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The seller name should have gave it away......he has been talked about so much on this board, his ears should be burning!!!! I don't know where he is finding the buyers to pay these outrageous prices!! I can't even sell my cards for less than VCP average......
Let's say the seller has $30 wrapped up into this card. He would need to sell approximately six of them at $60 a piece to make as much profit as he would make selling one of them for $200. If he thinks he can sell one at $200 in the time it would take to sell six at $60 then there's nothing remarkably irrational about this pricing.
Now, whether you agree that he can, in fact, do this is another matter entirely. But if the SELLER thinks he can then he has a firm rationale for this pricing structure. Since Levi probably knows more about selling vintage cards than you do (or than I do, for that matter), we can just for once and for all let this matter die on the vine.
SMR has absolutely nothing to do with the price of a card. The #s are pulled out of air. Supply and demand are what count. See VCP for a snap shot of the current market.
(Sigh!) i cant tell you how many times 707 (levi) comes up in my searches...............we have never been able to deal, i refuse to overpay and he will not budge. Wow, you will discount 3% if i pay by check, thanks, errrr , no thanks.
You should see him at a show, he practically ran me over at one table in Chicago trying to get at some raw stuff I was looking at. It didn't work, and later in the show we shared a bottle of bourbon together with one of Tiger's hookers.
Ron Burgundy
Buying Vintage, all sports. Buying Woody Hayes, Les Horvath, Vic Janowicz, and Jesse Owens autographed items
It costs him .05 per month to let that sit in his store waiting for the right person--or unknowing--to buy it and not care about the cost. Also, there's a BO feature, so he'd take a little less.
Anyone can use store inventory to list things at whatever prices they want. You never know when you'll get that one person that comes along. Is it overpriced? Sure. Should it matter to anyone? Nah. Some auto dealerships place a mark-up on some new and hard to get cars. Drive 30 miles away and get the same car without the mark-up. Some people are unaware of this while others probably just have enough money not to care.
I admire what he is able to accomplish as a business person. He knows that people will buy his cards at his price because of either his reputation or the card sometimes is hard to find. He's got a great selection and is very well trusted. His model works, no matter how high his price are. A quick look at the last month of feedback shows 250 positive transactions for over $25,000 in sales. He's sold cards for $10 and as high as $2500. I don't know what he has in the cards to determine profit, but his pricing model would make me think he doing OK for himself.
I've bought from him before and I'll most likely buy from him again. I just started a low grade 49 leaf baseball set and I know there are short prints that i'll most likely have to buy from him because he's the only one that will have them.
<< <i>You should see him at a show, he practically ran me over at one table in Chicago trying to get at some raw stuff I was looking at. It didn't work, and later in the show we shared a bottle of bourbon together with one of Tiger's hookers. >>
I enjoy sitting at a table with a mountain of nice raw stuff pawing through it as people lurk behind me just wishing they'd gotten there first. I am sure to yell out the final deal I am getting just to rub it in if any of them keep lurking (I guess hoping I have a coronary at the table so they can step in). Once a jag-off offered the dealer $20 more for the lot I had just bought. Thankfully the dealer told him to shove off.
Kiss me once, shame on you. Kiss me twice.....let's party.
Think of it this way, he's a fisherman. He sits in his boat, casts out his line and waits for a fish to pay $200. It's his card and evidently it works for him.
<< <i>Think of it this way, he's a fisherman. He sits in his boat, casts out his line and waits for a fish to pay $200. It's his card and evidently it works for him. >>
"Money always flows from the impatient to the patient".
<< <i>You should see him at a show, he practically ran me over at one table in Chicago trying to get at some raw stuff I was looking at. It didn't work, and later in the show we shared a bottle of bourbon together with one of Tiger's hookers.[/q
Ron - every time I read one of your posts, I can just hear Will Ferrell speaking what you write and it cracks me up. Bourbon and hookers? Come on - vintage Burgundy!
Looking for rare Randy Moss rookies and autos, as well as '97 PMG Red Football cards for my set.
<< <i>Think of it this way, he's a fisherman. He sits in his boat, casts out his line and waits for a fish to pay $200. It's his card and evidently it works for him. >>
"Money always flows from the impatient to the patient".
-Warren Buffett >>
Can't you feel 'em closin' in, honey Can't you feel 'em schoolin' around You got fins to the left, fins to the right And you're the only girl in town
<< <i>Think of it this way, he's a fisherman. He sits in his boat, casts out his line and waits for a fish to pay $200. It's his card and evidently it works for him. >>
"Money always flows from the impatient to the patient".
