@@SportCardMadness thanks bro you guys fueled this concept! looked it up those cost about 10,000 to make and from a defunct company could probably be obtained for Pennies on the dollar right?
I see PSA graded vintage cards from several years ago and compare them to recently graded PSA vintage cards and there definitely seems to be a discrepancy in the grading standards during the two time periods. What happens in the scenario where there is a 1968 Topps Nolan Ryan RC graded a PSA 4 several years ago but would only grade a PSA 2 today? What happens when a buyer/seller agree to sell a PSA 4 Nolan Ryan RC for market price of a PSA 4 ($800) but then either during the purchase or after the purchase there are problems because the card only has the value of a PSA 2 (which is what the card would grade today and the grade the card should have received back then)? How does PSA's guarantee kick in? Does PSA owe either of these parties money for relying on the PSA 4 grade to their detriment? If PSA over-graded several thousand vintage cards back then, what could be the possible economic consequences today? I'm assuming their 'guarantee' is covered with some 3rd party insurance.
@SportCardMadness please do that's a video we need cause last time I walked in Game Stop at the register was a man in a dress with a wig on I ran the hell out of their 🤣🤣🤣
Our full interview with Nat Turner is here: ua-cam.com/video/_KTVQHFnpOI/v-deo.html
You are challenging NEO and Dustin as my source of breaking financial hobby news. Awesome!
@@wackerly Wow great company!
Those old red box machines are about to be repurposed mark my words 🤣👏🔥
@@Danliny94 Wow great call!
@@SportCardMadness thanks bro you guys fueled this concept! looked it up those cost about 10,000 to make and from a defunct company could probably be obtained for Pennies on the dollar right?
I see PSA graded vintage cards from several years ago and compare them to recently graded PSA vintage cards and there definitely seems to be a discrepancy in the grading standards during the two time periods. What happens in the scenario where there is a 1968 Topps Nolan Ryan RC graded a PSA 4 several years ago but would only grade a PSA 2 today? What happens when a buyer/seller agree to sell a PSA 4 Nolan Ryan RC for market price of a PSA 4 ($800) but then either during the purchase or after the purchase there are problems because the card only has the value of a PSA 2 (which is what the card would grade today and the grade the card should have received back then)? How does PSA's guarantee kick in? Does PSA owe either of these parties money for relying on the PSA 4 grade to their detriment?
If PSA over-graded several thousand vintage cards back then, what could be the possible economic consequences today? I'm assuming their 'guarantee' is covered with some 3rd party insurance.
Wow nice do you listen to Marantz Rantz.
No I’ll check him out!
Ain't no way I'm leaving my cards at Game Stop I definitely don't trust it.
I’m going to test it out soon I think
@SportCardMadness please do that's a video we need cause last time I walked in Game Stop at the register was a man in a dress with a wig on I ran the hell out of their 🤣🤣🤣