Welcome to Sports Memorabilia Insider for 9th December 2021.
We use Moneyball tactics to discover undervalued, mispriced, and hidden gems in Fractional Investing.
After a slight recovery in the week prior, sports memorabilia continued its weak 2021 performance with a 1% decline last week.
Table of Contents
Last Week
Fractional secondary markets
Though small in number of assets, sports photographs did their best to offset other subcategory losses as it returned 13.5% for the week with the Ty Cobb photo on Collectable providing the bulk of the returns with a 27.1% return.
Football and baseball memorabilia were the laggards with declines of 2.3% and 2.0% respectively. Second-tier game-used bats seemed to fall out of favor as the Jimmie Foxx bat (-20.8%) and Michael Jordan bat (-14.3%) both declined.
This Week
Assets dropping on marketplaces
Sports memorabilia returns to the IPO market after a few weeks off as Collectable debuts a pair of LeBron James game-worn sneakers.
IPOs
LeBron James AZG Rookie Game Worn Sneakers – Photomatched to 3 Games
- Market Cap: $450,000 (0% retained equity)
- Inferred Value: $203,000
- Drop: 12/12/21 on Collectable
- Recommendation: [Insiders Only]
Secondary Markets
Rally continues to roll out live trading with 20 new assets debuting this week with 3 sports memorabilia assets – only one of which is trading below its inferred value.
Michael Jordan 1984 Signing Day Jersey
- Market Cap: $232,500
- Inferred Value: $220,000
Mickey Mantle 1960 Game Worn Jersey (Signed)
- Market Cap: $552,500
- Inferred Value: $700,000
90’s Bulls Championship Rings Complete Set (6)
- Market Cap: $276,000
- Inferred Value: $331,200
Auctions
Two assets currently at auction represent reasonable comps to assets currently trading on fractional platforms.
1953 World Series Game Six Ticket Stub (Heritage December Sports Showcase Auction)
- Heritage has three different tickets from the 1953 World Series on auction; this was Mickey Mantle’s third year with the club.
- Collectable has a 1951 Opening Day ticket for Mickey’s MLB debut IPOing soon; strong results above the auction estimate for these three tickets would be a strong indicator for the Collectable offering.
- Robert Edwards recently sold a 1951 World Series ticket featuring Mantle’s First World Series hit for $360.00
1930s Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig Dual-Signed Baseball (Lelands Late Fall Classic 2021)
- Collectable has a similar 1933 dual signed Ruth/Gehrig baseball currently trading at a $76,000 market cap.
- The Collectable offering is in better condition (a PSA 7.5) than the Lelands offering (PSA 5), but can be used as a comp; the Lelands offering is at $4,281 with three days left.