A close friend of mine has decided to be a full-time card dealer after dabbling in it on a part-time basis for the past few years. He has asked me to use my online contacts to help him increase his inventory of slabbed cards, primarily PSA and SGC cards of baseball, football, and basketball. (Some specific hockey cards will probably be okay, but they aren't a priority like the other sports.)
He is a dealer and asked me to specifically say that he needs "some room" between his purchase cost and selling price in order to make this new endeavor work out for him. I think most people in the hobby understand that already, but I know he's going to ask if I stated it.
If you have some slabs you would like to sell, please reply to this post with pics of the cards or at least the identifying label at the top of the slab. If you know what you want for the card, please include that too. It will save us time. Right now he said he would consider all slabs worth up to $500, but if you have some bigger ones, they may be acceptable depending on the specific card.
I hope all involved will benefit from this. He does buy cards at shows, but says he doesn't have nearly enough graded cards to present at his table. Customers seem to want them more than raw cards these days. Thanks.
He is a dealer and asked me to specifically say that he needs "some room" between his purchase cost and selling price in order to make this new endeavor work out for him. I think most people in the hobby understand that already, but I know he's going to ask if I stated it.
If you have some slabs you would like to sell, please reply to this post with pics of the cards or at least the identifying label at the top of the slab. If you know what you want for the card, please include that too. It will save us time. Right now he said he would consider all slabs worth up to $500, but if you have some bigger ones, they may be acceptable depending on the specific card.
I hope all involved will benefit from this. He does buy cards at shows, but says he doesn't have nearly enough graded cards to present at his table. Customers seem to want them more than raw cards these days. Thanks.





