Numerous posts have referenced profit motives of TPG,or greed for the sake of greed.I think different view points are healthy and add to the discussion.
Having not been a fan of TPG notes I'm slowly coming around to accept what the marketplace seems to be adopting.I've even purchased my first TPG note! Well over book I might add.
It's funny how we/someone can become so caught up in their self-importance that they suddenly believe they know how the paper money world should operate. Apparently poor collectors—if they really took Economics 101—did in fact see the textbook only from "across the room" and therefore have not heard of the "free market" concept. They evidently do not realize that whatever the market is willing to pay IS the correct price at that moment.
Was there any "relation" a few years back between a Cabbage Patch doll selling for hundreds of dollars and its worth,at least according to true cabbage patch collectors,the true cost of, perhaps, ten bucks? Did any of us write any posts back then decrying the unnaturally high prices of the toy industry?
Tell us,we that decry market forces: do you lose sleep worrying that an iPod selling for three hundred dollars is probably being produced in China for twenty? That's a markup of 1500%, fellas! Maybe we'd better place a call and lodge a complaint with the FTC!
Naturally, I could spend hours listing items that sell for prices out of all proportion—ooops! Many think a 10%, 50%, 100%, 200% ect. markup is... well, just too darned high. Never mind that for many years prior, lots of collectors were selling their paper at a LOSS—and a lot of them are no longer around to lament it.
These continual rants about pricing,brought up several different ways,over several months, may be one of the most useless—and patently obvious—statements I've heard in this paper bull market to date. Does it not go without saying that nothing can continue "forever"? Many of you admit that paper money prices can conceivably rise for years to come. So warning us that they cannot do so "forever" seems disingenuous. The fact that collectable paper money will likely rise for several more years is EXACTLY why we're invested in it,people! That's what we're all we're banking on: several more years. None of us supposes that paper money will rise indefinitely. We're merely heeding the clarion call of a powerful and important economic CYCLE. Are you not doing the same? C'mon now,be honest with yourself.
Perhaps it will trade lower in the days and weeks to come. But in the months and years ahead, it will in all likelihood trade many hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars higher,depending on quality of said note,rarity,grade,ect.
Of course you may disagree with my observations,that's what makes a discussion interesting.
In example,recently I let go of a $*VV '54 $1.00 at $13,500.Would TPG have increased the price? I highly doubt it,hard to improve on the unimproveable.Yet,it was well over book.I'd buy one in Original Unc,nicely centered right here and now for $10-$11,000. Would the seller be price gouging me? Not as far as I'm concerned.
I use the Charlton as a reference when it comes to pricing,but I do not make final buying decisions based onn a book that is 4-5 months behind the market at the point of sale.TPG pricing seems to command more,who am I to argue with the market.
An old proverb goes "It's hard to kick against the pricks"