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#1
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Quote:
I am not suggesting they are the sole cause for prices expanding. If I wasn't clear about this I apologize. What I am saying is the number market participants expanded and these sneaker heads are part of it. They are more speculators than collectors and you are seeing a lot of speculative activity. I wasn't informed of this segment of collectibles but I have two clients with sons in college and it is all the rage. They are signing up for fresh released shoes on lists and then flipping them on Stock Ex for five times the price before they even own them. The fast money drives this crowd and obviously cards can exchange hands for more immediately. My view is there is renewed interest in cards and it is spreading. Last edited by Dpeck100; 02-29-2020 at 02:09 PM. |
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#3
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I think these same folks are what is fueling the rise because they aren't afraid of the downside because they are so used to winning on these shoes.
Many collectors will simply pass on something once it was risen in their view too much. Wait for a dip. These are momentum investors willing to buy because the price is expanding. |
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Honestly, I hope EVERYTHING takes a huge dump in price and the card hobby (not business) sees an overdue correction. Wouldn't it be nice to collect what you like without worrying about what a card market downturn will do to your collections value? Holy crap, it's only frigging card board... someone should start a thread called "when it was a hobby".
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fr3d c0wl3s - always looking for OJs and other 19th century stuff. PM or email me if you have something cool you're looking to find a new home for. |
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Nowadays if you wait a day or two the stock market will change quite a bit. I think it does affect prices somewhat.
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Leon Luckey |
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Yes it will.
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I'm mostly a vintage collector but I always keep my eyes and ears open to the modern card collecting/investing market. It helps me understand the psychology behind what's driving the overall card sales.
It appears the market is as hot as ever in March 2020. This YouTube vlogger does statistical analysis on actual eBay sales data. Take a few minutes to watch this video and you'll see some of the card market activity which has been as good as 300% increases on certain cards. How does it correlate to the current state of the stock market? I think people are pulling money out of stocks and parking the cash in cards. (something younger people would risk) How does it correlate to the vintage card market? A lot of these collectors/investors graduate to older cards. It's the evolution of a collector. What does it mean for most Net54 members? Not much. We are a usually frugal and a suspicious bunch who keeps our niche part of the market slow and steady. <iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/X3Cx9Dfly6s" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
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