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#1
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Posted By: DJ
This was discussed about a year ago in a thread and I believe a large majority of the posters said the sky is the limit with this hot collectible and I think we should bring back some opinions. |
#2
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Posted By: Rick
Nothing beats compounded interest over the long haul. |
#3
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Posted By: davidcycleback
I would think quality antique sports autographs would be a fair investment: a nice Knute Rockne ALS with return envelope or Ty Cobb signed ball with good provenance. These seem to gain value with time, and it's unlikely an authentic Cobb signed ball or check will fall to zero any year soon. |
#4
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
I sure wouldn't listen to me, because I know how my investment choices have done to date. And I recommend that you stop reading this post right now. |
#5
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Posted By: Dan Kravitz
I think there are far better investments than baseball cards (try real estate, it has some incredible benefits). I don't think you can buy cards thinking that you are making a sound investment, unless you are buying them far under the current value and buying extremely rare pieces that very wealthy people will always pay up for. When interest rates start to creep up and gas goes through the roof, most people will slow down in their buying habits or even trying to sell their cards. I believe that the value of hofer players in common sets that are in abundance will fall sharply. The Cobb t206 is super common and I would bet that when the market takes a turn down it will follow accordingly. Now if you had a 1912 Boston Garter you would most likely be able to sell it in any market. BTW If anyone has any interest in discussing the benefits of residential or commercial real estate investing, please email me. You should collect what you like, because if and when the market takes a dive, you still have a collection of cards that make you smile. |
#6
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Posted By: John Spencer
While I am first and foremost a collector, and at one time a part-time dealer, I always, like most of us, had an abiding interest in the value of my collection. My collecting interest has always been geared to pre-war cards, as I thought it was the "golden age" of the game. But equally important I thought the cards from this time would hold their value better than a boatload of Dwight Gooden rookies. I have been fortunate enough to buy the majority of my collection when prices were not at their current statrospheric levels. In other words I would not and could not start in this niche area in 2006. As an investment, like almost anything, cards will move in line with economic barometers; the stock market, the price of oil, jobless rate, housing values, disposal income, etc. Hence, timing is a critical component when buying and selling vintage cards. The REA and recent Mastro auctions confirm that we are certainly in a bull market. Perhaps a personal example will help illustrate. Around 1999, I bought on Ebay a PSA 7 E98 Bresnahan for around $500. In May of this year I consigned it to Mastro for the auction which ended last night. It fetched $7,000, bringing a return that far outsripped any investment I ever made in the past. Are prices like this sustainable? Who knows, but I am certain that card prices like stocks, bonds or commodities (not to mention swamp land in Florida or Dutch tulips)are cyclical and can fall at any time conditions warrant it. The beauty of being a collector versus an investor is that I won't ever feel compelled to sell the collection at a certain time to reach a price target. I can just enjoy it. |
#7
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Posted By: Jack Richards
The biggest problem with card investments, it seems to me, is the difference between wholesale and retail. Buy a card, any card, then walk to the dealer next door and try to sell it. Asuming he's willing to buy it (always a questionable proposition), you're doing pretty well if you get 80%. More likely, you'll get 60-70% on a good day. |
#8
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
When you guys get done reflecting upon the constant gains in prices of old baseball cards, please think about what you consider an investment.... |
#9
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
I forgot to talk about rising and falling markets. |
#10
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Posted By: Seth B.
