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Topic: Point of interests regarding note sales on ebay  (Read 6693 times)
twoinvallarta
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« on: October 20, 2007, 06:51:03 pm »

In a recent series of auctions I ran on ebay 8 out of 9 auctions resulted in sales.The total value exceeded $23,000.Why I mention this,not to be seen as a braggart,but to report on a trend I've seen taking hold of rarer uncirculated notes.
First,4 auctions sold with the BUY IT Now option,indicating a desire to pay the higher price I had put in that feature.
Second,a total of 5 of the 8 sales went to international buyers.This is a trend I noticed some time ago,and I stated international demand will drive our market.
Third,out of 9 questions I received from buyers on all auctions,7 of those questions asked if I had a specific or other graded PMG notes!

Kinda threw me for a loop.But who am I to argue with what buyers want.Met a buyer of means today that purchased a PMG from me,and he also asked for PMG notes I may have in my collection?!

Call me naive but I know a trend when I see one-just look at the USD call ,and the Amero,which by the way,Vincente' Fox admitted on Larry King 2 weeks ago is a fact,a reality that has been planned for several years! DAAAMN ;D
« Last Edit: October 20, 2007, 06:52:54 pm by twoinvallarta »

twoinvallarta
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« Reply #1 on: October 22, 2007, 06:17:30 pm »

While we're observing Ebay sales,hope you know where your sale funds are parked.

EBay customers' cash linked to risky assets
Wed Oct 17, 2007 8:14 AM BST
By Tim McLaughlin

NEW YORK (Reuters) - EBay customers who park extra cash in a nearly $1 billion (490 million pounds) PayPal money market fund are exposed to the same type of assets targeted for an emergency bailout by the largest U.S. banks, regulatory filings show.

PayPal Money Market Fund, whose popularity has mushroomed with online consumers, is invested in a portfolio that contains structured investment vehicles, or SIVs, linked to troubled subprime loans and other debt.

The risk surrounding these illiquid assets has forced the largest U.S. banks to attempt to create a roughly $80 billion rescue fund to prevent SIV assets from plummeting in value.


The PayPal fund was No. 2 among 248 first-tier retail funds over the past five years as of September 30, according to iMoneyNet. Many other money market funds are also exposed to risky assets in the hunt for better returns, experts said.

The PayPal fund demonstrates the reach of complex securities packaged by large banks such as Citigroup.

SIVs are created to capitalize on the differences in yields between risky subprime loans, for example, and short-term debt like commercial paper.

PayPal's money market fund is a feeder fund that invests all of its assets in a $26 billion master portfolio run by Barclays Global Fund Advisors

 

 

EBay customers' cash linked to risky assets
Wed Oct 17, 2007 8:14 AM BST
Cheyne Finance LLC, a SIV run by British hedge fund Cheyne Capital Management Ltd., had $145 million of its commercial paper in the Barclays-run money market master portfolio at midyear. Since then, Cheyne Finance has liquidated assets and wound down operations just weeks after its AAA-rated ratings were affirmed.

Michael Ehrlich, a finance professor at New Jersey Institute of Technology, said money market funds have sought out low-grade assets with AAA-ratings to give them a competitive edge over rivals when yields on safer bonds were near historic lows.

SIVs fund themselves by selling commercial paper and medium-term notes. The proceeds are then used to invest in assets such as subprime mortgages that are given to people with weak credit.

It is unlikely PayPal customers, or other money market investors, read the fine print of a prospectus and know how their cash is invested, said Steven Davidoff, a law professor at Wayne State University who studies capital markets.


PayPal handled $23.05 billion in total payment volume during the first half of 2007. Among U.S. and British online shoppers, one in three uses the electronic payment system.

Since the end of 2001, assets in the PayPal Money Market Fund have grown more than 10-fold to $932.6 million, as of June 30, according to filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

The PayPal fund's performance corresponds directly to the performance of the master portfolio, the regulatory filings show. The portfolio's net assets increased $18.6 billion during the first half of this year, largely from contributions to the master fund.

 

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