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#1
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![]() Quote:
There are a ton of cards that yield a nice profit if you can get a 10 on them but that you'll lose money on if they come back as a 9. If you're good at grading and you are say ~80-90% accurate with your grades that you expect 10s on, then you'll turn a nice profit and you can just sell the 9s at a loss.
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If it's not perfectly centered, I probably don't want it. |
#2
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I imagine it's a lesser amount of people, but I've run into a few of this type of seller with graded cards...
Sometimes someone will submit 2-3+ of a certain card hoping for a 10 (or similar high mark given the issue) so they can keep one for their collection. When a 10 is practically unobtainable or existing copies are sky-high in pricing, the gamble can outweigh just outright buying it (if they can buy it at all). The leftovers are the cost of doing business hunting for the gem out the submitted ones. Occasionally they'll get multiples of the high mark card and occasionally they're just looking to recoup any of the gamble cost. |
#3
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If I purchase a collection of graded cards, there is zero cost (to me) in the grading of said cards. The value is found in a handful of cards and the rest can be sold at what the market bears to recoup costs and hopefully turn a profit if that is the goal. As other members noted, there was a time when PSA graded cards for $6-$7 a throw.
On another note, mid grade collections (50's-60's cards) purchased in the 80's of are higher value today and in my opinion some cards are worth grading. Not every collector is after a PSA 8, 9 or 10's. Go read the the 1959 Mantle raw thread and then ask yourself why would you drop good money on a raw card. This is coming from a collector who for a long time was on the fence about the grading of cards.
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Successful Transactions: perezfan, camaro69, dhicks67, Ed_Hutchinson, jingram058, LACardsGuy Last edited by Huck; 09-08-2024 at 10:07 AM. |
#4
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I think there a few reasons, some of which have already been mentioned:
1. The card was graded a few years ago in the past when the grading fees were much lower. 2. The submitter expected a much higher grade for the card, which would have made the grading fees worthwhile. (e.g., expected a 10, but got a 5) This happens a lot for new submitters as folks usually always think their card deserves a better grade than it gets. 3. The submitter knows he will lose money grading the card, but sends it anyway because he wants the card graded to be added to his registry set or some similar reason. Card collectors are notoriously particular about the cards in their collection whether it's the centering or some other reason. They often like their sets to look nice an uniform. Rather than waiting for the graded card to come up for sale, they just send the card they like to get graded. Collectors are also notorious for "changing focus" regularly, so after a while, they decide to just sell off that set when they lose interest. 4. Some dealers (e.g., 4 sharp corners) get good grading deals when they send in thousands of cards, so they submit a huge volume even if a lot of them end up selling for a loss. |
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