Price of Sets not equal to sum of singles
Aknot
Posts: 1,196 ✭✭
OK this has bothered me for YEARS. How can a set, not FACTORY (1985 Topps Football) be $60 yet the sum of only 6 cards from that set be over $60?
I mean a single dollar is worth a single dollar. If you bunch it with 4 others the value "matches" the end amount.
Am I missing something?
You would think a set would cost more especially if it was "hand" created.
I mean a single dollar is worth a single dollar. If you bunch it with 4 others the value "matches" the end amount.
Am I missing something?
You would think a set would cost more especially if it was "hand" created.
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<< <i>You would think a set would cost more especially if it was "hand" created. >>
Jim
This is a question that has perplexed me ever since I started collecting. In philosophy they talk of man in terms of the whole being greater than the sum of the parts. In math, the whole is equal to the sum of the parts. In set collecting the whole is less than the sum of the parts. I have seen a few exceptions but all and all that's just the way it is.
Go figure?
Mike
Website: http://www.qualitycards.com
Logic says that a set price should be determined by adding the individual prices that make up the set. Moreover, there should be a "leg work" factor, so the set price should be higher. But logic doesn't rule this hobby, not by a long shot. That's why you can pick up an entire 1975 Topps set in raw for the equivalent of one 1975 Ryan PSA 9.
Gotta love it!
When it comes to graded, I don't know if your theorum holds true. I'm not sure how many 100% PSA graded sets have changed hands but then I could understand a premium being paid becomes it becomes a case of supply versus demand and the time involved in amassing such a set.
Something similar: When you buy a new car the value of that car goes down 15% or more as soon as you drive it off the lot.
Free Market economics at its best.
I only collect rookie cards, so we'll take the 86 Topps set for example. I'd buy the Rice rookie, but probably wouldn't take the rest of the cards at any price (well if they were giving it away for $5, I might take it for the Young).
Also, you mentioned non-factory sets; I think the perception is hand collated sets typically have "filler" cards for the more valuable cards. If you had a high grade desireable card in the set, you would be better off selling it as a single.
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<< <i>Something similar: When you buy a new car the value of that car goes down 15% or more as soon as you drive it off the lot. >>
So why does anyone buy a new car?
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<< <i>When it comes to graded, I don't know if your theorum holds true >>
Zodiac
Good point! When it comes to complete graded sets - that could be different - unchartered territory?
I took one of the more hi profile sets - a while back Mastro sold a PSA8 52T set for about 277K and the set now books for 277K and the total value of all the cards in the column looks to be about 287K - so the sum of the parts is about 10K over the book. Pretty close and way better than what you would do with a hand collated 82T set e.g. at 55$ and probably like 120$ in individual cards.
So, that was in this case very interesting - thanx for bringing it up. BTW, I think only more vintage graded sets would fall into this category - obviously, it's not worth having an 89T set, all graded!
Mike
Collector
Topps 58,59,60,61,62,63,64 Sets
Fleer 60, 61-62 Sets
It is a sort of quantity discount. Hand collated sets do have fillers in them of the top value cards, so it is like buying a bunch of commons. Factory sets are worth more than hand collated, because there is a greater chance for better condition cards, even the key ones.
A set is basically like buying an unknown, that's why it can't ever be higher than the major singles put together. The 1987 Fleer set may have a crappy Bonds card, so then you are left with nothing but junk. It makes perfect sense that sets are cheaper---the condition of all the major sinlges would not match the condition of cherry picking those singles separately. It is perfect logic.
This is why I don't buy sets....I just pick the best singles I can find from a particular set that I want to have and that's it. Its all about condition.
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Your post did point to an issue that has troubled me for some time and that is the difference between the price for hand collated sets and sealed factory sets. To me, hand collated sets should command a higher price because of the time involved and you can't really be sure what is in a factory set unless you open it (and this greatly reduces the value). I purchased a 1982 Topps Traded set a few months ago. While there were 132 cards in the box, I didn't have 1-132. I was mising two cards and had doubles of a couple others. I don't believe it was the seller because the missing cards were commons and one of the doubles was Reggie Jackson. Doesn't make sense. I am sure there have been other examples of missing or damaged cards as well.
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<< <i>This has always bothered me as well.
Something similar: When you buy a new car the value of that car goes down 15% or more as soon as you drive it off the lot.
Free Market economics at its best. >>
Actually, this is only true if you pay the MSRP of the car. The actual value of the new car is what the dealer paid for it. So if you purchased the car for what the dealer paid, then driving the car off the lot does nothing to reduce the value. HOWEVER, if you paid MSRP, then you paid OVER the amount of which it was worth. MSRP is just a magical number to inflate dealer profit and it has nothing to do with value. It's just like paying $1,000 for a PSA 9 Canseco rookie. Just because you overpaid doesn't mean that the card is worth $1,000. The card is, and always had been worth much, much less.