Frank, everything you have said is just about dead on. |
#11
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Posted By: Judge Dred (Chicken Little)
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#12
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Posted By: leon
I think there are more issues than what has been brought up about the investment side of collecting. We all know how pre war cards have done in the last 1-10 yrs, they've done pretty good, overall. I will respectfully (and for sake of a good argument) disagree and say that cards can be good investments. Before I go any farther I will say that that is not my primary reason for collecting them, but it's certainly something. Any investment can go up or down, just like cards. An investment is something that you buy in hopes of selling later for more than you paid for it. Cards can fit that description. Investments are something that you can hold a long time and be relatively sure they will go up, over the long run. Pre-war cards have done that. I think the biggest reason I see cards as a good, dare I say, investment, is that to determine value we always look at both sides of the supply vs demand equation. The thing that has not been brought up is the demand side of the equation. Think back 10 yrs ago. There was no internet (or certainly not the way it is today). Since the internet, ebay, online auctions, etc.... the prices have gone up rapidly as more folks are coming into the hobby, with easier access, and are wanting the same finite number of cards. Timing is a key part of investing and so is card buying... I don't think it will change. I don't think pre-war cards will continue spiralling up, the way they have, but I do think they will be good long term investments. The market/hobby is too deep for it not to be....just another point of view I wanted to bring up. It's certainly debatable..I know that about 8 yrs ago it dawned on my that many more people would start collecting since they were so easily accessible...I was correct.....regards |
#13
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Posted By: Greg Ecklund
Frank, |
#14
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Posted By: warshawlaw
There are some things an "investment" is not: |
#15
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
I hate doing a rain dance at parade time, but tell me that the following does not mirror 1929: Precious metals have doubled in the past year, the stock market is strong, home values are through the roof, and virtually every other indicator is positive. |
#16
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Posted By: DJ
Well said Adam and I agree. |
#17
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Posted By: Frank Wakefieldf
Greg, I read your post. |
#18
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Posted By: Bob
As a collector first and foremost who sells only to finance new card buys, I wish all the investor-only types would dive out of the prewar card market, it makes it awfully expensive for the rest of us. That said I do realize that the investors and speculators help fuel the soaring prices of cards we already own. The one area I think still has some wiggle room is the caramel cards which have been on fire the last few years. Collectors are finally coming around to notice how few exist and that they are started out in the hands of children, not adults like with the tobacco cards, and are therefore very scarce in nice or often even decent shape, that is when you can find them. The stepbrothers of the tobacco cards have really been moving lately. Also, I've noticed, to my chagrin, that certain regional issues have started drawing amazing prices because of their scarcity as collectors (and investors) have begun to notice them also. I think prewar cards are an excellent investment. |
#19
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Posted By: leon
We actually agree on something else (this). Not sure what the value would be today but in the ACC this was valued at .20 cents, in 1960(I think that was the last update of the ACC). There is, even at 46 yrs, a very good return in the long run, I think. Getting in at the right time is certainly key too. For all of you mathematicians out there what is the rate of return if Mr.Comisky was valued at $25,000.00 today and .20 cents in 1960? I think that could be a conservative estimated value but I am biased so want to be cautious. |
#20
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Posted By: davidcycleback
I am leary about items that have seen a big boom in price lately. I'm not saying I wouldn't invest in them, but would think twice. Early baseball card prices have had a big boom-- though, in their defence, collecting cards is hardly a fad and the early cards are relatively rare. |
#21
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Posted By: Judge Dred (Fred)
Drool... slobber... drool... |
#22
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Posted By: BcD
short term,there should be some hit given the conditions of other markets (oil,gas,anthrax ect),but if you are looking to hold on 15 years I suspect you'll make more than a CD in the bank and unless the IRS finds a way to scan all e-bay and auction house records there still could be no tax implications as well. |
#23
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Leon: a financial consultant once told me that if your investment doubles in value every seven years, it should be considered a good choice (not a great choice). |
#24
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Posted By: Scott Gross
IMO vintage cards are an investment (for all the reasons so stated in this thread). And as also stated before, a fun investment. I wish I had all (well most) of the money I messed around in the stock market (win and/or lose) to put in cards and other investments that I enjoyed. I have bought and redeveloped three fixer-upper houses. I loved ripping out walls, working with architects and contractors, and all the DIY projects. Broke even on one, made a few bucks on another, and the value of the one I live in now is almost obscene (relative to me). |
#25
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Posted By: jackgoodman
Leon, |
#26
