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Old 11-01-2022, 12:33 PM
BobC BobC is offline
Bob C.
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Ohio
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pat R View Post
The demand is the tough part but you can get some kind of idea by comparing the information equally the E90-1 Mitchell and Dougherty are a good example some say the Mitchell is scarcer and others say the Dougherty is, no offense to the Mitchell group but Ed who is probably one of the most knowledgeable members on the set says that Dougherty is scarcer than Mitchell and all the numbers support that using the same sources to measure how many are graded and how often they come up for sale. The Mitchell in general probably gets more recognition for being scarce in the set so the demand on that aspect is probably higher for Mitchell but is it enough to balance out the scarcity and sales difference?

Population %

Dougherty 0.3016
Mitchell 0.4826

Cardtarget sales

Dougherty 11
Mitchell 49
All great points Pat, this is a very interesting thread you started. It is one of those issues where it is virtually impossible to truly measure and somehow quantify all the different factors that can impact and influence any particular card's overall desirability and ultimately its price in the marketplace.

Rarity is the simple part of it, and extremely easy to measure and compare. If there is only one known example of card A, and two known of card B, it is empirically shown and proven that card A is the rarer card. But then if/when those two cards show up for sale, and card B always sells for some ridiculously higher price than card A, that clearly demonstrates card B is scarcer than card A as more people apparently want and have a greater desire/need for card B, as shown by the higher price they're willing to pay for it versus the rarer card A.

What creates this scarcity is the level of desire for something (demand) versus how easy it is to satisfy that desire (supply). Measuring/quantifying the reasons behind the obviously higher desire or demand for card B in my example is impossible though as there can be an almost infinite number of reasons someone may want or prefer it over card A. Ask 10 different people why they all want the same card, and you can very easily get 10 different answers. And the level of that desire or need also tremendously factors into the scarcity of an item.

As in the earlier discussion of the T206 Wagner versus the T206 Doyle N.Y. Nat'l card, you can possibly have a somewhat similar number of people want, need, and desire both cards, but different levels of that want, need, and desire will have them wanting one of those two cards more than the other. And regardless of which card is actually rarer, they'll ultimately show those different levels of want and desire (ie: demand) by how much more they're willing to pay for the card they want the most. And because of the almost infinite number of variables that can go into determining the public's reasons for their desire/need of a particular card, and the different levels of that desire/need that each person can then have, the prices people are willing to pay may be the only reasonable measure to somehow truly incorporate all the variables in determining the demand for a particular card, and thus its true scarcity.
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