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FineCollector

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Posts posted by FineCollector

  1. On 5/18/2019 at 10:25 AM, Lazyboy said:

    Isn't that just another book that contains something vaguely similar to something in a movie?

    Sure, but that's the argument being made.  Something happens, people want it, price breaks out from issues around it, so it's a key?  I dont think so.

  2. Where do we fall on Marvel Team Up 62, first meeting of Spider-Man and Ms Marvel?  Had people looking for it a few months back.  Seemingly significant enough to move the needle for some people.  Does that make it a key, or is it just a cheap book people were speculating on, just in case?

    Cosmic Ghost Rider is Punisher, right?  Is first Frankencastle a key?

    Long term demand has to play a part in being called a key, otherwise you can call anything a key.  Some Facebook bozo on a live stream tried to sell a 90s Amazing Spiderman as first Black Cat cover.  Was he on crack?  Try Asm 194.  Okay, 3rd cover?  No, she was in Spectacular for years.  Okay, 3rd time appearing on the cover of ASM? Still no, but I got blocked before I could qualify that for him any further...

  3. 19 hours ago, Gaard said:

    I wonder if the people who do that just don't know that it's bs, or they do know and just don't care.

    Never had it happen to me, but I'd go with "dont care." Some people are just more important than the rest of us.

    Estate sales around here are hot garbage, so I've never been in danger of getting into a fist fight over funny books at 8am.  Anyone have any good stories about someone getting hopping mad and getting thrown out for being a jerk at one of those things?

  4. First flea market visit of the year.  There's a regular there who has boxes of books, records, pinback buttons, militaria all kinds of things.  Grading and pricing on the comics is a mystery, but found these two that I didn't have to haggle over .  Passed on some silver age Atoms at $80-140 for 5.0 shape, low grade JLAs in the late teens at $100 each, low grade Strange Tales at $60-80 each, that kind of thing.  You can deal him down to the right price sometimes, but didn't want to spend the time on stuff I didn't need as much.

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  5. The fact that there's no JLA or Titans makes this lot sweeter.  There's a metric ton of junk JLAs in that era, and I cant think of a Titans issues after 44 that cant be had for a dollar or less.  $25 a long for an orderly collection is a gimme, I'd buy it without a second thought.

    I don't get the hate for Wonder Woman: volume 2 wasnt overproduced, and sells very well around here.

  6. 1 minute ago, 01TheDude said:

    I thought this thread was about the new entrants to the market who buy books at market prices hoping to turn a profit at that point. The majority of people who flip comics from this board hunt for collections, get them at good value and make decent money when they sell high demand stuff. Nothing wrong with that. Guys like BCS (Bitcoinswami in case you forgot) -- the so called COMIC INVESTORS -- are fools who buy items at those market prices expecting things will continue to go up in value. So the people making any money are the old guard-- the old collectors in the hobby for a long time and who understand the price of books. And if these folks who speculated in a book leave the hobby and sell their stuff, you can almost bet it will not be very profitable if not a losing situation.

    You're right on target.  If Super-dude #17, first appearance of Super-Dude's sidekick, is a $3 book and it spikes to $40 due to a movie, I want to understand the monkeys driving the book up to $40.

  7. After watching a certain movie this weekend, I wondered about books that spiked in price due to rumors, but turned out not to be true.  I'd like to better understand the buyers who set market prices on comics that spike drastically (and fall).  Do any of you have anecdotes about collectors who chase the top market prices, and get burned when the books cool?  Do they take their licks and keep buying back in like bad poker players, do they see the light and start buying more sensibly, or do they just quit the hobby entirely?

    I'm assuming that despite us all having speculation failures in the past, the current market is being driven by novice collectors with dollar signs in their eyes, who dont have as many years invested in the hobby as we do.  I'm also assuming that most people buying at top prices have limited funds, that is, they maybe living in mom's basement, but high prices arent being driven by rich oil barons and princes who have unlimited funds to buy whatever they want.  Feel free to correct those assumptions if you see fit.

  8. I suspect the OP just wanted to gush about how much he loves the Artgerm covers, and is upset he didnt find us a receptive audience!

    To answer the unspoken question: yes, we're jealous of all of your Artgerm covers.  We'll look back on this very thread in 20 years and say "darn, the OP was so smart.  I wish I'd bought all those Artgerms before they were four-figure books!"  You're well on your way to paying your child's college tuition!  Keep it up!

  9. As a midgrade collector, I can say average copies of the non-keys between 1-28 have shown steady growth, while 29-100 havent been this cheap in 20 years.  Before this current wave of attention, 5 and 36 were up, but FF fans were happily plugging away at their runs.  Now, there are players who will buy the run, flip the major keys, flush the rest.  First Diablo or Dragon Man dont seem to count for anything, those get flushed too :|