From the outside, this storage unit in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, doesn’t look like much. There are fluorescent lights, concrete floors, and a faint smell of old paper. But inside, stacked in climate-controlled cases and sealed plastic slabs, is what one collector quietly calls his “real portfolio”: rows of graded baseball cards from over 30 years of American baseball history, along with an incredibly large sum of money. This is not the only way that people think.
There is a new type of serious collector that has grown over the past few years. They talk less about nostalgia and more about PSA grades, print runs, and long-term appreciation curves. These aren’t people looking for memories from their childhood. They are looking at Hall of Fame paths in the same way that an equity analyst looks at earnings calls. And the results are getting harder and harder to ignore.
Some other types of investments would be jealous of the track record that vintage baseball cards, especially issues from before 1990 that are in graded condition, have quietly built up. Not only have cards like the rookie Rickey Henderson from 1980 Topps or a high-grade Thurman Munson from 1971 held their value, but they’ve steadily gone up in value, especially in PSA 8 and above. The reasoning is easy to understand. There are only so many of those cards in the world. Even fewer people made it out alive in great shape. And the people who watched those players as kids are now old enough to spend real money.
Real investors and casual collectors are usually able to tell each other apart by three things: authenticity, condition, and scarcity. Professionally graded cards by PSA, BGS, or SGC have a certain level of trustworthiness that ungraded cards just don’t have. It’s not snobbery; it’s just trying to make things less uncertain in a market where fakes have been a real issue in the past. There is a range of three to ten times the price that the same card would fetch in PSA 9. When you think about liquidity and reselling, that spread is important.

Most serious portfolios have rookie cards as the base. Any player can only have one rookie year, which makes them scarce in a way that later issues don’t. Take Derek Jeter’s 1993 SP Foil rookie as an example. It’s become one of those cards that people talk about in the same breath as solid investments—not flashy but reliable. The collector in Greenpoint keeps a few of them but doesn’t play them often because he likes the Yankees. He does it because he understands the basics.
Cards made after the 1990s work differently than cards made before that year. During that time, there were a lot of prints, which made the value much lower. But high-grade cards from flagship sets, especially ones with players who went on to become Hall of Famers, have made their own place in the market. It’s still not clear if the Panini Prizm parallels and short-print autographs of today will hold up the same way over time. It feels like the artificial scarcity was planned, while the real scarcity wasn’t. No one knows yet if the market will reward that in the long run.
People are more interested in alternative investments, which has given this part of the collectibles world some legitimacy it didn’t have before. It is now taken very seriously to trade sealed wax boxes from the 1980s that have been verified by BBCE. Autographed baseballs, photos, and jerseys have found their way into a wide range of collections, along with baseball cards. These items offer something that a plastic slab cannot: a physical signature that connects a piece of paper to a real person’s career.
Why has the Brooklyn collector been doing this for fifteen years without getting tired? Because he doesn’t romanticize any of it. As a smart investor would look at a long position, he does the same with his collection. He is patient, skeptical of short-term hype, and aware that not every card is a winner. There are bets that don’t pay off. Some players don’t do their best. Some grades are not as good as expected.
But a 1952 Mickey Mantle that is in perfect shape? He’ll say that with the quiet confidence of someone who has been following the market for a long time: “That usually takes care of itself.”
