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#1
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Hello again. Some may recognize my name from awhile back when I was a regular poster here and solid (I believe) buyer and seller....Starting two years ago I decided to sell off about 90% of my pre-war cards, and almost all the pricier ones. I had reached a certain age, the market seemed flat and Covid had arrived, and baseball obsessed baby boomers about to (maybe) fade out....Anyway, for the next year I sold at auction and did pretty well, no complaints....But imagine my shock when, not long ago, I noticed the rather sudden surge in prices starting in 2021, and still accelerating (see: REA this week), where many of the better cards had doubled or even quadrupled in price (Ruths, Gehrigs, Cobbs, even a 1953 Mays, and some t206 etc.)....I had sold at exactly the "wrong" time...
So what happened? Just investment craziness in a time of uncertainty and NFTs etc.? Other factors? I am out of touch with any past analysis on this board. And what happens next? For example, that big climb in t206s prices--does that linger now or does the reality of many examples for most cards in the set arrive and we see a major fall back? And even true with more rare Ruth and Gehrig cards? Thanks for any reply, even if just guessing.... |
#2
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Murphy's Law
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#3
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If I knew the future I wouldn't be pondering it so much. But I do ponder it a lot more now than before. The numbers are just so crazy compared with the 'good ol' days'. If it wasn't for the tax hit, I'd sell off and start again.
__________________
Read my blog; it will make all your dreams come true. https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.com/ Or not... |
#4
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Greg, great questions.
For why, personally, I think a whole lot of money has been diverted into cards and card services over the past 5 years. Just another investment avenue. For future, unknown and I hate to speculate. But imagine this scenario: You bought a vintage card three years ago for 10k You can sell it now for 50k OR you can possibly sell it in one year for 100k Years ago, this scenario would have been farfetched. Nowadays, it is reality. |
#5
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T206 Hall of Famers (particularly those with name recognition), though? I just can't see them dropping much absent a generational financial crisis or an event that leads to people leaving the hobby en masse. |
#6
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The Rich Got Richer....ie the people spending 6 six figures at ease in auctions on slabbed higher end cards. The middle class got a little richer... drove up middle grade 4-7 graded cards and raw cards in VG-EMXT Shape...the poor got poorer but they still bought an occasional beatter poor to good shape card.
Notice now the off grade stuff has flatlined not talking rare or key graded stars talking the average. It's going to be interesting to see how this plays out. I think middle late next year things could be interesting. Meanwhile for this year and early next year i see ZERO signs of a recessions. The market will be higher then it started Jan 01 2021. Last edited by Johnny630; 04-27-2022 at 12:57 PM. |
#7
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Many of you know that I have started down the T206 route but prior to that - I had been a 1950s collector for a long long time. Just pull up eBay Search - "1955 Topps PSA" and look at the double digit (and lately triple digit) ASK on common Cards and absolutely ridiculous ask on stars and semi stars. Extremely disgustipatin............sigh
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Lonnie Nagel T206 : 210/520 : 40.1% |
#8
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Lets put it this way - I am not selling any nice vintage to then drop the coin into the stock market. Nope.
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#9
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With 2022 HRO DC - BATMAN Mythic- Physical Hybrid Card - Unredeemed selling in the $2,000 range, I wouldn't worry to much about vintage sports cards prices collapsing anytime soon--MOO
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#10
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LOL - Don't even have a clue as to WHAT THAT IS
__________________
Lonnie Nagel T206 : 210/520 : 40.1% |
#11
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__________________
___________________ T206 Master Set:103/524 T206 HOFers: 22/76 T206 SLers: 11/48 T206 Back Run: 28/39 Desiderata You are a child of the universe, no less than the trees and the stars; you have a right to be here. And whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should. With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Strive to be happy. |
#12
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I continue to live by my statement:
"Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow."
__________________
All the cool kids love my YouTube Channel:
Elm's Adventures in Cardboard Land ![]() https://www.youtube.com/@TheJollyElm Looking to trade? Here's my bucket: https://www.flickr.com/photos/152396...57685904801706 “I was such a dangerous hitter I even got intentional walks during batting practice.” Casey Stengel Spelling "Yastrzemski" correctly without needing to look it up since the 1980s. Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow. ![]() |
#13
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People buying cards with Pandemic protection funds
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"Trolling Ebay right now" © Always looking for signed 1952 topps as well as variations and errors |
#14
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I heard of people using food stamps to buy E93s and 55 Bowmans at a show in NJ.
