We are an eBay affiliate and may be compensated for clicks on links that result in purchases.
The internet has made it easy to trade. With the birth of the ebay flipper, where is our hobby heading? Is the hobby more of a business for flippers who are inflating our loved autographs. Its not uncommon to see items sold at auctions and resold a week later for double the amount. There also seems to be more and more flippers around.
Whats doing more damage to the prices the flippers or the forgers?
Tags:
For well over a century this hobby has been a business. There have been people willing to sell autographs for as long as there have been autograph collectors. Without the autograph-hounds, how would Mrs. Smith in Iowa have an autograph collection of her favorite celebrities? The guys out there getting the autographs for later sale are not the problem. People getting good deals and buying up real autograph collections for future sales are also not the problem.
Sellers try to get what the market will bear. That is called "The American Way."
People who are clueless and buying forged autographs and trying to pass them on at a profit ....that is the problem. For every real autograph on ebay there are easily ten forgeries available at 1/10th the price. Joe Idiot from Witchita buys Scarlett Johanssons and Harrison Fords and whoever else at $20 a pop, and has them back up on ebay at $150-$300 within a week. Then the next buyer thinks "hey that is real, look at the price."
Long time autograph collectors and dealers are not the problem, people seeing a quick buck and the forgers that supply them with material .....that is the problem.
the buyers set the price, not the sellers. its a complicated web. the cost of authentication has driven up the prices, as have companies like Steiner, Tri-STar. also the players are demanding ridiculous prices for an autograph. and even an inscription. take a look at Koufax's upcoming signing pricing for inscriptions. its nuts.
The low cost of forgeries undoubtedly causes more damage to the hobby than "flippers" IMHO. Especially when they come from an "eBay approved 3rd party" (GA).
So you've got 10 Yasiel Puig forgeries "authenticated" by GA selling for $50-$100, then you've got authentic ones from Panini/Fanatics with starting bids of $199... no one is even THINKING about bidding... (This has literally been happening on eBay for over a year).
Now if you decide to sell your Yasiel Puig in-person signature, which price do you think you'll get? You're going to get the $50-$100 range because of the MASSIVE amount of forgeries selling in that price range. People assume that is the "norm". If these forgeries never existed, then the "norm" would be what Panini/Fanatics is offering at $200+....
So not only are these scammers screwing customers, they are screwing the value of my authentic Yasiel Puig signatures as well.
If someone finds a nice deal and buys an authentic Puig signature for $75, then "flips" it for $150, that is actually helping you by showing the legitimate value of it.
There has been a signed Bob Dylan poster also signed by Hendrix on ebay for a long time. The price used to be around 2000 but now psa dna have given it a sticker its on for 8 thousand.
I don't like seeing flippers get their hands on ltd runs of vinyl sometimes the band or artist sign the albums for record store day. The flippers go to the store buy the albums and place a huge mark up on the item. The problem is the albums are suppose to be for the fans not the flippers. Its like ticket scalping. One flipper was paying people to line up at a store so he could get more albums to flog, then the kids who are the fanzines miss out because they cant afford the mark up on ebay.
In that case I feel for the fan who was at the end of the line and couldn't get one. The fan who sat at home and didn't go to the store, should pay the premium and pick up some cheese to go with his whine.
and yes that was a joke!
I disagree. Why would prices go down? The more flippers, the more bidders..the more bidders the higher the bidding goes. I've been buying from auction houses for many years now, and I can tell you it's MUCH harder to find a bargain now than it was even 10 years ago. Everyone has a smart phone, ebay, worthpoint, and knowing value of certain items is easy. Without that at your fingertips, like it was years ago, you actually had to know the value of things from experience.
I'm still trying to understand what the problem is with someone buying something at an auction, and then re-selling on ebay for a profit? This means that what it went for at Auction was not fair market value....what it sold on ebay was!
Let's say I own a signed Babe Ruth baseball, which I bought for $9000. Then a very similar one sells at auction for $6000. That same person then "flips" it on ebay for $11,000. That would make me happy.
Flipping (from auction houses) can only increase the value of your autographed items.
Forgeries can drive them down.
I totally agree. Someone who flips an autograph or anything else for that matter must first know what an item is selling for on the market. They are not creating a new higher value but rather using their knowledge of the marketplace and keeping an established value in place. Without knowing what an item sells for they will be out of business fast.
Posted by CJCollector on November 27, 2024 at 2:23pm 0 Comments 1 Like
Posted by CJCollector on November 11, 2024 at 6:03pm 0 Comments 1 Like
Posted by CJCollector on November 9, 2024 at 2:32pm 7 Comments 0 Likes
© 2024 Created by Steve Cyrkin, Admin. Powered by
Badges | Report an Issue | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service