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TheOldCollector

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  1. I just don't get it? I don't understand the business model. I just went on there this morning just to see what the current volume ASM back issues were listed for so I could fill some holes in my collection and they are through the roof I got 30 issues from Midtown today for $80 they would have been over $1000 or more over at Mile High's site. Surely nobody is actually buying books from their site? What is the purpose of their website if not to sell books? Everything I look up on it is way over priced and not by a little but by a ton.
  2. Am I missing something here? On CLink's auction tonight there are Nintendo Switch games going for like $900 that you can still buy new in the store for $44? Like Zelda Breath of the Wild.
  3. That's my thoughts as a collector as well. Don't get me wrong I have a good amount of CGC slabs in my collection. But when looking for CGC slabs I tend to focus on 9.6 unless I happen on a 9.8 for a good price just for the simple fact that there are humans grading these and we all know they make mistakes and some 9.8's shouldn't be 9.8's and some 9.6's should have been 9.8's. So I can't knowingly pay three times the price for a 9.8 compared to a 9.6 that .2 in a human's eye is laughable at best. Maybe like Randall said if it was a computer grading then maybe but when a human is doing it that is pretty much a lot of extra bread I could spend on other books for a .2 that may not even be .2 better. Thankfully I am a collector and don't have to worry about the whole tax thing yet but when I get to the point and when it's time to sell I'm probably going to be leaning on the Cash side of things because as a collector like someone mentioned before this is my hobby not my job so I don't want to have to deal with trying to figure out how to write off bagging boarding, storing, moving and keep receipts for every purchase and all of that nonsense. I look at it this way the taxes on my collection have been paid ten fold I'm not going to feel bad if Uncle Sam doesn't get to collect on them selling for the 10th time in that book's life.
  4. 40% Seriously? How did 40% of your sells earnings go to taxes?
  5. With the market as crazy as it is I think you'll have more people selling local for cash. At least the ones worried about the 1099. In this market you could be selling books in the middle of a hurricane and there will still be buyers They won't have that hard of a time selling locally for cash even if they sell it for a little less then what it goes for on E-Bay they are still making more money than they would if they sold it online. No Ebay fees, shipping or Paypal fees. So unless they live in an area not close to a mid size or major city they aren't going to stop they are just going to change their tactics. To be honest as a collector I wish more people were already doing this. There are some that have been doing this already. You'll see them on Craigslist with links to their E-Bay page offering a 10%-20% discount if bought locally. Of course I am talking about books priced below say 3k. If they were selling books of higher value already then they should already be used to 1099's.
  6. Makes sense now. I wish these sites would knock it off and just let them both use the sales price data if anything it drives more business to them for current auctions. GPA and Go Collect both have great ideas but for collectors I guess we have to keep doing what we are already doing and track all the current auctions on books that we want and make our own list to determine how much we should expect to pay.
  7. I don't know how it would be illegal if it's public information though. You may be right and this may be the reason they don't just monitor the major auction sites and enter the sold for prices into their systems themselves. But if anyone can see the sold price at auctions I don't think that's illegal to tell someone else on your site?
  8. Enough that most of us pay attention to all of their auctions... I mean I hop on there even when I'm not planning on bidding on anything in that specific auction just to see where prices are. If you run a business solely on gather sells data on CGC book sells you would think that you would want to gather as much data as possible not just rely on data sent to you. Let's say it was 2k books a week on CLink there are people who's whole job is nothing but data entry and I guarantee they enter more data than that in a single day. We are talking auctions here not direct sells.
  9. The only time I tried to order from Mile High the website said the book was in stock and I placed and paid for the order only for them to never place it. I emailed them after a while to ask about my order and they said they no longer had the book. I thought it was weird that I had to reach out to them about the order. If it was out of stock I would've thought they would've contacted me first. Never tried ordering since. Every time I do look them up their prices seem way above FMV.
  10. I know that, but that's what I'm saying they need to actually run the best business they can and rather than sit around and only use what's easy data. How about going out and collecting some?
  11. You would think rather than waiting for Clink and the other smaller auctions sites to share their sales data they would just have someone watch the auctions and write down the sold prices and update their database that way. There are not that many books per auction they could literally have one employee just for that and they wouldn't even be full time That goes for GoCollect and GPA. I mean they are both basically telling us we didn't add it to our database because they won't send us a spreadsheet with all of their sells.
  12. That ASM 262 drives me crazy I hate that I even own it
  13. I love me some Comiclink........ My bank account on the other hand hates them....