-Warren Buffett >>
"Hitting is timing. Pitching is upsetting timing."
LOL!!!!!! I guess it works, or maybe he isn't concerned about the turn.......I guess it is like gas....if one station is selling it for $4 a gallon, and right across the street I can get the exact same gas for $2.50 a gallon, I know which station I am going to. I am still going to shake my head and laugh at the idiots too lazy to cross the street for the cheaper gas.....
Let's say the seller has $30 wrapped up into this card. He would need to sell approximately six of them at $60 a piece to make as much profit as he would make selling one of them for $200. If he thinks he can sell one at $200 in the time it would take to sell six at $60 then there's nothing remarkably irrational about this pricing.
Now, whether you agree that he can, in fact, do this is another matter entirely. But if the SELLER thinks he can then he has a firm rationale for this pricing structure. Since Levi probably knows more about selling vintage cards than you do (or than I do, for that matter), we can just for once and for all let this matter die on the vine. >>
i have a different take......
its called cornerning the market and setting your own price....
he buys as many low grade 52 mantles, T206 Johnsons as he can....then sets the price WAY higher than it should be, in hopes of "setting" a new market price...
Let's say the seller has $30 wrapped up into this card. He would need to sell approximately six of them at $60 a piece to make as much profit as he would make selling one of them for $200. If he thinks he can sell one at $200 in the time it would take to sell six at $60 then there's nothing remarkably irrational about this pricing.
Now, whether you agree that he can, in fact, do this is another matter entirely. But if the SELLER thinks he can then he has a firm rationale for this pricing structure. Since Levi probably knows more about selling vintage cards than you do (or than I do, for that matter), we can just for once and for all let this matter die on the vine. >>
i have a different take......
its called cornerning the market and setting your own price....
he buys as many low grade 52 mantles, T206 Johnsons as he can....then sets the price WAY higher than it should be, in hopes of "setting" a new market price... >>
That's smart business. If there is a card that is pop 4 with none higher and I own all 4 I will be selling them at pop 1 prices. He is trying to buy as many cards as possible and he is setting new prices for hundreds of them, which in turn brings up the VCP value which will in turn be the new norm.
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Visit store: 707 Sportscards
The seller name should have gave it away......he has been talked about so much on this board, his ears should be burning!!!! I don't know where he is finding the buyers to pay these outrageous prices!! I can't even sell my cards for less than VCP average......
Let's say the seller has $30 wrapped up into this card. He would need to sell approximately six of them at $60 a piece to make as much profit as he would make selling one of them for $200. If he thinks he can sell one at $200 in the time it would take to sell six at $60 then there's nothing remarkably irrational about this pricing.
Now, whether you agree that he can, in fact, do this is another matter entirely. But if the SELLER thinks he can then he has a firm rationale for this pricing structure. Since Levi probably knows more about selling vintage cards than you do (or than I do, for that matter), we can just for once and for all let this matter die on the vine.
Example: 1960-Jim Rivera-#116 PSA 8
SMR $22
VCP
11/17/09 $274.99
6/7/09 $192.10
3/3/09 $208.46
2/14/09 $310.05
12/28/08 $228.05
9/18/08 $304.99
11/21/07 $243.50
4/22/07 $113.50
2/6/07 $80.99
1/21/07 $202.50
1/18/10 eBay Auction | Image anthjos t***t 3 $87.00
1/3/10 eBay Auction | Image wcsports1 4***a 14 $79.89
11/28/09 eBay Auction | Image senileman t***h 7 $53.50
11/24/09 eBay Auction | Image shaderise w***d 13 $83.00
10/15/09 eBay Auction | Image fscbob 9***1 8 $57.00
9/1/09 eBay Auction | Image anthjos e***o 14 $103.50
8/10/09 eBay Image champsandbums v***v 7 $73.57
7/30/09 eBay Image sundiegocollectibles t***h 9 $69.01
6/25/09 eBay Image shaderise e***l 6 $46.51
6/11/09 eBay Image anthjos l***o 11 $46.00
3/22/09 eBay Image clammy61 k***k 8 $55.74
...and yes, this is for the version that says "1921"....
Buying Vintage, all sports.
Buying Woody Hayes, Les Horvath, Vic Janowicz, and Jesse Owens autographed items
None of this matters. It's his card. He can (attempt to) sell it for anything he wants.