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#15
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Seriously???
__________________
_ Successful transactions with: Natswin2019, ParachromBleu, Cmount76, theuclakid, tiger8mush, shammus, jcmtiger, oldjudge, coolshemp, joejo20, Blunder19, ibechillin33, t206kid, helfrich91, Dashcol, philliesfan, alaskapaul3, Natedog, Kris19, frankbmd, tonyo, Baseball Rarities, Thromdog, T2069bk, t206fix, jakebeckleyoldeagleeye, Casey2296, rdeversole, brianp-beme, seablaster, twalk, qed2190, Gorditadogg, LuckyLarry, tlhss, Cory |
#16
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This hobby has one advantage over many other types of investments: it can be an investment that is fun as well. Our Helmar cards have been more popular than ever and retired cards show good returns. Charles Mandel
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#17
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With oncoming recession, I think many people are placing vintage in the basket of precious metals as a place to sit their investment capital. I would have told you this was heresy in the past, however “the times they are a changing”.
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- Justin D. Player collecting - Lance Parrish, Jim Davenport, John Norlander. Successful B/S/T with - Highstep74, Northviewcats, pencil1974, T2069bk, tjenkins, wilkiebaby11, baez578, Bocabirdman, maddux31, Leon, Just-Collect, bigfish, quinnsryche...and a whole bunch more, I stopped keeping track, lol. Last edited by JustinD; 04-27-2022 at 08:25 PM. |
#18
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Sad that a dealer was openly flaunting food stamp exchange laws for such a stupid sale. Also, I thought most states have switched to a debit card format to help prevent these issues.
__________________
- Justin D. Player collecting - Lance Parrish, Jim Davenport, John Norlander. Successful B/S/T with - Highstep74, Northviewcats, pencil1974, T2069bk, tjenkins, wilkiebaby11, baez578, Bocabirdman, maddux31, Leon, Just-Collect, bigfish, quinnsryche...and a whole bunch more, I stopped keeping track, lol. |
#19
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My opinion:
(1) Record prices of sports cards and memorabilia published on highly trafficked sites such as ESPN (2) Pandemic, stimulus, gov't policies, fed easy money putting a lot of cash in people's pockets that they wouldn't spend on travelling, restaurants (3) Once card prices start rising significantly, FOMO (4) Inflation / fear of stagflation leading folks to think cards may be a safer investment better than stocks or other traditional asset classes BTW, this doesn't mean that I believe card prices will continue to go up, far from it. There are no fundamentals behind it, and it's just manufactured cardboard. You'll never get dividends from it or be able to fashion it into jewelry. Last edited by glchen; 04-27-2022 at 09:14 PM. |
#20
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It still blows my mind when I hear people talk about cards as retirement vehicles. |
#21
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For me the Best way to use as a retirement hedge/side/retirement is try to stick with cards under 5,000 for ease of liquidity in selling for cash. Many can pull that off at a big show, higher then that they won’t spend at shows unless the National. Do you want multiple big checks coming in from auction houses ? I don’t. I wanna sell for cash at shows when retirement comes.
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#22
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__________________
Read my blog; it will make all your dreams come true. https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.com/ Or not... |
#23
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the new beckett vintage prices for star cards are insane .i mean crazy
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#24
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I prefer cash for the purchasing power it gives me via private sales in person from collectors or at shows from dealers. Over the years it’s been one of the only few ways I’ve been able to purchase big collections or single cards from private collectors. They want cash.
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#25
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And its my recent experience that there are some really crazy people in the hobby these days.
Angyale |
#26
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#27
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or little buyer recourse, or no bad checks.
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#28
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There are two reasons card demand can increase: either there are more collectors or existing collectors are buying more cards. I think it's a bit of both and mostly driven by covid.
