Quote:
Originally Posted by homerunhitter
Ben,
This is based on my own experiences selling cards to the local LCS. I get it that they need to buy low to make a profit but most thst (of course not all) that I’ve dealt with are slimy shady people. Example, “of this box of 1954 topps, I’ll give you $50 for!” or “this 1956 topps Willie Mays is not in great condition, I’ll give you $20 for it” most take advantage of people so they can make a buck.
Greg,
I definitely wouldnt have the patience or time to list card by card for thousands of cards or deal with problem buyers, so eBay wouldn’t work for me particularly. With graded, no patience to wait a year to get my cards back! Plus most of my raw are 1950’s lower grade commons.
Greg morris might be a got fit when the time comes but i thought he only dies high end vintage? (Not sure my low end vintage fits his business model) and also don’t you have to inventory every card you send in to him. (Great if you only had a few cards but what if you are sending in thousands!)
Thanks guys! I appreciate you both.
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I mean, any way you sell them you will realistically need to inventory what they are, whether graded or raw, auction house or eBay. If you have a bunch of low grade commons, you can sell them in lots the same as they are usually bought. If you send graded to an auction house an inventory list will still be needed. Low grade 50's common cards are worth less than the cost of a slab, so graded would make no sense for thousands of low grade 50's commons. Selling those cards graded would be a massive loss of money, where raw you can get about what you put into them right back. Any sale requires a little bit of work, whether that's driving to an outdated LCS you feel rips you off, selling lots on eBay, consigning graded to an auction house or any other method.