Conversely, a buyer can either buy it or not.
wpkoughan@yahoo.com
Collecting 1970-1979 PSA 9 & 10 Baseball Cards
Anyone can use store inventory to list things at whatever prices they want. You never know when you'll get that one person that comes along. Is it overpriced? Sure. Should it matter to anyone? Nah. Some auto dealerships place a mark-up on some new and hard to get cars. Drive 30 miles away and get the same car without the mark-up. Some people are unaware of this while others probably just have enough money not to care.
It's his nickel.
I've bought from him before and I'll most likely buy from him again. I just started a low grade 49 leaf baseball set and I know there are short prints that i'll most likely have to buy from him because he's the only one that will have them.
Jim
<< <i>You should see him at a show, he practically ran me over at one table in Chicago trying to get at some raw stuff I was looking at. It didn't work, and later in the show we shared a bottle of bourbon together with one of Tiger's hookers. >>
I enjoy sitting at a table with a mountain of nice raw stuff pawing through it as people lurk behind me just wishing they'd gotten there first. I am sure to yell out the final deal I am getting just to rub it in if any of them keep lurking (I guess hoping I have a coronary at the table so they can step in). Once a jag-off offered the dealer $20 more for the lot I had just bought. Thankfully the dealer told him to shove off.
Kiss me twice.....let's party.
<< <i>Think of it this way, he's a fisherman. He sits in his boat, casts out his line and waits for a fish to pay $200. It's his card and evidently it works for him. >>
"Money always flows from the impatient to the patient".
-Warren Buffett
<< <i>You should see him at a show, he practically ran me over at one table in Chicago trying to get at some raw stuff I was looking at. It didn't work, and later in the show we shared a bottle of bourbon together with one of Tiger's hookers.[/q
Ron - every time I read one of your posts, I can just hear Will Ferrell speaking what you write and it cracks me up. Bourbon and hookers? Come on - vintage Burgundy!
<< <i>
<< <i>Think of it this way, he's a fisherman. He sits in his boat, casts out his line and waits for a fish to pay $200. It's his card and evidently it works for him. >>
"Money always flows from the impatient to the patient".
-Warren Buffett >>
Can't you feel 'em closin' in, honey
Can't you feel 'em schoolin' around
You got fins to the left, fins to the right
And you're the only girl in town
Jimmy Buffet
<< <i>
<< <i>Think of it this way, he's a fisherman. He sits in his boat, casts out his line and waits for a fish to pay $200. It's his card and evidently it works for him. >>
"Money always flows from the impatient to the patient".
-Warren Buffett >>
"Hitting is timing. Pitching is upsetting timing."
-Warren Spahn
I'd be like him.
Steve
<< <i>OK- Let's clear this up once and for all.
Let's say the seller has $30 wrapped up into this card. He would need to sell approximately six of them at $60 a piece to make as much profit as he would make selling one of them for $200. If he thinks he can sell one at $200 in the time it would take to sell six at $60 then there's nothing remarkably irrational about this pricing.
Now, whether you agree that he can, in fact, do this is another matter entirely. But if the SELLER thinks he can then he has a firm rationale for this pricing structure. Since Levi probably knows more about selling vintage cards than you do (or than I do, for that matter), we can just for once and for all let this matter die on the vine. >>
i have a different take......
its called cornerning the market and setting your own price....
he buys as many low grade 52 mantles, T206 Johnsons as he can....then sets the price WAY higher than it should be, in hopes of "setting" a new market price...
<< <i>
<< <i>OK- Let's clear this up once and for all.
Let's say the seller has $30 wrapped up into this card. He would need to sell approximately six of them at $60 a piece to make as much profit as he would make selling one of them for $200. If he thinks he can sell one at $200 in the time it would take to sell six at $60 then there's nothing remarkably irrational about this pricing.
Now, whether you agree that he can, in fact, do this is another matter entirely. But if the SELLER thinks he can then he has a firm rationale for this pricing structure. Since Levi probably knows more about selling vintage cards than you do (or than I do, for that matter), we can just for once and for all let this matter die on the vine. >>
i have a different take......
its called cornerning the market and setting your own price....
he buys as many low grade 52 mantles, T206 Johnsons as he can....then sets the price WAY higher than it should be, in hopes of "setting" a new market price... >>
That's smart business. If there is a card that is pop 4 with none higher and I own all 4 I will be selling them at pop 1 prices. He is trying to buy as many cards as possible and he is setting new prices for hundreds of them, which in turn brings up the VCP value which will in turn be the new norm.
"Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind." Dr. Seuss