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#1
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Posted By: Trae R.
Just a topic I have been pondering lately. Please post your stance on the subject. While I am new to pre-war I would consider myself a "both" sort of hobbyist. Because I am realizing now (what most of you probably realized long ago) that while we put a lot of our money into cards we are reaping the mental benefit (joy, excitement, etc.) of having a cool piece of history, and at the same time purchasing a seemingly sound investment should we ever need to resell the items. Assuming most of the dealers who frequent this board are also collectors - I pose the question to you too. |
#2
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Posted By: john/z28jd
I could be considered both,as i only collect now but hope to use the cards as a retirement fund and only sell what i have to.Of course some cards wont ever get sold but if i live long enough then all those cards i got from the 80s might be able to buy me food for the week if i sell them in clips of 500 [insert smiley face here] |
#3
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Posted By: Mike
My idea from the beginning was to form a collection in which I could pass on through my family.(assuming my children give a damn about baseball). |
#4
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Posted By: Josh K.
I am a collector first, but I sell off items that I dont want to fund cards that I do want. For example, I used to collect as a kid - 50's through early 90's then stopped for nearly ten-twelve years (still liked the cards, just didnt buy anything). I got back into collecting about 2 years ago and went head first into vintage cards about a year ago. Ive been selling some of my original cards to offset the new vintage cards. |
#5
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Posted By: Lee Behrens
I personally buy them because the love the cards and the history of the game. They have turned out to be a good investment that helps to fund my purchases of almost complete T202 (missing one card) and a T206 set (minus 8 cards and the big 5). In the 4 years I have been on ebay the vintage market has really blossomed. i buy for both reasons profit and to collect. |
#6
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Posted By: jay behrens
I am pretty much a pure collector at this point since I workingon a player set and not concerned with resale value of my cards. If I'm looking to make a few bucks, I will ventuer into areas that I think are ready to take off. I've had a pretty good track record over the years of getting in on th hot new collectible before it booms. I made a nice killing on CCGs (collectible card games for those that don't know), action figures and most recently, my collection of Indian Chief and Wild West cards. I scoffed at when I first showed up here and talked about my Indian cards. Now, a number of board members collect these cards, which I am sure ahs helped me make a nice profit on the cards I bought |
#7
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Posted By: Kevin Cummings
Unless you make a conscious decision going in with a "buy low/sell high" attitude, you're a collector, period. |
#8
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Posted By: leon
"f" it......I'm a dealer........there, now I said it and can accept the fact that Brian D. calls me one...(actually I really only buy and sell so I can have enough moolah to buy for my personal collection but that's not the story I'm telling) ..later |
#9
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
I collect baseball cards. If the cards do not decrease in value, then the hobby is justifiable to my wife as a viable form of savings. However, if they do go down in value, I can afford more of them. |
#10
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Posted By: Darren J. Duet
COLLECTOR, COLLECTOR, COLLECTOR |
#11
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Posted By: JimB
This is a tough one and like so many questions, I don't think there is a black and white answer for myself. Certainly, it is the love of the cards, the history, and the art of the cards that brought me and keeps me in the hobby. And I am probably guided more by my heart than head often times with purchases. But I think I would be lying to myself if I did not admit that there is a lot of money involved here and I am certainly conscious when buying expensive cards about the investment type prospects of the card. Although I have bought a handful of cards for immediate resale when I thought there was a particularly good deal, 99.9% of the time I am buying for my collection which I have no plans to sell. There are times when I sell duplicates or I sell one thing to get the funds to buy something else I am more interested in having in my collection, but those are rarely investment type decisions. |
#12
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Posted By: warshawlaw
I used to be a pure collector, of five sports plus the odd nonsports cards. Then the Hobby happened. Now, of necessity, I limit myself to baseball and boxing (with the odd basketball from the 1970's) and I carefully consider the financial aspects of my card purchases because they have become so expensive. Conseqently, I look to buy cards with upside potentials or lots I can split up so that I can finance the collection end of things on the profits. I only wish I gave enough of a damn to cultivate a stock-picking skill to the degree I seem to pick up on good card investments, but life is too short to be bored. |
#13
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
For getting Leon to admit he is a dealer - now he can sell me the rest of those Croft's Cocoas!!!!!!! |
#14
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Posted By: Bruce Babcock
Back when they were naming schools after him, I "invested" in several hundred Steve Garvey cards. After his well publicized troubles, I stopped "investing" - in anybody. |
#15
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Posted By: Julie
...so I'm a dealer insofar as I always think--will i be able to sell this someday? Someday... |
#16
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Posted By: BCD
That's why he purchased a Tango Brand egg card from me about five years ago. He is PURELY a type card collector! |
#17
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Posted By: Julie
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#18
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Posted By: Anonymous
Collector. |
#19
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Posted By: pete
like many of you I am a collector of almost 30 years. I've always been a collector first...although as of recently I've considered buying cards for an investment. I feel as if I'm knowledgable enough to invest wisely in bb cards vs stocks or mutual funds. Seeing the unbelievable rising values of some scarcities and caramel cards in general leads me to want to INVEST!!!!!!!!! |
#20
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Posted By: barrysloate
Even if you consider yourself a pure collector, if your collection happens to increase in value along the way, doesn't that make you a collector/investor without even trying? And who objects to their collection increasing in value. Seems like a positive thing to me. To put it another way, if you considered yourself a pure collector and the value of your collection plummeted, would you be inclined to just throw in the towel? |
#21
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Posted By: Brian H (misunderestimated)
I think Barry is right that like it or not collectors are in some sense investors unless that requires intent to invest.... Personally I realized once my cards started being worth (and started to cost) a meaningful amount of money that I was clearly an investor even if I wasn't necessarily always a particularly rational investor in that I buy/sell/trade cards often without regard for what I think that they are (or will be) worth.... |
#22
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Posted By: Bob
Definately a collector, reliving the joys of my childhood. I invest in real estate (my house), the market (401k, various funds) and even our educational system (3 kids and my wife headed for college). Cards to me ideally would be an escape from concerns about money. Hence I collect judiciously in the P-VG range. |
#23
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Posted By: Trae R.
