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  #1  
Old 10-20-2022, 12:50 PM
raulus raulus is online now
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What is even more surprising to me were the final hammer prices. Both PSA 9s, but the older '54 Topps Mays card going for exactly 30% less than a '62 Topps Mays?!?!? They are both not always found well centered, but if anything, I would have expected those prices to more likely be the other way around. Possibly a case of two determined collectors fighting for registry improvement or superiority in regard to the '62 Mays?

The PSA pop reports show a total of 16 '54 Mays cards graded as 9s, with three of them having qualifiers, but none graded higher. Meanwhile, the pop report shows a total of 9 '62 Mays cards graded as 9s, with none having any qualifiers, but in this case there is 1 single higher graded '62 Mays card graded 10. Though there are actually fewer '62 Topps Mays cards graded 9, or higher, I can't see enough of a difference in the numbers to justify and explain the big difference in those final auction prices being based on these pop reports alone.
1962T in high grades tends to sell at a pretty good premium. Wood borders can be a real issue with getting dinged up pretty easily, and I think that’s what’s coming into play here with the prices.

If you look historically at those two cards in PSA 6, 7, 8, the 1962T consistently sells for a lot more than the 1954T in the same grade. And often the difference is 2x or 3x.

Also, we’ve seen a few of the 1954T in PSA 9 come onto the market over the last 5 years. I think this might be the only 1962T in PSA 9 in that span. So there was probably some pent-up demand for the 62T.
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1968 American Oil left side
1971 Bazooka numbered complete panel

Last edited by raulus; 10-20-2022 at 12:53 PM.
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  #2  
Old 10-20-2022, 01:39 PM
BobC BobC is offline
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1962T in high grades tends to sell at a pretty good premium. Wood borders can be a real issue with getting dinged up pretty easily, and I think that’s what’s coming into play here with the prices.

If you look historically at those two cards in PSA 6, 7, 8, the 1962T consistently sells for a lot more than the 1954T in the same grade. And often the difference is 2x or 3x.

Also, we’ve seen a few of the 1954T in PSA 9 come onto the market over the last 5 years. I think this might be the only 1962T in PSA 9 in that span. So there was probably some pent-up demand for the 62T.
Don't disagree at all, just don't really get why his '54 card would sell for less than his '62. IMO the '54 is a much better looking card to begin with. There are many people who are not real crazy about the wood grain effect on '62 Topps cards at all. And the '54 set also marks the first Topps cards they actually used real player photos on, so there is that added extra as well.

As I said, the pop reports don't seem to offer a reasonable explanation for such a price difference at all. What does possibly help explain it is if the high grade '62s have been hoarded in the recent past and not showing up for sale, as you mentioned. In which case, that difference could be due to two collectors just waiting a long time to finally find a high grade '62 Mays card for sale, and both went after it. Which actually just reinforces my original point that I don't think it was primarily the pop reports alone that explain the differences in the prices paid for those two different Mays cards.

Last edited by BobC; 10-20-2022 at 01:50 PM.
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  #3  
Old 10-20-2022, 01:58 PM
raulus raulus is online now
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Don't disagree at all, just don't really get why his '54 card would sell for less than his '62. IMO the '54 is a much better looking card to begin with. There are many people who are not real crazy about the wood grain effect on '62 Topps cards to begin with. And the '54 set also marks the first Topps cards they actually used real player photos on, so there is that added extra as well.

As I said, the pop reports don't seem to offer a reasonable explanation for such a price difference at all. What does possibly help explain it is if the high grade '62s have been hoarded in the recent past and not showing up for sale, as you mentioned. In which case, that difference could be due to two collectors just waiting a long time to finally find a high grade '62 Mays card for sale, and both went after it. Which actually just reinforces my original point that I don't think it was primarily the pop reports alone that explain the differences in the prices paid for those two different Mays cards.
Upon further reflection, and looking at some of the historical results a bit closer now, I may have over-stated the pricing differential here, pre-pandemic at least.

For example, at PSA 8, the 1954 Mays pretty routinely sold for about $3k-$4k. Same grade for 1962 was around $3.5k to $5.5k. Still a premium, but probably closer to 20-30%.

