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#1
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And the same goes for any of those much rarer cards/sets on your list. Given an honest choice between any of those specific cards you mentioned in your initial post of this thread, if they could pick and have only one, which card do think would be chosen by the majority of collectors to own? Demand over supply is what creates scarcity. Think about it. "Hey everyone, I own a complete T206 set, including the Big Four!" or "Hey everyone, I own two T206 Wagners!". Which statement (as a collector, not a flipper, dealer or investor) would you rather be able to make? |
#2
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I like this idea as a fun little exercise. Rarer than Wagner, within the context of it's set.
1932 US Caramel PSA Graded: 2,163. Lindstrom POP: 1 SGC Graded: 843 baseball + 59 boxing + 37 Golf = 939, with 0 Lindstrom's Total of 3,102, with 1 Lindstorm. Final percent: .00032237% Of course, this isn't actually right. I believe there are 2 Lindstorm's out there known, and big cards are graded much more than commons (Wagner is actually tougher than the figure in POP reports would suggest). I would think, off the top, this has got to be up there if not the #1 as the set is not all that rare. Perhaps a unique Old Judge pose bests it. |
#3
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Monty Python did a skit on this: "The man with three buttocks and two Wagners." |
#4
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Its nice that you can buy rarer cards of Mathewson for way less money,
Like Crofts cocoa and candy love that horizontal pose. Last edited by MR RAREBACK; 10-29-2022 at 01:18 PM. |
#5
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That's where they've all been hiding, nice group.
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#6
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The most valuable cards in the hobby aren't the rarest ones, other than maybe grade. .
__________________
Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com Last edited by Leon; 11-09-2022 at 04:43 PM. |
#7
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Awesome cards everyone! Mathewson run and the proofs are amazing!
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#8
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trying to get 50 of them, have around 25 so far
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#9
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The Spring 2022 Mile High auction had a t206 Wagner (the Charlie Sheen Wagner) and a Joe Doyle NY Natl. The Wagner sold for $3,060,000. The Doyle sold for $1,030,000. Clearly the Wagner is more “valuable”. But, for what it’s worth, the Doyle had 44 bidders while the Wagner had 45 bidders. I think this is a great discussion, and I agree with most statements, including rarity vs scarcity in relation to value. But the Joe Doyle Natl is an oddball bc of its roll as the necessary spike piece in the greatest set of all time. |
#10
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Scarcity is scarcity. The only germane thing is the number of copies known of the item. By most estimates there are sixty to seventy Wagners. There are ten BN Ruths. The Ruth is 6x-7x scarcer---end of story. What you are looking at is the relative scarcity of the card compared to others in the set it is part of. Taking your argument to its' illogical extreme a unique card that was not part of a set would have a ratio of one and not be considered rare.
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#11
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#12
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Rare is a darby chocolate complete box 🤭🤭
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#13
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Yes, I know, and that is also part of why measuring "demand" is so very hard. Had I said to pick between a T206 Wagner and say a T206 Cobb, that's a no brainer, everyone will go for a Wagner. But make it between a Wagner and a Doyle Nat'l, and now you might get some people to have to think about it for second. As you point out, the Doyle Nat'l is actually much rarer in terms of the actual number that exist than the Wagner. And anyone trying to complete the T206 set is obviously going to want both cards. But if given a choice where you can only ever have one card or the other, but not both, and money is not an issue, which card do you suspect the most people to choose? And so in essence, the one card the most people are going to pick between the two would seem to then have a greater level of demand overall. How you can quantify and then measure that demand level difference in a statistical or other manner, I don't know, unless you look at the difference in price people are willing to pay for those two cards maybe. And because so many more people would likely take a Wagner over a Doyle, the demand for the Wagner is greater, and therefore the price for the Wagner will likely always be greater. Which it was proven to be in that recent Mile High auction you referenced. And don't forget, not everyone necessarily wants to complete a T206 set. And for those people just looking to collect a great card, the T206 Wagner is the pinnacle, the holy grail of baseball cards that even those who've never actively collected baseball cards in their life still are likely aware and have heard or know of. Then ask the same people about a T206 Doyle Nat'l card, and get ready for tons of blank stares. It ends up being a great question and conundrum then as to why else wouldn't the bidders in that Mile High auction pay the same, or even more, for that Doyle Nat'l card versus what ended up being paid for that Wagner. |
#14
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Did you know 3% of all Vermeers are "Girl with a Pearl Earring"? It's not very rare really.
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#15
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T206 Wagner 0.0130 Leader Novelty Hornsby 0.8333 |
#16
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Okay, I admit this made my wife ask what I was laughing at.
__________________
- Justin D. Player collecting - Lance Parrish, Jim Davenport, John Norlander. Successful B/S/T with - Highstep74, Northviewcats, pencil1974, T2069bk, tjenkins, wilkiebaby11, baez578, Bocabirdman, maddux31, Leon, Just-Collect, bigfish, quinnsryche...and a whole bunch more, I stopped keeping track, lol. |
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