There were a lot of people sitting at home with nothing to do that decided to clean out their closets, and when they did they found half-completed baseball card collections. Many ended up organizing and adding to their cards. At the same time a lot of people stopped commuting to work, eating out, and going on trips, so they had extra cash to spend. One outlet for that money, new and existing collectors, was buying more cards. The big question is what will happen now, now that we all have more choices on spending our money. I am skeptical that the level of new collectors will continue, especially with the steady decline in interest in baseball. And without new collectors, that just leaves all of us buying each other's cards. Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk |
#29
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It appears, judging from latest REA, that the (probably) new, "investment" driven, collectors are truly buying by PSA grade, at least for good t206s and maybe in some other cases, without close attention to "scarcity." Myself and I'm sure many others who bought such cards in the past would usually research at least "how many/how many higher" and disparities in recent prices etc. but now it seems that if it's a star card at PSA 5 or greater, or a common at, say, PSA 6 or 7, the offers in most cases are the same, no matter how (relatively) scarce or common a card might be....
They DO seem to value centering, at least.... |
#30
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Speaking as a new T206 collector who has been completely out of baseball cards since the early 1990s, here is my personal take. I collected baseball cards as a kid starting around 1986. I couldn't get enough 1987 Topps. A 1989 UD Ken Griffey Jr. rookie card was going to pay for my retirement. Topps Stadium Club cards looked like the Mona Lisa. I knew of the T206 Wagner (who didn't!) but literally nothing more about the set nor where to get them nor did I care. It was all about the the next new thing!
Then the bottom dropped out and I stopped collecting and life went on. From school, to getting a job, to getting married and having kids, 30 years flew by in the blink of an eye. At some point, though, things settled down - job was steady, kids were a bit older and were at school all day and the desire for a hobby resurfaced as my son and I would watch more and more baseball games together. New baseball cards were of no interest to me. They were now TOO premium, TOO gimmicky and everything was left to too much chance. To spend multiple hundreds of dollars or more on modern day card seemed insane. But to spend multiple hundreds of dollars on a card from 1909 seemed incredibly reasonable to me! Stuff I could never afford before (or I has assumed I could never afford) was all now within reach. And if that was what I desired, how could I start anywhere other than with T206? The final catch is this - given when I started collecting I had NO IDEA that prices has spiked. For all I knew it could have been a steady growth, flatline or decline over the last few decades. I am completely missing that part of history so paying $50 for a 100+ year old card of some guy nobody has ever heard of from a team that barely ever existed seemed exactly 0% crazy to me. So for me the price increase is a result of two things: - People of my age who collected in the 1980s/90s as kids who had to get through "life" first before getting back into collecting (including having the disposable income to do so) - Those same people having absolutely no idea about what prices "should" be Now I can't get enough. I love baseball cards again! |
#31
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#32
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How does one balance the feeling of seeing their existing collection's value grow but putting future cards out of reach?
I really hate to say this, but it sucks. Sure it is great some cards shot up in value but it ends up being net-net pretty terrible for people actively building a collection.
__________________
Looking for: Sporting News/Collins McCarthy Jackson Low Grade Ruth rookie Signed Wilt Chamberlain rookie Cards: https://www.flickr.com/photos/189414509@N08/albums |
#33
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I also know that I'll be able to prioritize collecting eventually, but it's going to take decades at this point.
__________________
Successful Deals With: charlietheexterminator, todeen, tonyo, Santo10fan Bocabirdman (5x), 8thEastVB, JCMTiger, Rjackson44 Republicaninmass, 73toppsmann, quinnsryche (2x), Donscards. |
#34
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..... but if you do sell any nice vintage, maybe Bitcoin?
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#35
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Welcome back! |
#36
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I really don't get excited about the rising value of things I never want to sell, but I do get bummed by the rising value of things I want to buy. Plus, when things reach a certain level of value, one almost feels obligated to be "responsible" and keep at least one eye on value, if a sale could move the quality of life needle even a little bit. |
#37
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__________________
194/240 1933 Goudeys (Ruth #144, #149, Gehrig #92) 131/208 T205s 42/108? Diamond Stars |
#38
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Q1 GDP was negative 1.4%. I believe we are in for some interesting times - QE winding down, 7-8 interest rate hikes, wild inflation. Card market is already contracting (broadly, doesn't mean what you collect is).
