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#1
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I'll step out on a limb, and assume you mean you saw the price in PSA's Sports Market Report (SMR) magazine. As crazy as it may sound, some cards that are graded do go for a lot more than a nearly identical card that hasn't been graded. Just how much difference will depend on the card. Generally on the newer cards, it takes a card being a PSA10 grade to make that kind of difference. However, on the older cards that's not unusual at all. There's just a much bigger collector group for graded cards than the ungraded cards. So many people are trying to put together sets that will garner a higher number on the registry and they are willing to pay the price for higher graded cards to boost their set's registry number.
Last edited by GasHouseGang; 09-16-2013 at 10:56 AM. |
#2
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I'm with the OP. Never understood grading.
Hate the fact that it has driven up the price of nice conditioned pure cards.
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[FONT="Lucida Sans Unicode"]CampyFan39 |
#3
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Chris--thanks goodness you did not call them raw. Pure verses entombed or imprissoned. I like it.
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haha Al,
I have liberated" my share at least 100 haha I also detest the term "raw" Pure sounds more appropriate IMO
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[FONT="Lucida Sans Unicode"]CampyFan39 |
#5
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Umm...they make up the prices. Have done so for a long time. Run the pops on some of the prewar cards in high grade--they don't exist. PSA plugs them. The SMR is best viewed as a PSA public relations device not as a serious academic study of prices.
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Read my blog; it will make all your dreams come true. https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.com/ Or not... |
#6
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In general I agree with you Adam. SMR does list some sold prices along with their prices, but some of the items they list a price for don't even exist in the grade. If it doesn't exist, they have to just be guessing what the card would sell for if it was available. More realistic prices are found at Card Target's website and at Vintage Card Prices, both of which use actual prices realized for cards at various grades at auctions or sales.
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#7
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Or maybe they are following the Beckett business model in reverse.
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Tiger collector Need: Harry Heilmann auto Monster Number 520/520 |
#8
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The SMR is a slick advertising propaganda tool to stroke their key customers, AHs and Registry patrons, that masquerades as a price guide.
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Check out my aging Sell/Trade Album on my Profile page HOF Type Collector + Philly A's, E/M/W cards, M101-6, Exhibits, Postcards, 30's Premiums & HOF Photos "Assembling an unfocused collection for nearly 50 years." |
#9
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#10
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I agree more and more with such sentiments and with those who have chosen to free their cards from their plastic tombs. I have thought about releasing my '53s and '57s....I am only 40, but I can remember just collecting cards and not worrying about what number they would be assigned. Yes, I was somewhat selective about condition (and still am), but I feel like after spending enough years around cards I should be able to identify what I am looking for without "help" from TPGs.
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#11
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Disclosure - I happen to like the TPG's when I sell highly graded cards ;-) |
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#14
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I remember being at a show in the mid-eighties with my late father and he pointed out the coins that were also at the show and were graded.
He said right then that he feared cards would be encased and graded one day. I reassured him that would never happen because it would take away from the beauty of the cards by sticking a number or label on there. I was wrong. Sadly he didn't live to see it
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[FONT="Lucida Sans Unicode"]CampyFan39 |
#15
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i remember that, when in the early mid 80s coins started in the graded world it turned me off, so i decided to sell my entire coin collection! i raised 32K went to B of A and borrowed 5k more and purchased a 7-11 franchise in Hawthorne Ca. not long after that late 80s i remember the PSA people coming around shows advertising card grading and most dealers laugh at that!! and the rest as they say is history. |
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Thanks |
#17
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Psa has a set registry on their website psacard.com. It evaluates and ranks set based on grade with key and tougher cards weighted higher in each set. Weighting a are often based on player popularity and population in higher grades. Hope this helps and welcome aboard.
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Pricing | Railroad Bill | Postwar Baseball Cards Forum (Pre-1980) | 1 | 12-06-2010 07:20 AM |