I'm not entirely sure that you can necessarily explain it just based on pop counts and aesthetics. For better or worse, the market tends to take on a life of its own, and often the results aren't as explainable as we might like. I guess if we were really adventurous, we could go out and take short positions on the 62, and long positions on the 54 so as to arbitrage and drive the pricing to a relative spot where we think makes more sense. But in the process, we might lose our shirts!
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1968 American Oil left side
1971 Bazooka numbered complete panel
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  #4  
Old 10-20-2022, 03:32 PM
BioCRN BioCRN is offline
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For better or worse, the market tends to take on a life of its own, and often the results aren't as explainable as we might like.
At this beginning of this year I sold a PSA 8 1975 Jose Cardenal for $150 and that wasn't even a top-3 sell price for that card in that time period. It was $100-$150 range in the year before, too.

A recent one sold for $61 (including shipping) and there's a $96 buy-it-now sitting around with no action on EBay right now.

I still have no idea why there was a run on the card. I bought 2 PSA 8's about 5 years earlier for $20 combined.
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  #5  
Old 10-20-2022, 03:46 PM
raulus raulus is online now
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At this beginning of this year I sold a PSA 8 1975 Jose Cardenal for $150 and that wasn't even a top-3 sell price for that card in that time period. It was $100-$150 range in the year before, too.

A recent one sold for $61 (including shipping) and there's a $96 buy-it-now sitting around with no action on EBay right now.

I still have no idea why there was a run on the card. I bought 2 PSA 8's about 5 years earlier for $20 combined.
While that kind of movement is big in percentage terms, in absolute dollar terms it's perhaps a little less exciting. It could be that the movement and action has more to do with the number of pieces on the market at the time and the number and aggressiveness of buyers that happened to be in the market for it. Or it could just be that a handful of buyers didn't mind paying an extra $50 or so to pick it up now, rather than wait for the next one to roll around at a lower price. Because hey, what's another $50 among friends when it means you get your cardboard today?!

Or it could also be one of your famous "fake sale" patterns, where someone was trying to establish a market at $150 or so, and then unload their real card at that price. Although for an extra $50 or $100 to create a fake higher market price, it seems like a lot of work to me.
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1971 Bazooka numbered complete panel
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  #6  
Old 10-20-2022, 04:03 PM
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I have paid more than rare cards are worth, in my mind, to have them not go to auction. If 2-3 people with deep pockets wanted them in an auction, I would have no chance. And it's unlikely I will see some of them very soon again, if ever..So, sometimes, a collector has to do what a collector does.

I don't blame the guy with the Black Sabbath poster. Most of us, who have been doing it a while, have done something like that...and might again!
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  #7  
Old 10-20-2022, 05:33 PM
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Originally Posted by Leon View Post
I have paid more than rare cards are worth, in my mind, to have them not go to auction. If 2-3 people with deep pockets wanted them in an auction, I would have no chance. And it's unlikely I will see some of them very soon again, if ever..So, sometimes, a collector has to do what a collector does.

I don't blame the guy with the Black Sabbath poster. Most of us, who have been doing it a while, have done something like that...and might again!
.
Good point, if you're going to overpay its better to overpay with another board member, you just never know what could happen if rare cards make it out of the clubhouse.

Plus it feels better selling a card to a fellow member/friend/colleague than some rando in the outside world because you can always invoke the "if you're going to sell it, you have to give me first shot at buying it back" clause.
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  #8  
Old 10-20-2022, 06:10 PM
BobC BobC is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Leon View Post
I have paid more than rare cards are worth, in my mind, to have them not go to auction. If 2-3 people with deep pockets wanted them in an auction, I would have no chance. And it's unlikely I will see some of them very soon again, if ever..So, sometimes, a collector has to do what a collector does.

I don't blame the guy with the Black Sabbath poster. Most of us, who have been doing it a while, have done something like that...and might again!
.
LOL

So true!

Once in a very great while it can actually work the other way though. Years back I'd heard of someone selling a card that was a white whale for me. Contacted them and sure enough, they had the card for sale and told me the price. They also told me they had already offered it to someone else, whom they were just waiting to hear back from, and was told they had first dibs. But if they passed on it, the card was mine at the same asking price. So of course, the other buyer didn't pass and lo and behold, I was SOL. But then several years later the very same card came up in an auction, and I miraculously won it for almost half of what it had been offered to me at before. So sometimes patience, and an auction, can work to your benefit.

Last edited by BobC; 10-20-2022 at 06:11 PM.
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  #9  
Old 10-20-2022, 08:17 PM
G1911 G1911 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Leon View Post
I have paid more than rare cards are worth, in my mind, to have them not go to auction. If 2-3 people with deep pockets wanted them in an auction, I would have no chance. And it's unlikely I will see some of them very soon again, if ever..So, sometimes, a collector has to do what a collector does.

