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  #1  
Old 09-20-2019, 11:35 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by drcy View Post

In fact, it's right now a nonsensical exercise on its face to try to calculate the condition value of cards in PSA holders because no one knows what are the condition grades of the cards. One certainly can't go by the number on the labels. One might as well try to calculate the condition values of cards in black boxes..
You are losing me here. I think the market "trusts" PSA to assign a reasonable grade to each card presented to it. (The kind of corruption that is routinely alleged by posters is very hard to sustain in a public company). It is true that we don't know whether the card was doctored and if so how; but, we are reasonably confident that the card now presents at the cited grade level. Your overall point is a good one -- the Blowout saga has surely been a negative for the value of high-grade cards.

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  #2  
Old 09-21-2019, 01:11 AM
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If a card is altered, any number grade, except debatably 1, is incorrect, and the card is less valuable than an unaltered card in that number grade.

Humorously, PSA's own website states "Cards that have been trimmed have very little value." (link if you want to read for yourself, or copy for posterity) However, as was suggested in other thread, that line may be quietly removed at some point in the near future.

Last edited by drcy; 09-21-2019 at 02:04 AM.
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  #3  
Old 09-21-2019, 03:20 AM
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I would expect that the value of most high dollar slabbed cards, altered or not, would take a hit for this. Every buyer now has to factor in the risk that every card at that end they buy might turn out to be altered. I would be curious after a couple of years of auction data post scandal becomes available to see how much that “We don’t trust PSA like we used to” discount is going to be.
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  #4  
Old 09-21-2019, 09:32 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by drcy View Post
If a card is altered, any number grade, except debatably 1, is incorrect, and the card is less valuable than an unaltered card in that number grade.

Humorously, PSA's own website states "Cards that have been trimmed have very little value." (link if you want to read for yourself, or copy for posterity) However, as was suggested in other thread, that line may be quietly removed at some point in the near future.
You’re eloquently stating the obvious.
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  #5  
Old 09-21-2019, 10:28 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GeoPoto View Post
You are losing me here. I think the market "trusts" PSA to assign a reasonable grade to each card presented to it. (The kind of corruption that is routinely alleged by posters is very hard to sustain in a public company). It is true that we don't know whether the card was doctored and if so how; but, we are reasonably confident that the card now presents at the cited grade level. Your overall point is a good one -- the Blowout saga has surely been a negative for the value of high-grade cards.

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George, I may be missing the point of your post, but I'd counter that while we can be reasonably confident that the card "presents" at the cited grade, it presents due to alteration and deception and thus is no where near the assigned grade. With or without corruption the market trust erodes.
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  #6  
Old 09-21-2019, 10:32 AM
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i'd really like to know what's happening to the altered cards pwcc/psa is buying back as well.

THIS SHOULDNT BE A BIG SECRET...especially if they want we consumers to have any confidence that anything positive is happening.
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Old 09-21-2019, 10:44 AM
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A high grade altered card bonfire seems unlikely. Perhaps a moderate sentence of incarceration in the vault before hitting the auction block again will occur.

If the market gradually heads south in terms of return, the cards may get a reduced sentence for good behavior.
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  #8  
Old 09-21-2019, 10:50 AM
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Originally Posted by ullmandds View Post
i'd really like to know what's happening to the altered cards pwcc/psa is buying back as well.

THIS SHOULDNT BE A BIG SECRET...especially if they want we consumers to have any confidence that anything positive is happening.
I thought someone said that they're being passed on to the FBI. If that's the case, it would be up to the FBI what to do with the cards. It was law enforcement that destroyed the autographs and stamped the early Pete Rose counterfeits.
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  #9  
Old 09-21-2019, 10:59 AM
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Originally Posted by drcy View Post
I thought someone said that they're being passed on to the FBI. If that's the case, it would be up to the FBI what to do with the cards. It was law enforcement that destroyed the autographs and stamped the early Pete Rose counterfeits.
if this is the case I'd bet some end up going home with the agents!!!
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  #10  
Old 09-21-2019, 11:24 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by drcy View Post
I thought someone said that they're being passed on to the FBI. If that's the case, it would be up to the FBI what to do with the cards.
If the cards are being sent to the FBI, then there is very little likleyhood they will enter the hobby again, or if they do, they will be permanently marked somehow. The FBI does not care about the cards except the fact that they were used to commit fraud.

