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View Poll Results: Do the stock market losses play into your vintage buys?
Yes 95 25.33%
No 230 61.33%
Sometimes 50 13.33%
Voters: 375. You may not vote on this poll

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  #1  
Old 03-11-2025, 11:15 AM
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Originally Posted by Balticfox View Post
The graph is correct. The "problem" though is that it's scale on the vertical axis is arithmetic and not geometric. This means that recent percentage changes aren't apparent at a glance.

Or, one could conclude that in the big picture, they aren't that significant. But sure, any graph's visual impact depends on scaling.
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Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 03-11-2025 at 11:16 AM.
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  #2  
Old 03-11-2025, 11:35 AM
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Money that is sunk into a stock "down in the moment" is money that is not working for you.

It's a lost opportunity.

Eventually you may find yourself back to even or profit, but there's a cost of lost opportunity while it sits there trying to get back to where you started.

It can even make sense to sell at a loss to put your money back to work depending on your next plan.
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  #3  
Old 03-11-2025, 11:40 AM
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I think there are indirect impacts. When the market is down, there often is economic uncertainty that can curtail discretionary spending of any kind. If we're worried about the future or our jobs - it has an impact. Also, as the market fluctuates, it has an impact on who is in the market and who is out and that can lead a few speculators to get more into cards (alternatives to the market) or less (heavier focused on the market). It doesnt impact me directly very often as Im a low budget collector, but the impacts are definitely there.
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  #4  
Old 03-11-2025, 11:40 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BioCRN View Post
Money that is sunk into a stock "down in the moment" is money that is not working for you.

It's a lost opportunity.

Eventually you may find yourself back to even or profit, but there's a cost of lost opportunity while it sits there trying to get back to where you started.

It can even make sense to sell at a loss to put your money back to work depending on your next plan.
If you're an active trader, sure. But most people do not have the time, energy, and sophistication that takes. Buy and hold, and broad based funds, work better for most people as I understand it.
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Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 03-11-2025 at 11:41 AM.
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  #5  
Old 03-11-2025, 11:58 AM
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For us mere mortals, securities are all about timing, not skill. My wife and I are terrible at it so we retained a financial planner to handle our portfolio. I just have to hope that I am not caught in a downdraft like the 2000s. The S&P 500's total return from January 1, 2000 to December 31, 2009 was a loss of 9.10%. The fact that it came roaring back eventually would not have meant much to someone who had to live on the proceeds for those years.
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  #6  
Old 03-11-2025, 12:09 PM
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I wish I was the kind of alpha male collector who welcomes the “blood on the street” and is salivating at the opportunity to pounce, but unfortunately I have an entire life away from vintage card collecting. There is work, kids not yet settled, elderly parents, illness, etc.
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  #7  
Old 03-11-2025, 12:20 PM
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I wish I was the kind of alpha male collector who welcomes the “blood on the street” and is salivating at the opportunity to pounce, but unfortunately I have an entire life away from vintage card collecting. There is work, kids not yet settled, elderly parents, illness, etc.
You can accept that capitalism frequently rewards moral shortcomings without losing your own morals or empathy.

Unless you pull the levers that make the immoral decisions, you're going to live through it whether you're buying into that particular system or not. The stock isn't going to sit around in a pool of "unsold"...someone will hold it.

Celebrating people's pain while also celebrating the gains aren't always tied together. For some people it is a sick bonus, though.
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  #8  
Old 03-11-2025, 12:31 PM
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Not really talking about morals or empathy. Just can't divorce spending significant amounts of income on collectibles from the rest of my life obligations. My hobbying don't happen in a vacuum, disconnected from all the other shit going on in my life.



Quote:
Originally Posted by BioCRN View Post
You can accept that capitalism frequently rewards moral shortcomings without losing your own morals or empathy.

Unless you pull the levers that make the immoral decisions, you're going to live through it whether you're buying into that particular system or not. The stock isn't going to sit around in a pool of "unsold"...someone will hold it.

Celebrating people's pain while also celebrating the gains aren't always tied together. For some people it is a sick bonus, though.
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  #9  
Old 03-11-2025, 12:33 PM
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In praise of portfolio diversification, I wonder how one Elon Musk feels about watching his precious Tesla stock crater, losing billions in the process. Gee, maybe now he is only the second richest man on the planet. Stuff happens, Elon.

Leon, I promise this is financial and not political.
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  #10  
Old 03-11-2025, 12:54 PM
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Originally Posted by Yoda View Post
In praise of portfolio diversification, I wonder how one Elon Musk feels about watching his precious Tesla stock crater, losing billions in the process. Gee, maybe now he is only the second richest man on the planet. Stuff happens, Elon.

