginning of the regular expenses. Plus there is the one-off expenses like the $2000 she is about to drop on a new saddle.

iwantitiwinit 01-31-2021 05:58 AM

Remember they truly aren't worth anything until you monetize them.

Directly 01-31-2021 06:19 AM

The lady collectors will spend some $$$ too! During the Beanie Baby craze around the holiday, I sold 9 Princess Diana's. The first 5 around 350/per, the last 4 at 450/per--I wonder if the lady buyers always inform their spouses all their purchase's besides the dozens of the shoes they buy every six month?

Aquarian Sports Cards 01-31-2021 06:23 AM

Well if you're net worth is negative but you own cards does that mean it's over 100%???

:D

pcoz 01-31-2021 06:38 AM

Probably 30-40% for me after the recent surge. High end cards are too expensive to not consider them investments in my opinion. Their appreciation has rivaled if not beaten the stock market the past 20 years, at least the high-end cards. Insane right now.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Gorditadogg 01-31-2021 10:26 AM

As a retired finance professional, I remember the disclosure that went on all our presentations: "Past performance is not a predictor of future results".

Right now we can all feel good that our cards are worth more, but it seems to me that with most investments today, including cards, there is an attitude of easy money, which is dangerous. People are buying stuff just because they see it going up without regard for underlying fundamentals, in many cases without even understanding them.

I would not advise anyone to have 30% of their assets in anything. When you have your net worth tied up in things that appeal to only a small part of the market the risks are even higher than with a mainstream investment.

I've said this before, but one thing I like about the card market today is the prices have pried a lot of nice cards out of old card collectors' hands. I am still buying because of that, but I am concerned about whether in the long term cards will continue to appreciate.

Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk

Fred 01-31-2021 11:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gorditadogg (Post 2062428)
As a retired finance professional, I remember the disclosure that went on all our presentations: "Past performance is not a predictor of future results".

Right now we can all feel good that our cards are worth more, but it seems to me that with most investments today, including cards, there is an attitude of easy money, which is dangerous. People are buying stuff just because they see it going up without regard for underlying fundamentals, in many cases without even understanding them.

I would not advise anyone to have 30% of their assets in anything. When you have your net worth tied up in things that appeal to only a small part of the market the risks are even higher than with a mainstream investment.

I've said this before, but one thing I like about the card market today is the prices have pried a lot of nice cards out of old card collectors' hands. I am still buying because of that, but I am concerned about whether in the long term cards will continue to appreciate.

Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk

Sounds like a Chicago Booth graduate.

This surge in prices reminds me of the early 90's when certain wax cases and other "new" material went flying through the roof.

When the "market" prices out the hobbyist, then the only people left are investors/speculators (which sometimes are hobbyist with, as Alan Greenspan said, feelings of irrational exuberance), playing chicken with each other. They're waiting to see who flinches first.

Unfortunately, the hobbyist are usually the ones that get burned worst because they have an emotional attachment. Then it'll be a scramble for the exit to see who gets left holding the goods at the highest price and who was smart enough to get out before the fall.

To those that are "investing". Don't take the above statement as a warning. It's just the rambling of a KNF that likes to stir the pot. :p

Edited to add - I choose not to look at my cardboard as part of my net worth. It aint worth nuthin unless you sell it.

cardsagain74 01-31-2021 11:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by iwantitiwinit (Post 2062307)
Remember they truly aren't worth anything until you monetize them.

Liquid assets are worth what you can sell them for.

joshuanip 01-31-2021 11:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by iwantitiwinit (Post 2062307)
Remember they truly aren't worth anything until you monetize them.

But neither is stock or any asset for that matter...

joshuanip 01-31-2021 11:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gorditadogg (Post 2062428)
As a retired finance professional, I remember the disclosure that went on all our presentations: "Past performance is not a predictor of future results".

No one reads that last page... and they still performance chase anyways...

Not to take away your great point - old collectors are priced out... (thank u for that by the way) not only acts as a buffer (dip buying mentality) but changes the velocity of transactions, as the flipping is what really juices the prices. Are we overpriced? Maybe along with everything else, but relatively, with the standardization of grading and moving from in person transactions to online auctions, we’ve been sitting on tinder for sometime...

Exhibitman 01-31-2021 04:13 PM

https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibi...e/franklin.jpg
https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibi...us%20cards.jpg

notfast 01-31-2021 04:18 PM

Do people include a house they’re paying a mortgage on in their net worth as an asset?

I’d assume a HUGE majority of the population has a negative net worth if you don’t.

Fred 01-31-2021 04:42 PM

Adam, I gotta ask -

Is that a modified "High Times" cartoon? :p

Edited to add - Ok, I googled Freewheelin Franklin - I remember that from such a long time ago. Made my day.

Natswin2019 01-31-2021 06:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by notfast (Post 2062622)
I’d assume a HUGE majority of the population has a negative net worth if you don’t.

Just as a note the median net worth of American's is 52k as of 2016

joshuanip 01-31-2021 07:10 PM

Not meant to be technical but you do include the house in your assets and subtract debt including credit lines and mortgages.

My point is I’d like to redo this poll a year later and see where we shake out. I’d bet you see a less tailed distribution with these card prices...

Exhibitman 02-01-2021 03:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fred (Post 2062646)
Adam, I gotta ask -

Is that a modified "High Times" cartoon? :p

Edited to add - Ok, I googled Freewheelin Franklin - I remember that from such a long time ago. Made my day.

https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibi...Bros%20Pin.jpg
https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibi...0Bros%20PC.jpg


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