1968 Topps PSA 9s

I was just reading through the SMR Price List and about fell over on the floor when I saw all the red for the 1968 cards. With the exception of the major HOFers, almost every card in PSA 9 dropped. I am looking for your thoughts on why this would happen. I know in the past, other magazines were accused of lowering the prices in there price guide so major buyers could benefit. I have no doubt this is not the case with PSA, but it is weird. I look forward to reading your thoughts.
"A full mind is an empty bat." Ty Cobb
Currently collecting 1934 Butterfinger, 1969 Nabisco, 1991 Topps Desert Shield (in PSA 9 or 10), and 1990 Donruss Learning Series (in PSA 10).
Currently collecting 1934 Butterfinger, 1969 Nabisco, 1991 Topps Desert Shield (in PSA 9 or 10), and 1990 Donruss Learning Series (in PSA 10).
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Currently collecting 1934 Butterfinger, 1969 Nabisco, 1991 Topps Desert Shield (in PSA 9 or 10), and 1990 Donruss Learning Series (in PSA 10).
<< <i>I believe SMR is catching up with reality on this one. Of all the sets from the 1960's, the 1968's are the most readily available in NM-MINT to MINT condition. >>
I've read/heard this before several times. Wonder why the supply is up on this particular set...
<< <i>Most common player PSA 9's can be had for $10-$25 and even the stars and HOFers are not all that expensive. >>
Wow, really?! PSA 9's go that cheaply?? That's good news for someone wanting to put the set together! Bad news for an "investor". I've got a raw set I put together as a kid and completed as an adult. I know it's not high-grade, but I enjoy the heck out of that set with Carew's rookie being my favorite card there (sorry to Mr. Ryan).
<< <i>Mike, I collect this set too and love the look and players selection, but for the sake of accuracy, Carew's RC was in the 67 set. >>
Yup, that's correct. For some reason I didn't buy cards in '67 but did from '62 thru '66 and again in '68. The '68 was my first of Sir Rodney (solo at that!) with the Topps All-Star Rookie trophy on it.
I've gotta dig that set out and enjoy it again one of these rainy nights...
Supply is going to ONLY increase in future on all of these common cards that used to be sold as "commons" in the 50 cent bin at any show, but now are being unnecessarily slabbed by the registry hype collectors.
IMO
The registry hype (and SMR guide hype) will die down one day.... if not already starting today.
i've seen some nutty prices on singles from set breaks, and i suppose that could be said about anything now, but anyone who wants a mint raw card for a '68 set just needs to buy a cheap 9 and crack it out.
<< <i>I love the 68 set as well, but I am horrible at trying to determine grades on raw copies. With those borders, my eyes go batty after ten minutes of looking closely at the edges.
I really have trouble grading 68s too. I bet a loupe would come in real handy with these cards. I can't speak to the supply out there, but to me it seems like the stock is thicker on the 68s (69s too) than preceding years. I would guess that would contribute to the heavy supply of 9s.