And that will reduce supply and leave holes in registry sets.
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Last edited by Bigdaddy; 09-21-2019 at 11:25 AM.
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  #11  
Old 09-21-2019, 11:42 PM
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Originally Posted by brob28 View Post
George, I may be missing the point of your post, but I'd counter that while we can be reasonably confident that the card "presents" at the cited grade, it presents due to alteration and deception and thus is no where near the assigned grade. With or without corruption the market trust erodes.
Drcy (and you, I think) is addressing the case where a card is determined to be doctored in an unacceptable way. I'm trying to address the other graded cards that haven't been determined to be "altered", and probably never will. Taking doctoring in it's broadest sense to mean helping the card present as well as possible, we have to assume every graded card was doctored (at least soaked and cleaned). What we don't know is whether the doctoring is inside or outside the vaguely defined boundaries that affect it's legitimacy, and ultimately it's value. That uncertainty will weigh on values, but won't make the cards (near) worthless. The key driver of prices is (perceived) scarcity.

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  #12  
Old 09-22-2019, 01:11 AM
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In these discussions, I often use the words worth less, but not worthless.

And, yes, there are uncertainties, unknowns, gray areas and matters of opinion and different viewpoints in this topic, including when trying to devise a market valuation system (which I am not doing-- in the current environment I don't think it can be done).

Here and elsewhere in my life, I often point out that things, systems and calculations are inaccurate, and leave it at that.

I've long railed against the PSA Registry because, for many reasons, it presents a false certainty, a false representation of reality and the statistical calculation methodology is incorrect. It's long offended my sense of logic and common sense . . . As an online game or fun showcase of collections webpage, that is fine. However, so much of the hobby and pricing and grading methods (and ethics) are influenced by the registry.

With the current scandal, people are realizing that the Registry numbers and calculation totals can't be more accurate and precise than the margin of error in grading and especially alteration detection. No doubt, to some people and due to the prevalence of as yet unknown number of mislabelled altered cards, the Registry numbers mean nothing now. All they know is that the numbers can't be correct. In this very thread, someone pointed out cards in the Registry with wrong numbers (number graded cards that have been shown to be altered).

Last edited by drcy; 09-22-2019 at 01:42 AM.
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  #13  
Old 09-22-2019, 02:54 AM
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Great angle to proceed with, David. I like the way you are thinking.

I'd like to propose an alternative. First, let me say I have no skin in the registry, nor do I have six figures to buy the best of the best. Just an alternate theory:

What if, by exposing the altered cards, it actually increases the value of the remaining cards?

Now, this theory assumes the remaining graded cards are indeed unaltered and legitimate.

Let's assume there are 15 PSA 9's of a certain card, and using your values they are "worth" $1000. Now 7 of them are deemed altered, and they are removed. They are now "worth" $30, but further, by definition they are not PSA 9's. Therefore the value of a PSA 9 remains the same, and all altered cards continue to be worth $30.

Finally, there are now only 8 PSA 9's of this particular card. Does that now mean the PSA 9's are actually worth more, because there is less supply of them?
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  #14  
Old 09-22-2019, 05:25 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Stampsfan View Post
Great angle to proceed with, David. I like the way you are thinking.

I'd like to propose an alternative. First, let me say I have no skin in the registry, nor do I have six figures to buy the best of the best. Just an alternate theory:

What if, by exposing the altered cards, it actually increases the value of the remaining cards?

Now, this theory assumes the remaining graded cards are indeed unaltered and legitimate.

Let's assume there are 15 PSA 9's of a certain card, and using your values they are "worth" $1000. Now 7 of them are deemed altered, and they are removed. They are now "worth" $30, but further, by definition they are not PSA 9's. Therefore the value of a PSA 9 remains the same, and all altered cards continue to be worth $30.

Finally, there are now only 8 PSA 9's of this particular card. Does that now mean the PSA 9's are actually worth more, because there is less supply of them?
This for instance -

https://www.ebay.com/itm/1955-Topps-...gAAOSwlOVdgowK

I would estimate value right around $33K - Seems to be no lack of higher than that "investors"
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  #15  
Old 09-22-2019, 05:36 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by toledo_mudhen View Post
This for instance -

https://www.ebay.com/itm/1955-Topps-...gAAOSwlOVdgowK

I would estimate value right around $33K - Seems to be no lack of higher than that "investors"
My first immediate thought.....was this card residing in a 6 holder 2 years ago ?

