• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

Nick Furious

Member
  • Posts

    1,292
  • Joined

Everything posted by Nick Furious

  1. If you all want to have a little fun with bad buyers, ask them if they would be interested in purchasing at a 50% discount. Don't word it as an offer, just a question. Then block them right after they reply.
  2. Wouldn't it still be two business days if shipped on Monday? Bought on Thursday at 7 PM. I think the buyer is out of line. But I also think with a note like that I would just refund his money without shipping the book.
  3. I don't think the price points would be comparable. If so, that X-men 10 is priced way too high. MCS has a 2.5 for $150 and a 3.5 for $190. And they are typically at least a half grade tight on their grading.
  4. Yeah, I agree. If you don't have access and boxes are stored or stacked on top of each other, then quantity is not so great. But in the right situation, where each box is easily accessible, I really enjoy the quantity over quality. It's like having my own little private comic book store. I've been thinking lately that my 5,000 or so raw books are actually my true permanent collection that I will be glad I still own when I am old and have lots of time on my hands. While my more valuable books, the 200 or so slabbed books, are fair game to sell.
  5. Yeah, I would agree and he kind of buried himself in trying to make that threat. Gave indication that the situation actually is within his control and he's going to use the books as leverage. That statement won't hold up well under scrutiny.
  6. True, unpaid accounts receivables is definitely another common way for a seemingly successful small business to run out of money. Along with using the float to finance overhead and expansion.
  7. My best guess on the delays is not that he is a thief but that he's trying to recover books that are missing. Possibly taken by former staff members who were let go. He sounds like a guy who has a skill, but should not be running a business of any significant size. Taking full payment upfront, he likely used the float for cash flow and created a bit of a Ponzi scheme that collapsed. When money runs out, the hole just keeps getting deeper and anything can happen. Insurance payments stop. Books go missing, they get used as collateral for loans, aggrieved employees take or intentionally misplace things...
  8. I would give 10 to 1 odds against an active insurance policy.
  9. They will probably learn pretty quickly to only allow photos for positive feedback. Allowing public photos for negative feedback will open a can of worms and will not be a net benefit to Ebay. They want to encourage transactions, not discourage them.
  10. I call it Sherpa employment. You intentionally make something so complex that it requires the average person to hire a professional "sherpa" in order to navigate it properly. The law is a great example. I think that tax accounting is another one. The thing about the comic grading industry though is that the complexity is driven by the market is demanding it. This is just the grading company responding to the demands of the market. Buyers of slabbed books take comfort in presuming there was a deep level of complexity in certifying the book with a statement of condition. Kind of like an auditor certifying the financials of a publicly traded company.
  11. What did they say about their monstrous star? Did they demand his removal from the film? Clearly they didn't make the personal sacrifice of walking away. This is where we get it wrong as a society. We shouldn't give special consideration to those who tolerated evil because it was in their best interest. We should give special consideration to those who sacrificed personal interest and walked away.
  12. I think there was a time when it was just another way of getting enjoyment out of being a collector. Some people discarded or gave away comics after reading them, some people kept them and continued to tinker with them by trying to make them look nicer. There were a lot of slow TV nights for kids back in the day. Coloring in a crease line and flattening comics with encyclopedias was something to do.
  13. Ebay's TOS theoretically are there to protect both buyers and sellers. It's supposed to be a two-way street. If a buyer goes through Paypal to get a return after 30 days, they should have their Ebay account suspended for violation of TOS.
  14. This cover always captured my imagination in the early 80's but the back-issue price was out of reach for me as a kid. I finally bought a copy a few years ago and read it. It was pretty lame.
  15. The passage of time has made me regret the two times that I did return a book to a dealer after slabbing. The second time was a Hulk 181 5.0 that had small amount of color touch. In retrospect, I would rather have the book than the $200 credit, equal to what I paid for it.
  16. I can't imagine that Sir Isaac Newton ever considered this as the most common way that his name would be mentioned in the future. Probably rolling over in his grave.
  17. Honestly, I faced a similar situation with a convention dealer that I saw once or twice a year. I bought a decent value book from him as a raw 9.4. It graded at CGC 9.4 but with a green label because the centerfold was detached. 6 months later I brought the book to him at a convention. I didn't want to create a "zero sum" situation where he lost money by reimbursing me, so I asked for a credit. He accepted and took the book back for a credit towards other purchases. I think the difference here is that we had a history together and I offered a solution that didn't have him losing money in the form of cash. I would suggest the same resolution in this situation...ask the dealer for a credit equal to your total costs...be willing to accept a compromise that does not include grading fees. I did not ask for grading fees as part of my credit...it was my choice to get the book slabbed and the dealer had no say in that.
  18. I think the formula is twice your age plus 30. Or any number greater than 60.
  19. Good point. There has to be a point where a seller is free to use the sale proceeds without fear of having to return them to the buyer. Ebay says that point is 30 days. Anyone who feels this is not enough time should find another platform that puts that timeframe out longer. Not sure there is one, as I think most reasonable people agree that 30 days is long enough. Most people I've heard from agree that Ebay's TOS are very generously biased towards buyers. Many sellers have left Ebay because they feel TOS are not fair to sellers. Buyers are free to do the same thing if they really feel that Ebay's TOS are not good enough for them.
  20. If you buy your raw books through MCS they will already come with a grade on them that is highly respected in the industry. It doesn't eliminate all need for slabbing, but it certainly reduces it.
  21. Anyone who didn't get to meet Nick Scotto missed a heck of an experience. I don't know if he was a stereotype...or a prototype. I started stopping by his Carson warehouse around 2009. Not only did his books have no pricing, they also had no bags or boards. Nick was pretty good at getting information from his customers, letting them dig out his treasures from the drek. Then he would look up the prices and realize the books had achieved some recent high 9.8 price and use that as the starting point for pricing. As one dealer told me, much like a Tijuana shop owner, Nick was always going to give you a great deal...until you showed interest in something. Two ways to get good value from Nick were to buy in volume (he wanted to move large stacks of books), and the other was to go there when he was on vacation with his wife and the assistant was running the warehouse.
  22. It's like leaving a negative Yelp review for the IRS.
  23. I think the success of GOTG created a false hope that MCU could transition from A list characters to C and D list characters and audiences would follow. If all the latest movies had been on par with GOTG, maybe that would have been the case. But that's a tough act to follow.
  24. I have a theory that the recent boom in prices brought awareness and interest to many books that most folks had not considered owning before. I suspect some of that increased interest will remain and provide price support well above 2019 levels for many books, even after the pure resellers have abandoned them. Just curious, what books have you significantly increased interest in since 2020 but still not purchased?