The past couple weeks have been really interesting regarding
Vintage Masters. I wrote last week about when to sell Vintage Masters cards and
basically, the pointer was to keep until another “Masters” set comes out, other
than Modern Masters 2.
There is one other thing that’s important to point out that
I have been encountering a lot lately. I am an avid Magic player. In fact, I
changed to online because it’s convenient to open a program and be able to play
a game within a minute. Vintage is my favorite format because games are never
the same and there are a lot of interesting decisions. Vintage is the most
played format by me, and I noticed that most of the time, the maximum number of
players in the Vintage room is 10. That’s 10 at the popular times of day. When
I log on at 2am Pacific time I usually don’t get an opponent before I decide to
do something else instead of play Magic.
The thing I want to say is that it appears that there are
very few avid Vintage players online. So, why are cards skyrocketing online
when there seems to be less and less people playing Vintage? It’s certainly not
because there are more people collecting the cards they need to play, it’s
because everyone seems to be speculating that the “good” cards will keep going
up. This phenomenon happened once before in the stock market….it was happening
rampantly when the stock market collapsed in 2008 and caused “the great
recession”. People speculated that prices will go up, the same thing is
happening online. Online is a different animal, I’m not saying they are the
same, but some parts of the strategies for effective investing can transfer
from one to the other.
So, there’s not a lot of Vintage players who want (or can
afford to) play Vintage online. What’s making the prices go up? Speculators are
making the prices go up. Since Vintage is still expensive, is it possible that
speculators will only be selling to other speculators? I think that’s possible
until there is a point when the cards are reprinted again. It’s like the dual
lands, they were really expensive even though the online community of Legacy players
was really small the speculators drove the price up to over $50 for Underground
Sea. When Vintage Masters was released, the price dropped very low. The price
was around $15 the entire time Vintage Masters was released. The price stayed
low mostly because the speculators sat back and waited for the “right time” to
buy their cards. It appears now is the time.
I just wanted to take this week to talk about how
speculators can change the market and make investing more challenging. It’s
really something worth talking about because there’s a lot of speculating right
now that seems to be driving the prices up even though the number of Vintage
players are dropping (or at most, maintaining) and the popular vintage cards
that aren’t in Vintage Masters are dropping.
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