Personally I won't be making any big card or other consumer purchases, highly suspect there be many folks caught naked (over leveraged) when this tide goes out. Toys will be going on sale soon. |
#39
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Middle and low grade cards have pulled back because this inflation is affecting the middle class ..... conversely inflation has little to no affect on 5 and 6 figure buyers on Mile High, REA, and just wait till Memory Lane. Higher Higher and Higher a 53 Mantle PSA 7 sold for 47k along with a SGC 7.5 Mantle selling for over 15k in REA's last auction. The rich get richer...the poor get poorer... and the middle class pay more and will spend less. Cards are still bullish IMO just not low and middle grade. Last edited by Johnny630; 04-28-2022 at 04:34 PM. |
#40
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Recency bias says says that assets like cards, homes, art, vehicles will go up forever but we know that isn't true. Can't think of an asset class that doesn't correct periodically, and the correction is typically in proportion to the run up. We are way overdue for a big reset. |
#41
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#42
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Correct me if I am wrong. Last edited by joshleon; 04-28-2022 at 04:55 PM. |
#43
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Never wrong, just early.
__________________
Read my blog; it will make all your dreams come true. https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.com/ Or not... |
#44
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Being early is the same as being wrong.
I can call a card from a deck and if you keep flipping them, eventually I'll be right. Was I just "early" saying I could predict the card? |
#45
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My theory is that prices escalated because I was getting to the point where I could afford to responsibly buy some of the nicer cards. The market realized this was unacceptable and so everything doubled.
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#46
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That is a funny post.
![]() To me it is not about grade (high grade, low grade, mid grade) — there are plenty of cards that are quite expensive in low or mid grade. |
#47
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Exactly!
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#48
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__________________
Read my blog; it will make all your dreams come true. https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.com/ Or not... Last edited by Exhibitman; 04-28-2022 at 10:37 PM. |
#49
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As far as cards go, I agree with you. I don't really like analogies between card collecting and investing because when investing, my sole interest is making money on X instrument. I don't sit around and look at my short position in the health care sector with the kids. That's not why I collect cards. I buy cards I like and they go up as a byproduct. Last edited by joshleon; 04-29-2022 at 06:08 AM. |
#50
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So many great points and thoughts here.
I see the spikes tied to people having more time working remotely to get a hobby, then having extra funds from not vacationing in lockdown and not commuting to work, possibly having even more expendable money after receiving stimulus checks, an increased interest when they see mainstream news and sports sites reporting on huge sale prices of vintage cards from Wagner and Ruth down to newer cards from Trout and Tom Brady. It does seem we're due for a correction, but it might be like the art world. The artists who are kind of famous in the art world but not known to the man on the street do flatten or drop in price, but Van Gogh and Da Vinci keep spiking. The blue chip cards, especially in decent condition, are now forever out of reach of most people, and those with deeper pockets will chase them and compete and drive up the price. Even with inflation raging and a recession staring us down I'm surprised to see how much cards are going for, especially for the big names. I'm also surprised to see on eBay how many people are buying cards at the "Buy it Now" price, which is often 25% or more higher than at auction (except for Dean's Cards who prices everything at like 50000% above the going rate). In 2014 I bought a PSA 7 Babe Ruth Sanella for $189. According to PSA one just sold for $1622. An 850% increase in eight years? Ridiculous. And most of that increase has happened in the past two years! I then went through my email to check out a 1933 red Goudey Ruth that I recalled just losing out on at auction. I found the email and saw it was a PSA 4 and that the sale price was $2,750 in 2014. Earlier this year the same card at the same grade went for $25K at auction on eBay. I'm a white collar guy in my late 40s who makes a decent buck and is a millionaire on paper (though clearly not one in liquid funds!) but I just can't be plunking down $25K for a card. The $2,750 was a stretch for me back in 2014 but do-able and I just lost on when someone outbid me at the gun. Unless I win Mega Millions, I'll never come that close again to owning a PSA 4 of a 1933 Goudey of Ruth. No matter the market, historically we have seen people pay huge figures for T206 Wagners and those prices only go up. It seems this will happen now with the vintage cards, and special modern cards, of the big name players. It's good to see more people get hooked into collecting in the past two years, and I hope many will stick with it to some degree over time, but I think the mid to higher end HOFer vintage cards and going to be out of range for most of us from now on. As such, I'm tempted to sell that Ruth card, as well as a nice T206 Cy Young portrait, a high-end N28 of Charlie Comiskey and a few more, but I'll hold on to them as I suspect the prices will only go higher. On the other hand, I wouldn't argue with anyone selling their common vintage cards now. |
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