dangevin
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Nibbly Pibbly
Posts: 135
Pottstown, PA
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It's easy to get scared off by some prices if you're a young person, not used to investments or without a good amount money in the bank. But these aren't expensive to collect comparatively. An entire set you can buy for the price of a single classic car, a single Harley, a single piece of original art by even a mediocre artist.
Moreover, picking up the big ones is an investment...if were going to keep $1,000 in a bank and not touch it as a fall-back, and let it gain the tiny bit of interest, why not just go but an SE, since it not only is much scarcer than finding a bank that will take your money, but also is appreciating much more quickly. It's certainly liquid within 30 days too...if you ever come across a problem, ebay that night and when your legs are back under you, buy it again. It's rare but not unique.
Most of the time an investment implies a release of the investment at some indeterminate point in the future, otherwise you never "realize" it. But the fact that you could, the option to do so, is valuable unto itself, and the value of the asset of a cart that appreciates at 10% annually rather than a 2.9% interest savings account can't be denied.
Keep in mind I can't apply this analogy to most NES carts. Undenyably some are just worth too much. And there's more of an element of risk (Aladdin games, abundant now) but that risk is offset by time (Cheetahmen II, relatively worthless when uncovered). That limits your options when "troves" are unleashed but what goes around comes around.
Also keep in mind artificial demand. This makes a balloon that can pop. Panesians fall into this category. Their price is artificially high and will dip. Some carts also are starting to rot out and fail...and as uneducated collectors react to this it will change the market quite a bit.
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