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An Adventure with a Stamp Collection I sourced recently...

So the back story on this collection... is that it showed up at the shop in Feb 2023, and a local stamp dealer came and appraised it for us to make an offer to the owner. It was appraised at $5K (I wasn't party to the negotiation, just knew what the appraisal value was). It fit in five large boxes, two of which had lots of "loose" stamps (tiny little albums, glassine envelopes and ziplock bags of loose stamps... I weeded out all stamps on paper when I got this collection and gave them back to the shop, won't touch that with a 10 foot pole).

 

So around February when it was obtained by the shop, they sent it out to an auction house. The auction house did nothing with it for six months (and I could see why when I got my hands on it, it's a full time job for three months for one person to deal with all those stamps, I've been working on it part time for two months, and am only halfway through the collection). Basically we said "give us our stamps back" when it became evident they were going to sit on them, and my brainiac comment to our shop owner was "if you let them keep it, it's just going to lose value while it's not being sold". That seemed to create a sense of urgency to get the collection back for us to deal with ourselves.

 

Well when I got it, I went through everything, and I gave my appraisal value of it at $3500 (what we would pay the customer, I'm a little unsure how much we can sell it for since there were too many unknown items in this collection that needed careful research, I'm going through it in detail now).

 

Well there was stuff at the bottom of a shoebox that had a very high value and was at one point, six months ago, particularly scarce. But now there's 4 or 5 of these Dollar value jubilee stamps on eBay in every denomination they made. I have a full set, but to avoid the issue of signature on delivery I broke the set apart and have been listing them slowly to reduce the chances of a $750 sale which will be problematic for me to ship from Canada. (I will deal with it if it comes up, but I'm trying to avoid that by limiting the availability online, and they are selling, just not fast).

 

This is my fear though with this collection... it's dropped 30% in value from the time the shop got it until the time I got it, which was about 6 or 7 months later. And while I'm processing it, more of these rare stamps are appearing on eBay and the prices are being pushed down. I have stuff going up but in a few weeks or so, more are appearing that undercut my prices and I have to lower them.

 

I guess you could say I'm concerned on how much profit will be left by the time I'm unable to sell any of these stamps at all... I have set aside all coins, banknotes, tokens and anything that's low value or purchased by common collectors in favour of trying to get the rare valuable stamps dealt with first.

 

Basically the pool of collectors is decreasing as we move forward in time, and our shop is seeing all sorts of rare things turning up right, left, and centre as baby boomers downsize and estate sales come in. This stamp collection is no exception. It's the greatest thing I've ever seen, and since I got it, a few more collections have turned up (that I had to pass on selling for them), and I'm not even excited to see a bunch of Canadian Bluenose stamps because after the great big collection, nothing seems to be very rare anymore as it comes into the shop.

 

Well if you deal in stamps and collectibles and have feedback on the declining pool of customers and prices dropping, and rare stuff turning up everywhere... I definitely want to hear from you.

 

If you don't deal in collectibles, I hope you enjoyed my story of the day.

 

C.

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Re: An Adventure with a Stamp Collection I sourced recently...


@reallynicestamps wrote:

So most of those packs still have value as  postage.

But they can't be turned in for barcoded stamps, since they are still valid.


Yes you're are correct. I'm guessing that collectors don't have so much interest in everyday basic stamps. More in the fancy commemorative type which are still valid.

Message 46 of 52
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Re: An Adventure with a Stamp Collection I sourced recently...


@fern*wood wrote:

@sin-n-dex wrote:

@12345jamesstamps wrote:

I see the words "You are bidding....." on description....is that an oops?

 


No, English isn't my first language, it sounded more correct on a site that does auctions than saying "you are buying".

 

C.


I remember you stating that before, but you write so well, I forget it immediately.  I enjoy reading your stories and your writing is far better than most that claim English as their first language (me included for sure). 


I'm fluent by far, lived in English speaking Canada for 20 years, and 3 years in the US before that. But some expressions don't translate in my mind into perfect English.

 

The word bidding (when translated) means "to make an offer", and since I take offers on listings, I thought if someone messaged me "I'll give you $5" they are "bidding" on my item.

 

If there's a better way to write that line in my copy, I'll change my templates, but definitely do not want to change 13K in listings. It's not against eBay policy to use the wrong words to say something, they are quite used to badly written descriptions on the .com site. Plus some people who speak English as a first language don't write so well.

 

I generally proofread for little mistakes, like when to say "there is" as opposed to "there are" when describing something. I proofread most of my posts as well.

 

C.

Message 47 of 52
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Re: An Adventure with a Stamp Collection I sourced recently...

Understand.

When I look at it...it looks like it was on auction before...didn't sell...so got placed at "buy it now". Most buyers wouldn't even notice it....but picky me did. LOL

Message 48 of 52
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Re: An Adventure with a Stamp Collection I sourced recently...

Would you prefer the terminology "previously rarely available for purchase"? Because this is the trend now for many collectibles as owners of collections are dying off and stuff is coming back onto the market.

"If a product doesn't sell, raise the price" - Reese Palley
"If it sold FAST, it was priced too low" - also Reese Palley
Message 49 of 52
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Re: An Adventure with a Stamp Collection I sourced recently...

LOL I saw that too and checked to make sure they were FP.

"If a product doesn't sell, raise the price" - Reese Palley
"If it sold FAST, it was priced too low" - also Reese Palley
Message 50 of 52
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Re: An Adventure with a Stamp Collection I sourced recently...


@12345jamesstamps wrote:

Understand.

When I look at it...it looks like it was on auction before...didn't sell...so got placed at "buy it now". Most buyers wouldn't even notice it....but picky me did. LOL


Ah, no, none of them were auctions, but the auction ones said "you are bidding" as well. I figure as long as it's not a violation, there's no need to revise all listings, but if I had better wording I'd update the templates for future use. You are actually the first person who commented on that detail, which gets me to thinking about it.

 

C.

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Re: An Adventure with a Stamp Collection I sourced recently...


@toomuchstuffagain35 wrote:

LOL I saw that too and checked to make sure they were FP.


Heh, OK so now two people noticed 🙂

 

I'm sure I'll get lots of feedback on that one now that it's been pointed out. I procrastinated doing listings today. We're having our stamps meeting over dinner tonight, I'll bring up the wording and see if my MBA friend can tell me a better way to phrase that. (We meet up to brainstorm ideas for more sales in the store and how to manage situations that come up...)

 

C.

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