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#1
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I'm a autograph collector in college and just started collecting single signed HOF baseballs. I love the feeling of adding to my collection and seeing an empty space on my shelf be filled as much as the next guy, but does anyone collect as a way of investing?
I didn't start collecting as a way of investing my money, but I would rather purchase a new baseball instead of stuff I would use for a few months and then find myself wondering where I spent all my money. Considering there is no sample pool as autographs weren't considered valuable 20-30 years ago, where do people see them at in 20-30 years? |
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#2
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its a carp shoot. dont collect to invest. its too volatile, just collect to have fun. if they go up in the meantime, great.
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#3
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Don't you catch CARP Trav? haha.
I agree w what Trav said though. "Investment" is a scary word. Have fun at it. |
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#4
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I agree with Scott and Travis.Its my hobby and I enjoy it.If I were to do it for investment,it would take the fun out of it.
__________________
Looking for'47-'66 Exhibits and any Carl Furillo,Rocky Colavito and Johnny Callison stuff. |
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#5
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I'm not an autograph person myself, but as far as an investment I would agree with the others.
As a hobbyist I say that my collection is exactly that ....... my collection, and the money aspect of it means nothing to me. As a realist (because this stuff does cost money) I see it more as a "really cool savings account" if anything. I honestly don't see the market for baseball cards falling off anytime soon. Worst case scenario is I hold on to a $1000 card for 5-10-20 years and then sell it off for the same amount that I paid for it originally..... no different than burying $1000 in the back yard and digging it up 5-10-20 years later ..... except that I got to enjoy it for that 5-10-20 years But as far as getting a substantial dividend off of your investment, collectibles is probably not the way to go. |
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#6
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I don't consider my collectibles as an "investment" either. But, when I spend money on something, it would be nice to get something back out of it down the line when it's time to sell.
With this in mind, for someone starting I would advise on avoiding mass-produced material as much as possible. By that I mean single signed balls of common signers, common signed flats, etc. Go for items that are less common. If you really want a signed item from someone who is in plentiful supply, get one with a less common inscription. If I could tell go back in time and tell myself something 20 years ago, it would be, "one $200 item is way better than ten $20 items."
__________________
Steve Zarelli Space Authentication Zarelli Space Authentication on Facebook Follow me on Twitter My blog: The Collecting Obsession |
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#7
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Quote:
I have had a lot of fun with this hobby and plan on continuing to add for years to come. Thanks to everyone for your responses so far and happy collecting
Last edited by baseball111; 01-09-2013 at 05:40 PM. |
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