Leon, I promise this is financial and not political.
Other investments -- Twitter and Space X -- are equal shitshows.
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  #11  
Old 03-11-2025, 01:03 PM
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TSLA is up 17,000 percent since it went public. Elon will be OK.
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Four phrases I nave coined that sum up today's hobby:
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Stuff trumps all.
The flip is the commoodity.
Animal Farm grading.

Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 03-11-2025 at 01:04 PM.
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  #12  
Old 03-11-2025, 05:48 PM
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Absolutely mind blowing that 65% of the respondents so far in this thread think that people won't spend less when they have less money to spend.
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  #13  
Old 03-11-2025, 06:22 PM
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Originally Posted by Snowman View Post
Absolutely mind blowing that 65% of the respondents so far in this thread think that people won't spend less when they have less money to spend.
I think most of the responses here are more about their personal plans, and less about what they think that others will do.

But even so, count me as skeptical that a big hit to the stock market wouldn't impact the average cardboard collector.

I suppose we can debate the line where the average collector starts to feel it, even subconsciously. At 5% maybe not. But as you inch your way up to 10% and beyond, at some point, it seems like there has to be some impact, even if it's merely subconscious and psychological and just causes you to be a little less carefree and unfettered when it comes to bidding like drunken sailors in every auction that comes your way.
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Last edited by raulus; 03-11-2025 at 06:23 PM.
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  #14  
Old 03-11-2025, 07:34 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Snowman View Post
Absolutely mind blowing that 65% of the respondents so far in this thread think that people won't spend less when they have less money to spend.
I'm on mobile and can't see the poll. But the title of the thread is about the stock market. Most people don't have less money to spend when the stock market is down. Most of us aren't living day to day on income from the stock market. I have the exact same money to spend when the market is up as when it's down.
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  #15  
Old 03-11-2025, 07:37 PM
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I budget my card purchases with "fun" money since its a hobby for me. it's not tied to my investments/retirement funds or funds I set aside for everyday living expenses.

Also I fund what I want by selling what I don't want.

It works good for me.

Ricky Y
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  #16  
Old 03-17-2025, 09:09 PM
JohnnyHatesJazz JohnnyHatesJazz is offline
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Me personally, when the market is down, it's a good time to make offers.
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  #17  
Old 04-08-2025, 08:06 PM
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Default Is the end near?

Since I have been doing the memorabilia thing, Paul Volker pulled the plug on money around 1980-81; Black Monday in 1987 where the Dow dropped 22.6% in one day; 9/11, which speaks for itself; the housing crisis in 2008; Covid, 2020-2l...and now this.

The only difference between everything that happened before what has been going on for the last week is that we know how the other stuff turned out.

Oh, yeah, and people who can afford it never stopped buying memorabilia.
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  #18  
Old 04-08-2025, 10:09 PM
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Looking at Treasury yields now, it looks like people are indeed selling. The flight to safety might indeed be to somewhere other than America.
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  #19  
Old 06-28-2025, 02:37 AM
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I have never used my 401 k to buy cards or anything else.
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  #20  
Old 06-28-2025, 07:44 AM
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Default 2024 Panini Rookie Royalty WNBA Trading Card Box Dutch Auction

This box goes live in a couple days, 2024 Panini Rookie Royalty WNBA Trading Card Box--starting bid $30,000--guess this might be a fair indicator on peoples spending habits on collectibles==good luck to the all bidders out there!
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  #21  
Old 07-02-2025, 05:37 PM
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Originally Posted by Directly View Post
This box goes live in a couple days, 2024 Panini Rookie Royalty WNBA Trading Card Box--starting bid $30,000--guess this might be a fair indicator on peoples spending habits on collectibles==good luck to the all bidders out there!
I'll bet there are a lot of younger collectors out there who have been longing for one of these for a long time!
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  #22  
Old 03-11-2025, 01:30 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Exhibitman View Post
For us mere mortals, securities are all about timing, not skill. My wife and I are terrible at it so we retained a financial planner to handle our portfolio. I just have to hope that I am not caught in a downdraft like the 2000s. The S&P 500's total return from January 1, 2000 to December 31, 2009 was a loss of 9.10%. The fact that it came roaring back eventually would not have meant much to someone who had to live on the proceeds for those years.
And of course nobody ever promised us that life was going to be a bowl of cherries. Certainly not our parents.

Moreover nobody ever promised us that stocks had to go up all the time. My initial awareness/experience of the stock market came during the very bumpy markets of 1969-81 so I never developed the expectation that stocks were the road to riches. As I used to say to clients "Well sometimes they go up, sometimes they go down." Had it not been for my underlying ingrained skepticism, I wouldn't have missed out on so many (irrational) booms over the years.

