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  #1  
Old 04-05-2019, 08:32 AM
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Rhotchkiss Rhotchkiss is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Econteachert205 View Post
The best will continue to outperform. The rest is doomed long term.
100% agree. However, my definition of best not only includes "highest graded", but also (perhaps more so) ultra-blue chip players, especially rarities of them, and super rare type-cards (like rare back T206s, T214, T215, T216, E92 Crofts/Nadja/Blank, E104-II, etc).

Anyone have an M131 Baltimore Newsboy Cobb to sell?!
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  #2  
Old 04-05-2019, 09:28 AM
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Yastrzemski Sports Yastrzemski Sports is offline
Adam Yastrzemski
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A key to the hobby is the young players in the league. In the past 8 years baseball has thrived starting with Trout and Harper, Altuve, Baez, Bryant and a big swell with Judge and Ohtani. Getting kids into the hobby is a key and they are. I have seen Judge turn a lot of casual fans into buyers. I see more and more shops opening up and staying open. The other factor is breakers. They seem to be running the hobby and open a ton of product. Overall baseball is very strong. Basketball is stronger. Football is doing well and Hockey seems to hold its own. The young talent in sports brings people in who then branch out to the old stuff. Things seem to be going well.
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  #3  
Old 04-05-2019, 09:53 AM
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darwinbulldog darwinbulldog is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yastrzemski Sports View Post
A key to the hobby is the young players in the league. In the past 8 years baseball has thrived starting with Trout and Harper, Altuve, Baez, Bryant and a big swell with Judge and Ohtani. Getting kids into the hobby is a key and they are. I have seen Judge turn a lot of casual fans into buyers. I see more and more shops opening up and staying open. The other factor is breakers. They seem to be running the hobby and open a ton of product. Overall baseball is very strong. Basketball is stronger. Football is doing well and Hockey seems to hold its own. The young talent in sports brings people in who then branch out to the old stuff. Things seem to be going well.
This is a bit of tangent, but is football really doing well? In absolute terms, sure, but my understanding is that the NFL is significantly less popular now than it was just 5 years ago. And even if that's not true, there are significantly fewer kids playing football, largely because of the greater awareness about CTE and about concussions in general. I certainly don't want my boys playing football.
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  #4  
Old 04-05-2019, 10:12 AM
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Glenn
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To the original question though, I'd say that the hobby (prewar baseball cards) is about as strong as I've seen now, but only in retrospect will I be able to say if that was a good sign or a bad sign.

There are some cards that I'm a little hesitant to pick up right now, just because they're behaving as if there's a bubble, and there are other things I'm buying up because I think they're undervalued, but again, who knows?
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Old 04-05-2019, 10:45 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by darwinbulldog View Post
To the original question though, I'd say that the hobby (prewar baseball cards) is about as strong as I've seen now, but only in retrospect will I be able to say if that was a good sign or a bad sign.

There are some cards that I'm a little hesitant to pick up right now, just because they're behaving as if there's a bubble, and there are other things I'm buying up because I think they're undervalued, but again, who knows?
This last point is key to me - sometimes you can find undervalued cards that are ready to takeoff. Other times, you should just stick with the blue chip cards that are trading at historically high prices, because they have shown a pretty consistent climb that shows no signs of a cliff.

I prefer to go after the undervalued ones because they’re fairly constant with significant upside. I do worry about bubbles bursting.
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  #6  
Old 04-05-2019, 10:55 AM
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After a long hiatus I am seeing some new strong buying in 19th century cards. The supply of most sets is low so this could translate to some price spikes.
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