It's really neat to see how everyone views such a topic - I figured it would probably stir up some passion about the subject! Keep it going! |
#24
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Posted By: davidcycleback
I'm a renter. I enjoy handling stuff, looking at it in person. Some stuff I keep for a long while, some stuff I frame and hang from my wall, other stuff I keep moving. For something I buy to resell I might say, "I wouldn't buy it for myself, but I can see why people like these." For things I'm particularly fond of on a personal basis, that the next owner appreceates it as much or more than I do can be more important than the amount of money offered. For a few, the price is set where only a person who really appreceates it would pay that amount. I have items where I know what the sale price is but have never offered them for sale or even said aloud what is the price as I'm aware no one would pay that amount ... I've found that the best way to discover how much you like something is by selling it for a good price and wishing you hadn't. |
#25
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Posted By: Scott
I'm also a "renter" when it comes to baseball cards. |
#26
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Posted By: Bily
OK, since I am new to this board I should use this topic to talk about myself a little (lol). I am 21 and just graduated from Nevada-Reno (sweet 16 team last year) in August, and while surveying my future I decided to take a calculated gamble on T201 and T206's. I have no real money to speak of, just credit cards. My question is this, is it smart to buy these cards when you can get a deal (at or below SMR) and throw them on the plastic? Right now I have very good intro offers of 0% interest which will expire soon and go up to 10% there after. It seems like a good idea to me, but I can tell it frustrates my parents. I figure if you want the cards (which I do badly) the time to get the rare vintages is now (as leon mentioned earlier, ebay, PSA registry, etc all have increased demand). I also remember in Ecology class my prof said in 2050 there will be 15-18 billion people on the planet, and it's convinced me to go for it right now. |
#27
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Posted By: davidcycleback
Don't buy baseball cards on credit cards when you have no money to back it up. Go conservatively until you have the discretionary funds (amount you can afford to lose) to spend. |
#28
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Posted By: leon
Do exactly as David (Cycleback) just said. You are probably playing with fire. It is obvious that you mean well but you are taking a major gamble given the statements you made. Don't buy on credit cards ESPECIALLY IF YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU ARE DOING AND AREN'T AN EXPERT. There is one board member, who's a friend of mine, that does it and does ok but he has a lot of experience. Start off with about $50-$100 of your own money and buy and sell a few cheap things first.....regards |
#29
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Posted By: Julie
I'm suppoosed to leave them sit there and fritter them away on groceries and bart tickets? |
#30
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Posted By: davidcycleback
Thinking about it a bit more, my opinion is even stronger against the poster investing money he doesn't have with credit cards. Investing in anything with borrowed money where you owe 10 percent interest is bad, bad news from the start-- and shows lack of undertanding of good investing and personal finances. Spend discretionary funds only and learn about the market with money that is yours and that you can afford to lose and isn't rent or food money or money you don't have. |
#31
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Posted By: Billy
Your advice is greatly appreciated. The high PSA SGC grade T201'S have generally doubled in price since I started buying them this summer. I have made good money on those that I have sold, however I have bought more than I have sold and am still in debt. I have absolutely no bills or college debt, so that is how I justified it to myself (since many of my peers can have $50,000 in college debt alone). I will probably make sure to be very cautious about adding more debt though. Another solution is to balance transfer to new cards with 0%, and keep doing that, but it probably isnt worth it. Thanks, Billy |
#32
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Posted By: Billy
David, |
#33
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Posted By: leon
First of all I spelled your name with only 1 "l" earlier because that's how you spelled it in the previous post. Looked funny....but hey, with a name like mine who knows? In my brief collecting career I have made the best decisions when I try to take the emotion out of them. I still find it difficult (as almost every other board member will have the same issue) when it's for my personal collection. Recently I paid about $400 more for a card on ebay than the same exact type brought just a few weeks later. Had I been patient I would possibly have been better off (had I bid on the later one first it's hard to say for sure). Like most pro's say, you will probably see another of whatever your heart is set on. There are few examples that you will "never" see again.....take care and whatever you do ...have fun with the hobby. 99% of the people I have met are great folks.....it's been a lot of fun so far. |
#34
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Posted By: Billy
Thanks Leon!!! |
#35
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Posted By: jay behrens
I haven't had a credit card, or even a loan in almost 15 years. When you live on cash only, you know exactly where you stand financially. I could have a lot of really cool, brand new toys, like that 42" DLP TV I want, but I don't really need it. I just set aside some money that draws interest instead of paying interest to come credit company. |
#36
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Posted By: davidcycleback
What can be said about a quality T206 Ty Cobb or Walter Johnson bought at a good price with discretionary funds, is that it is a relatively stable product. I'm unable to predict what if any return it will bring over five or ten years, but the card is nothing like a Crispy Creme stock. Even if the price drops, the Cobb or Johnson will retain financial value for years to come. So, while it wouldn't be my investment of choice, I don't object to a collector putting some hard earned dollars into a nice Ty Cobb or two. |
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