I don't blame the guy with the Black Sabbath poster. Most of us, who have been doing it a while, have done something like that...and might again!
.
I have done this a few times. For truly rare items, it's a complete guess of what "overpaying" even is, and while I may hypothesize it 'should' go for $300, it might go for $3,000. Sometimes it's better to just pay $500 to buy it direct and skip the risk. Lose out on a deal maybe, but secure it and remove the risk

Other times I have paid 5x of what I think a card would go for at auction, because it is not available at auction and the seller isn't really looking to sell. For a card I can get elsewhere, I value based on the market because I don't want to unnecessarily throw money down the drain, but if it is a unique or nearly so item I want, I value it entirely based on its personal value to me.
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  #10  
Old 10-20-2022, 05:46 PM
BobC BobC is offline
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Originally Posted by raulus View Post
Upon further reflection, and looking at some of the historical results a bit closer now, I may have over-stated the pricing differential here, pre-pandemic at least.

For example, at PSA 8, the 1954 Mays pretty routinely sold for about $3k-$4k. Same grade for 1962 was around $3.5k to $5.5k. Still a premium, but probably closer to 20-30%.

I'm not entirely sure that you can necessarily explain it just based on pop counts and aesthetics. For better or worse, the market tends to take on a life of its own, and often the results aren't as explainable as we might like. I guess if we were really adventurous, we could go out and take short positions on the 62, and long positions on the 54 so as to arbitrage and drive the pricing to a relative spot where we think makes more sense. But in the process, we might lose our shirts!
LOL

That's okay, I'll be happy with the '54 and '62 Mays cards I already have.

And sounds like you're agreeing with me, it is not the pop reports causing what seems to be a bit of a pricing anomaly for these two cards. We'll probably never know what could have caused such a big price differential between those two PSA 9 Mays cards in that last REA auction then?
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  #11  
Old 10-20-2022, 06:36 PM
raulus raulus is online now
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LOL

That's okay, I'll be happy with the '54 and '62 Mays cards I already have.

And sounds like you're agreeing with me, it is not the pop reports causing what seems to be a bit of a pricing anomaly for these two cards. We'll probably never know what could have caused such a big price differential between those two PSA 9 Mays cards in that last REA auction then?
Obviously the bidders are responsible for the price differential. But beyond that, digging into why these two cards have the relative values that they have in relation to one another is likely to remain a bit of an enigma.

But the 1962T selling for 25% more than the 1954T seems to follow the historical relationship between these two cards pretty closely. Whether the bidders had that in mind in the heat of the action is unlikely. But that’s definitely where the chips fell in the end. The invisible hand at work!
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1968 American Oil left side
1971 Bazooka numbered complete panel
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  #12  
Old 10-20-2022, 07:22 PM
BobC BobC is offline
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Obviously the bidders are responsible for the price differential. But beyond that, digging into why these two cards have the relative values that they have in relation to one another is likely to remain a bit of an enigma.

But the 1962T selling for 25% more than the 1954T seems to follow the historical relationship between these two cards pretty closely. Whether the bidders had that in mind in the heat of the action is unlikely. But that’s definitely where the chips fell in the end. The invisible hand at work!
And that factoid you are pointing out about more recent '62 versus '54 prices I find very interesting. I haven't really been actively collecting and paying attention to cards and prices from those sets for a decade or two now. But when I was, I always seemed to remember '54 cards going for more than comparable '62 cards. Maybe it also has to do with the higher grades for these particular cards, because as you speculated and pointed out, the full-bleed wood grain borders on the '62s do tend to highlight any edge and corner issues way more so than on cards with just white borders.

But then these are the kinds of conundrums that help to make, and keep, this hobby interesting to many of us. Good stuff!
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Old 10-20-2022, 09:03 PM
raulus raulus is online now
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And that factoid you are pointing out about more recent '62 versus '54 prices I find very interesting. I haven't really been actively collecting and paying attention to cards and prices from those sets for a decade or two now. But when I was, I always seemed to remember '54 cards going for more than comparable '62 cards. Maybe it also has to do with the higher grades for these particular cards, because as you speculated and pointed out, the full-bleed wood grain borders on the '62s do tend to highlight any edge and corner issues way more so than on cards with just white borders.

But then these are the kinds of conundrums that help to make, and keep, this hobby interesting to many of us. Good stuff!
Just to be clear, I was only comparing the Mays items from those two years, not other items. The same ratio may or may not hold true more generally.
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1968 American Oil left side
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  #14  
Old 10-20-2022, 01:42 PM
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Put a bunch of extra zeroes before the decimal place and dare anyone to outbid you.
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