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Posted By: Wesley
Gil, Money will double in seven years at 10%. I think most of the caramel cards have at least doubled in the past twelve months. |
#27
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Posted By: john/z28jd
I might have alot of money "invested" in cards but i cant wait for the bottom to drop out of the 19th century market so i can buy more of them! |
#28
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Wesley: is 10% good or bad? |
#29
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Posted By: Greg Ecklund
Frank, |
#30
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Posted By: Wesley
Gil, Ten percent a year is good. That is about four percent more than a twelve month CD. But not as good as double. Certainly they are more risky, but cards should not be discounted as a long term or short term investment vehicle. |
#31
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Posted By: bruce Dorskind
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#32
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Posted By: edacra
I picked up an old Beckett Price Guide from 1988 and was shocked at how much of the vintage pricing was still accurate. Okay not, all - many cards had doubled in book value for a 100% profit, assuming you were buying and selling at that rate to begin with. Where many rare issues jumped in price, others had settled, or are just outright undervalued in comparison. That I can buy any pre-war cards today at 1988 prices or possibly even lower says everything. |
#33
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Posted By: DJ
Leon, |
#34
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Cards are up? What ain't? |
#35
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Posted By: Greg
I'm pretty new here, but thought I would jump into the fray. |
#36
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Frank: “I think lots of money that would have gone into stocks has wandered over into baseball cards, and screwed up the prices.” |
#37
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
That is an interesting point which you raise, Warshawlaw. I however, am less certain whether it is the high end collector who drives prices with their comparitively few 1K+ purchases, or the Ford worker types who support the market with their <$500 (and often ~$100.) typical individual card purchase. Actually, I am leaning toward the latter as the true driving force. |
#38
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Don't mix the two; they are not the same. I think for anyone to have a substantial effect on the vintage card market they have to be able to spend into five figures every year. Those who cannot afford to spend more than a few hundred dollars a year simply do not have the financial muscle to push the prices on vintage cards. They play the "penny stocks": postwar and modern cards. If you want to know who moves those markets, that's the answer. Younger, lower socioeconomic class (think back to who you saw at those tables at the National). |
#39
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Ungraded prewar cards and lower graded prewar cards should be a fair to good investment. High grade SGC or PSA prewar cards(8 or better) should be a spectacular investment. |
#40
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
I stand by my contention that for each of your high income collectors spending upward of $1000 per month, there exists more than ten less high income collectors spending upward of $100 per month, and driving the market. |
#41
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Gilbert, |
#42
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Jim: in 1989, in numismatics, it was closer to $100,000 per day when investment firms decided to enter the market. |
#43
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Gilbert, |
#44
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
It was not love in our sister hobby. It was the perception that coins would trade sight-unseen and become the new commodity. Grading was young and welcomed. The investors misjudged the power of the collectors. |
#45
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Posted By: warshawlaw
It is collectors, not investors, driving this market. Take the folks we all know and (sometimes) love who have the mega bucks for cards. All of them are collectors first. They ENJOY this. That sort of spirit wasn't there with coins. The dynamic is different. The pride, the happiness, the little boy showing off his card collection, all that plays into this hobby like no other. Coins are dull. There are no funny stories from the dugout, no classic films to watch all winter, no gamer bat to hold or hat to try on and pretend for a moment, and no funny old man telling stories who used to be the Man. Your dad and you never tossed coins back and forth in the yard and you never drove a coin over the roof of the school or cut off a coin deep in the gap in left-center. |
#46
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Posted By: jeffdrum
Jim, |
#47
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Warshawlaw, |
#48
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Although it is true that the coin hobby was invaded by investors in the late 1980s, the hobby had been existing for over 200 years by that time. And while it is true that coins have less interactiveness associated with the "sport" of minting, there is an interesting history associated with the manufacture of those lil devils. |
#49
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Posted By: DJ
I think it's "too each his own" as far as what people collect and the enthusiasm they have for the item. |
#50
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
It matters not that prices for something have gone up... that is not a valid indicator of a good investment. If it was, then invest in human cadaver tissue business, that should be booming, maybe AlloSource of Centennial, Colorado would be a good choice, since their #1 competitor in North Carolina is under investigation. Or buy enriched uranium... it would fetch a fine price in Iran or North Korea. |
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