Everything you need to know about collecting marquees: UPDATED 4/10!!
No need for the defensive posture. I didn't say you bought them all on eBay. I know you traded or were zapped for many of yours. Although, I have heard you in person say how much x marquee "cost" you. Perhaps you were translating pin trade values into dollars.
What I did say was the eBay price would have been $300 when you and Dan were trying to complete your sets. People were buying pins left and right to try to get pins to trade you guys. And trading $300-$400 in trade value also sets values. It's not always eBay and it's not always cash that increase a pins value. I know the amount paid for your Up marquee, maybe you got it for free, but that doesn't mean money and pins didn't change hands. Even I was approached to donate a pin to be sold to raise money for your Up marquee zap. I have said in other posts I don't blame all the marquee craze on you. There are plenty of people collecting and paying high $$$ for marquee's.
I think also people were listing pins at high BIN prices to try to increase what they themselves could get in trade for it, but then, maybe even to their surprise, the pins were selling for those high BIN prices. You and I both know people toy with pin value manipulation using eBay. People prelisting pins super early at a very high amounts to try to set a value. Or fake selling 1 BIN high and then relisting two or three lower to make people think they got a deal. Or fake selling low to try to devalue a pin they want. People go to crazy lengths to get pins or get money. Anyone else ever notice it's always the same seller that posts a PTD first and it's always like 150% higher than the first one actually sells for? That aught to teach you not to buy the first one listed of a new pin. Someone will always go lower to try to sell theirs quicker. Then someone goes lower yet to get theirs sold quicker.
A vast majority of the time when someone asks me what I traded for X marquee I normally tell them the pin value of what I traded instead of giving them the entire run down of what I traded. I only got defensive because I worked very hard to get together the collection I have (I obtained all but 15 of the marquees in my collection on my own) and for someone to say you took the easy way out (i.e buying your collection) it really hurts.
a 17 year old kid.
New collectors will be scared off by The Wild having a $250 BIN OBO price on eBay. So maybe the time is coming soon. I don't know.
Nathan, I thought you recently turned 18 years old?
god I keep forgetting your only 17 lol you could pass for 20
I am 18 I made an error in that post. I just now realized that.
Hold on, what?! The Wild has a $250 BIN OBO?! What the heck is going on with that? And why is it that I trade a pin away and then it skyrockets?!
I was just joking that should this craze continue eventually the prices will be so redonkulous that people won't even start marquee's. Or we'll have some sort of like Pre-Brave / Post-Brave or Over $100, Under $100 type division in marquee's.A BIN listing never represents the value of anything, even if it sells. _If_ it sold for $250, that wouldn't mean it's worth $250, just that there's one person with enough money and desire to spend that much (and possibly someone that mistakenly assumed it was worth that much since it was listed that way, that's what a lot of these high BIN sellers are hoping for, in any hobby, not just pins). Value is dictated by what buyers will pay under normal circumstances (i.e., normal auction starting at lower-than-value price), not what sellers try to get.
Looking at The Wild in particular, that pin has _sold_ for $80 in Jan, and $34 a couple of weeks ago, both in normal auctions. Currently one on eBay for a $99 BIN and no one seems interested yet... I say it's still a $34 pin, if even that...
A BIN listing never represents the value of anything, even if it sells. _If_ it sold for $250, that wouldn't mean it's worth $250...
I was just joking that should this craze continue eventually the prices will be so redonkulous that people won't even start marquee's. Or we'll have some sort of like Pre-Brave / Post-Brave or Over $100, Under $100 type division in marquee's.
Ummm..... yeah, if a pin has a BIN of $250 and it sells for $250, kinda means its worth $250 becuase that is the going market rate. Granted there are exceptions to this, like if there was one listed at $75 and one sells for $250, I wouldn't call the $250 the going rate. However, if there are none cheaper listed and that was the most recent selling price, that is the going rate, like it or not.
Ummm..... yeah, if a pin has a BIN of $250 and it sells for $250, kinda means its worth $250 becuase that is the going market rate. Granted there are exceptions to this, like if there was one listed at $75 and one sells for $250, I wouldn't call the $250 the going rate. However, if there are none cheaper listed and that was the most recent selling price, that is the going rate, like it or not.
An authentic auction price means there were at least two people will to spend the sale price (within $2.50 or whatever the current bid increment is) and so the price is more stable if a second one goes for sale. Even then, it's just a moment in time, if next week only one person is looking for that pin it will sell for less at auction.
No, it has nothing to do with that actual market value. If I list a Tangled marquee for a $100 BIN, and it sells, does that mean they are all worth $100 now? No.
If I list it for $10,000, and some millionaire that doesn't care about money buys it, does that mean they all now worth $10,000? No. And, just to be really crazy, how do I know everyone else that wants this pin wouldn't be willing to pay $20,000 for it? A fixed-price listing tells you nothing...
A few weeks back someone listed an Enchanted Stained Glass LE 100 pin for a BIN $7.95 and it sold quickly but I wouldn't say that is the going rate, I wouldn't even quote it to someone trying to say the price range for that pin is.... A B.I.N. price can be vastly under or over priced. Past Sales prices can trend a price down or up, and then when ebay removes past sales after two months it's really hard to get a true understanding of the long term value of a pin. I can only see what has sold in the past few weeks which for many older pins is not at all.
Yeah, what a lot of people usually miss is that when determining a lasting value for something that sold at auction, you need to look at the _third_ highest bid. If it sold for $1000, bidder #2 bid $950 and bidder #3 bid $400 (and all lower bids closely follow the minimum bid increment), $400 is closer to what it's actually worth. Bidder #1 & #2 just got into an 'I gotta have it' bidding war. If another came up forsale with the same participants (minus the winner of the first one), it's likely to sell for $450.
There's a lot more to determining a true market value of an item than just 'But it sold for $xx the last time'. And remember, for every one that sells, that's one less person in the buying pool that wants it. If the pool isn't being re-filled in some way, the price is likely to go down, not up. Desire to own it by the remaining potential buyers may increase, of course, so that can help hold (or even increase) a value as well... Nothing about the value of collectibles is ever static or black-and-white...
Also, there are ways of searching eBay for past sale prices for 12 months if you know where to look....
I'll bite..That would be very useful, how can I do that? Thanks.
I did say there are exceptions. A huge one being if the BIN price is below the regular market price. That is obvious. If a pin is listed for $10,000 and it sells for $10,000 and there are no others available for sale. That makes $10,000 the going rate and market value at that now. Now, the next time one is offered for sale, if its at a lower price (which is likely that it would be), that would then become the market price, even if it does not sale. A market price was already set at a higher rate from the previous sale and none others were on the market. A new one is on the market at a new price, since it is less than the other one, that is the current market value, unless you can find one for less. For something without an unlimited supply being offered, previous sales play a huge part in the market value, regardless on the method of the sale if there isn't another one around for less.
For example, lets take the recent Rapunzel Reveal Conceal sale. It sold via BIN for $2000. Is that the going rate. I think so. If its not, show me where I can buy one for less.
Marquees are now sky rocketing. Valiant which a couple weeks ago would sell for 12 dollars is now BIN for $99...
That doesn't really mean anything though. The person who is selling those marquees has their marquees listed at crazy prices. I think they're unsure about selling their collection so they listed them at crazy prices to see what kind of offers they get to see if its worth selling. IF (and that's one big IF) i ever sell my collection I'd do the same thing.
haha and IF you do, i'm on board for your enchanted marquee T_T lol
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