Hockey Cards - Part III

miscs75

Registered User
Jul 2, 2014
6,453
6,048
Glad I decided to tell my LCS I wanted a box. Only spent $225 USD on it:


*His auto is a mess sadly
 

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miscs75

Registered User
Jul 2, 2014
6,453
6,048
Nicely done, sell it now unless you want it as a PC.. Given how he's not exactly dominating this year, he might turn out to be more like a Tavares/Stamkos/Kane than CM/AM
I plan on selling but my main issue comes selling to somewhere not in the USA. The last time I did that (Nuge Ice /99), some guy from QC tried pulling a fast one (stated it never came but magically had the same card for sale) until his eBay inbox got blasted and he revoked his dispute with me. Magically appeared 2 days after the chaos started for him.
 

frightenedinmatenum2

Registered User
Sep 30, 2023
2,779
3,077
Orange County Prison
I plan on selling but my main issue comes selling to somewhere not in the USA. The last time I did that (Nuge Ice /99), some guy from QC tried pulling a fast one (stated it never came but magically had the same card for sale) until his eBay inbox got blasted and he revoked his dispute with me. Magically appeared 2 days after the chaos started for him.

Don't sell something like that on your own if you're not a "professional" eBayer who knows the dispute process and all the scams to watch out for. Look for a consigner. Odds are, someone will give you a great rate because it's a Bedard card and it's easy money for them and it also gets lots of eyeballs on their other auctions.

eBay does have the Authenticity Guaranteed program now, which makes it a bit safer for the seller. If they have that in the US, that might be an avenue to go down.

You could also take to your card shop owner and see if he knows any big money hockey card collectors who are looking to buy one. Depending on how community oriented your shop is, he might have a few guys he knows and can point you in the right direction, or he might even be willing to buy it from you.

Keep in mind that straight up eBay fees work out to being about 14-15 percent because they also charge fees on the sales tax and shipping. So if this is a $5000 USD card, you're getting somewhere around $4000-$4250 after eBay fees. I'm just using $5000 as an example, I'm not saying it should sell for $5000. In this scenario, if your local shop owner comes in and offers you $3500, while that might seem like a lowball, it's $3500 against $4250, not $3500 against $5000. Also figure in that if he pays you cash and you're smart enough not to put it in the bank, well you can figure the rest out there.

With all that said, consignors usually charge much less than 15 percent on eBay because they have lower rates of negotiated fees, and if you have a Bedard Future Watch card they may go even lower. For example, Slab Shark in Canada at one point was offering to consign Bedard cards for 1 percent. I assume because it gets them so much traffic, it's basically marketing.
 

miscs75

Registered User
Jul 2, 2014
6,453
6,048
Don't sell something like that on your own if you're not a "professional" eBayer who knows the dispute process and all the scams to watch out for. Look for a consigner. Odds are, someone will give you a great rate because it's a Bedard card and it's easy money for them and it also gets lots of eyeballs on their other auctions.

eBay does have the Authenticity Guaranteed program now, which makes it a bit safer for the seller. If they have that in the US, that might be an avenue to go down.

You could also take to your card shop owner and see if he knows any big money hockey card collectors who are looking to buy one. Depending on how community oriented your shop is, he might have a few guys he knows and can point you in the right direction, or he might even be willing to buy it from you.

Keep in mind that straight up eBay fees work out to being about 14-15 percent because they also charge fees on the sales tax and shipping. So if this is a $5000 USD card, you're getting somewhere around $4000-$4250 after eBay fees. I'm just using $5000 as an example, I'm not saying it should sell for $5000. In this scenario, if your local shop owner comes in and offers you $3500, while that might seem like a lowball, it's $3500 against $4250, not $3500 against $5000. Also figure in that if he pays you cash and you're smart enough not to put it in the bank, well you can figure the rest out there.

With all that said, consignors usually charge much less than 15 percent on eBay because they have lower rates of negotiated fees, and if you have a Bedard Future Watch card they may go even lower. For example, Slab Shark in Canada at one point was offering to consign Bedard cards for 1 percent. I assume because it gets them so much traffic, it's basically marketing.
I’m not worried about all of that. I’d rather try to make a deal through one of the FB groups I’m in. I just wish hockey was more popular locally so I can move out quite a bit of stuff without resorting to COMC for quite a bit of it. For the LCS portion, he doesn’t buy singles. I’ve left bulk random Isles/Rags cards in there and let them go just for the heck of it. I leave the cash and put it towards deposits on my next pickup.
 

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