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  #23  
Old 03-11-2025, 03:43 PM
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Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth View Post
If you're an active trader, sure. But most people do not have the time, energy, and sophistication that takes. Buy and hold, and broad based funds, work better for most people as I understand it.
actually its pretty easy, you buy an index fund like sp 500, SPY and hold and sell calls on it and you will outperfrom 95% of the 'expert funds'
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Old 03-11-2025, 03:46 PM
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Originally Posted by 1952boyntoncollector View Post
actually its pretty easy, you buy an index fund like sp 500, SPY and hold and sell calls on it and you will outperfrom 95% of the 'expert funds'
Pardon the naivety, however what if you sell calls, and since stocks only go up, you stock gets called away?
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Old 03-11-2025, 03:52 PM
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Since you were willing to sell the stock at that price, you just buy it again. Since you pocketed the call premium already, you're still ahead in the game.

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  #26  
Old 03-16-2025, 12:21 AM
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Pardon the naivety, however what if you sell calls, and since stocks only go up, you stock gets called away?
you can roll up the calls, yeah in theory if the market goes up 30 percent you will make 20 percent etc, but assuming the market doesnt go up forever you will eventually catch up to the market with your calls and be always outperforming the market...yeah if market loses 30 percent you will still lose 20 percent etc so you will also get crushed but you will still be out performing the market..which very few hedge funds do ..
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  #27  
Old 03-16-2025, 03:58 PM
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you can roll up the calls, yeah in theory if the market goes up 30 percent you will make 20 percent etc, but assuming the market doesnt go up forever you will eventually catch up to the market with your calls and be always outperforming the market...yeah if market loses 30 percent you will still lose 20 percent etc so you will also get crushed but you will still be out performing the market..which very few hedge funds do ..
So why don't all sophisticated investors just do covered calls? It can't be this simple.
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Four phrases I nave coined that sum up today's hobby:
No consequences.
Stuff trumps all.
The flip is the commoodity.
Animal Farm grading.
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  #28  
Old 03-11-2025, 03:53 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 1952boyntoncollector View Post
actually its pretty easy, you buy an index fund like sp 500, SPY and hold and sell calls on it and you will outperfrom 95% of the 'expert funds'
Yes, I'm sure it's that easy.
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Four phrases I nave coined that sum up today's hobby:
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Stuff trumps all.
The flip is the commoodity.
Animal Farm grading.
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  #29  
Old 03-11-2025, 04:08 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth View Post
Yes, I'm sure it's that easy.
Free money! Can't lose!!
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  #30  
Old 03-11-2025, 05:20 PM
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Don’t take the “blood in the streets” comment, at least from me as, cavalier. My 401k is one thing, suffers like everyone else.

My other account generates cash each week from selling calls and or puts. That cash goes into monthly dividend paying ETF’s until I need the $ for life, or until there is a downturn in the market, and creates opportunistic buying opportunities. Or some cards!

I started trading like that years ago because I couldn’t afford child support and tuition on my salary (my X is a lawyer!). It was developed out of necessity from the tiny 401k that I got in the divorce.

Everyone has their own style and risk tolerance when running your own account. I bring in cash from people that are willing to gamble on things going up 5% in a week, while I hope they go up 4% and I pocket their $100 bill in the process. Repeat the next week. It took years of practice, working countless hours and continuously researching.

Thanks,
Bob
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  #31  
Old 03-12-2025, 10:14 AM
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Quote:
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 1952boyntoncollector View Post
actually its pretty easy, you buy an index fund like sp 500, SPY and hold and sell calls on it and you will outperfrom 95% of the 'expert funds'
Yes, I'm sure it's that easy.
The problem with such an option strategy is that a big spread typically prevails between bid and ask prices on puts and calls. Therefore it's difficult to pocket the theoretically realizable advantage of that strategy (particularly after commissions).

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  #32  
Old 03-12-2025, 10:38 AM
raulus raulus is offline
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The problem with such an option strategy is that a big spread typically prevails between bid and ask prices on puts and calls. Therefore it's difficult to pocket the theoretically realizable advantage of that strategy (particularly after commissions).

Pretty sure all of your income from writing options is also ordinary (or short term capital gain), so you get to pay ordinary tax rates. As opposed to generally lower rates for long-term capital gains.

And unlike income from selling cards, this income is definitely getting reported to the IRS, so anyone who might be tempted to use a little accounting legerdemain when it comes to the taxation of their cardboard sales, that's not a possibility here.

I suppose if your taxable income is low enough that your marginal tax rate is low, then that's not a big deal, but for some of us, our marginal rate is at or approaching the current highest marginal rates.

When you factor in state (and sometimes local) taxes, some of us are lucky enough to get to share 50%+ of our ordinary income with the government.
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