I hate to be this way but that’s my first impression of all PSA high grade cards
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  #16  
Old 09-22-2019, 05:53 AM
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It depends on whether or not the entire thing falls apart, because registry contestants no longer believe in high grade slabs OR give up on the collecting concept.

If people continually get scammed as they are, do they pull out of their collections and start selling off in quantity? Or do they continue to fill the gaps in their sets with the only remaining high grade cards on the market? It's kind of like this:


Take the 1948 Leaf (baseball, football, boxing) sets, which have been found to be completely inaccurate. If one person who had 10 altered high value cards out of the complete set of 100, are they going to feel enough animosity to PSA to sell their 90 "good" cards or are they going to buy back the 10 cards they now need? How do they (or the market) trust their own "good" cards? What if it's 15 altered or 20 altered out of 100? Each collector will have their own breaking point.

I have seen a bunch of collectors post something to the effect of: "Man, I hope these cards all lose their value because I'll be right there with my cash to buy them on the downswing!" But is that just talk? Are they willing to buy into a recession downswing?
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Old 09-22-2019, 01:25 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Stampsfan View Post
Great angle to proceed with, David. I like the way you are thinking.

I'd like to propose an alternative. First, let me say I have no skin in the registry, nor do I have six figures to buy the best of the best. Just an alternate theory:

What if, by exposing the altered cards, it actually increases the value of the remaining cards?

Now, this theory assumes the remaining graded cards are indeed unaltered and legitimate.

Let's assume there are 15 PSA 9's of a certain card, and using your values they are "worth" $1000. Now 7 of them are deemed altered, and they are removed. They are now "worth" $30, but further, by definition they are not PSA 9's. Therefore the value of a PSA 9 remains the same, and all altered cards continue to be worth $30.

Finally, there are now only 8 PSA 9's of this particular card. Does that now mean the PSA 9's are actually worth more, because there is less supply of them?
NM

Last edited by perezfan; 09-23-2019 at 02:55 PM.
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  #18  
Old 09-22-2019, 03:58 PM
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@drcy

David...

Please correct me if I am wrong... but to your credit, I believe that this is what you have anticipated regarding market pricing of cards, and have referred to in several prior posts.

I am no longer a card guy, however I believe as "alteration" definitions are clarified there will be a fairly dramatic change from how cards are currently valued.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Stampsfan View Post
Great angle to proceed with, David. I like the way you are thinking.

I'd like to propose an alternative. First, let me say I have no skin in the registry, nor do I have six figures to buy the best of the best. Just an alternate theory:

What if, by exposing the altered cards, it actually increases the value of the remaining cards?

Now, this theory assumes the remaining graded cards are indeed unaltered and legitimate.

Let's assume there are 15 PSA 9's of a certain card, and using your values they are "worth" $1000. Now 7 of them are deemed altered, and they are removed. They are now "worth" $30, but further, by definition they are not PSA 9's. Therefore the value of a PSA 9 remains the same, and all altered cards continue to be worth $30.

Finally, there are now only 8 PSA 9's of this particular card. Does that now mean the PSA 9's are actually worth more, because there is less supply of them?
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  #19  
Old 09-22-2019, 08:10 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Stampsfan View Post
Great angle to proceed with, David. I like the way you are thinking.

I'd like to propose an alternative. First, let me say I have no skin in the registry, nor do I have six figures to buy the best of the best. Just an alternate theory:

What if, by exposing the altered cards, it actually increases the value of the remaining cards?

Now, this theory assumes the remaining graded cards are indeed unaltered and legitimate.

Let's assume there are 15 PSA 9's of a certain card, and using your values they are "worth" $1000. Now 7 of them are deemed altered, and they are removed. They are now "worth" $30, but further, by definition they are not PSA 9's. Therefore the value of a PSA 9 remains the same, and all altered cards continue to be worth $30.

Finally, there are now only 8 PSA 9's of this particular card. Does that now mean the PSA 9's are actually worth more, because there is less supply of them?
Yep.
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