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Ebay experiment: PSA vs. SGC
OK, not quite apples to apples, but close.
This evening I ran these 2 auctions: https://www.ebay.com/itm/155085096215 https://www.ebay.com/itm/155085093904 Same card, identical descriptions, closing the same night within 2 minutes of each other. The results: PSA 5 received 11 bids and sold for $118.50. It had 143 views. SGC 4.5 received 1 bid and sold for $60.00. It had 35 views. I can't imagine the half grade difference alone could count for the quadruple number of views, or doubling of the high bid. |
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Sgc one is quite off center...
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oops!
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When I see anything graded a 4, my immediate thought is 'wrinkle or crease,' and when I see anything graded a 5, I have no such 'fears.' That (I assume common thought among collectors) probably plays a role.
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I suspect the main reason the PSA card sold for significantly more is because it's much better centered, as others have noted.
The PSA cards had 4 times as many views as the SGC card. This could be interpreted as collector bias toward PSA, which many/most of us already acknowledge, especially for post-War cards. Also, there are collectors who are putting together 1957 Topps sets with all cards graded the same. A mid-grade set collector might well strive for a complete set graded 5-EX. But, I've never heard of a collector striving to complete a set graded 4.5. This could be one reason the PSA card generated more interest and the higher price. |
I just checked out VCP averages for your experiment. You had an opening bid for the PSA 5 of $60 with a VCP average of $108. For your SGC 4.5, you had an opening bid of $60 with a VCP average of $68. Your experiment isn't as revealing to me as you think it is. Everything sold near their average. If anything, it gives me hope that the market is crashing in the face of this recession.
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I'm currently running a pair of Walter Payton rookies, an SGC 7 and a PSA 7. Both look equally nice to me. Here's where they stand with a couple of days left.
1976 Topps #148 Walter Payton SGC 7 Near Mint HOF RC Chicago Bears $355.00 Current bid + Shipping (buyer pays $5.00) 91 Views 39 Watchers 19 Bids 1976 Topps #148 Walter Payton PSA 7 Near Mint HOF RC Chicago Bears $315.00 Current bid + Shipping (buyer pays $5.00) 137 Views 46 Watchers 40 Bids |
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With the price of cards today, the set registry will probably collapse. Who in their right mind would pay some of the stupid prices for commons. After that the rush for PSA will probably cool off a lot.
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1976 Topps #148 Walter Payton SGC 7 Near Mint HOF RC Chicago Bears $547.87 Current bid + Shipping (buyer pays $5.00) 213 Views 48 Watchers 33 Bids 1976 Topps #148 Walter Payton PSA 7 Near Mint HOF RC Chicago Bears $580.00 Current bid + Shipping (buyer pays $5.00) 305 Views 66 Watchers 58 Bids |
Interesting....thank you for sharing.
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The images in the auctions do not appear to be of the same quality.
The image of the PSA card appears much clearer/crisper that that of the SGC card. |
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My most recent $50 sub was a mix of T206's and 30s, 40s, and 50s cards. They HAMMERED the T206's (Sorry Sonny).....
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It's getting bad. Before, I was only getting the terrible/noob/inexperienced graders on ultra-modern stuff. Now, I'm getting them on $10k+ cards. I also have a beautiful 86 Fleer Jordan RC that is dead-centered and dead mint. It was in an SGC 9 holder when I bought it, but I decided to grade shop it around for fun. PSA rejected it as a crossover (which they often do) so I cracked it out and decided to send it in raw. They said it was "altered" :rolleyes:, so I sent it to BGS and they gave it a 9++ (9.5, 9, 9, 9.5 sub grades - almost a gem mint. It's one of the nicest 9s I've ever seen. PSA screwed me twice on it. And I know the 86 Fleer set and grades very well. I've subbed hundreds of these cards. My grades are always spot on with 86 Fleer basketball (or at least they were until recently at PSA, and they're still spot on with SGC and CSG). PSA is putting inexperienced graders on high-end vintage stuff now. Guys who just finished slamming a Red Bull that came back from lunch break with Cheetoh fingers who had never even seen a vintage card prior to their training course last month. And if you believe the "we have 2 to 3 graders evaluating every card" line that PSA proclaims, I've got a bridge to sell you. That's nonsense. It's gotten so bad, that I now find myself seeking arbitrage opportunities for cards in PSA slabs whose serial numbers start with 6xxx. I'm not even all that interested in flipping cards, but PSA is now flooding the market with $10k cards in $4k holders. Getting your cards slabbed with PSA used to be a value add. Nowadays, a card often loses value after they put an EX-MT card in a 3 holder. |
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