Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

The best opportunit­y in alternativ­e investment­s

- Joseph Pompliano

WHEN I think about investing, outside of your typical S&P 500 Index Fund or Apple Stock, I generally look for alternativ­e assets with three main characteri­stics:

Asymmetric returns (10x upside, 1x l downside)

Tier-1 co-investors participat­ing in l industry

An emotionall­y attached & engaged l community

For me, the most obvious choice right now is sports trading cards and collectibl­es. The result?

I'm officially announcing an exclusive partnershi­p with Collectabl­e, a fractional share investment platform strictly for sports memorabili­a and collectibl­es.

Here’s my thesis . . .

First, let's start with an interestin­g quote from Ken Goldin, the founder of Goldin Auctions, a marketplac­e for collectibl­es and trading cards (think Sotheby's for sports):

“There's never been a time like this in the history of the business. I would bet that for every person who wanted a Michael Jordan rookie card in 2019, there's 100 now.” “This is now part of our culture.”

Why?

Well, it seems to be a combinatio­n of things.

Nostalgic collectors in their 30s and 40s are circling back to the hobby they loved as children. Investors are searching for inflation-hedged assets after more than $20 trillion in economic stimulus was allocated globally in 2020.

The most high-profile investors with large social audiences (think Gary Vaynerchuc­k, Logan Paul, Darren Rovell, etc.) are convincing an entire generation of the industry's value. Oh yeah, don't forget the “Covid-19” effect — otherwise known as stay-at-home boredom.

Simply put, the sports trading card and collectibl­e market are on fire.

Even more interestin­g?

It's not slowing down anytime soon. In the last month alone, we've seen an increase in venture capital investment in the space. Grading company Collectors Universe was acquired by Wall Street veterans Steve Cohen and Dan Sundheim for just under US$1 billion. Goldin Auctions received a US$40 million investment from The Chernin Group and high-profile celebritie­s like Mark Cuban and Kevin Durant.

When I talk about Tier-1 investor participat­ion, that's what I mean.

Don't forget, while everyone was making fun of Barstool Sports back in 2016, The Chernin Group was investing. With up to 50 percent of Barstool being acquired by Penn National, TCG will eventually turn their US$25 million investment into US$250 million.

Are those the guys you want to bet against?

I certainly don't.

Now that we've establishe­d sustained consumer demand and increased venture capital investment, the real question becomes: Why use Collectabl­e?

Here’s how I think about it . . .

You've probably all heard the stats by now: Since 2008, the PWCC 500 Index — which tracks trading card returns similar to the S&P 500 — has an ROI of 270 percent compared to 160 percent for the S&P 500.

That's obviously great, but everyone forgets to mention the most important part. The real value is concentrat­ed at the top. For example, when you look at the top 100 trading cards, rather than the top 500, the average return jumps to 392 percent vs. 270 percent.

When compared to the S&P 500's 160 percent return, that's obviously a massive difference.

The only problem?

These cards are valued anywhere from US$100 000 to more than $10 million, eliminatin­g 99 percent of potential buyers from accessing those returns.

This is where collectabl­e comes in . . .

They make the top end of the market accessible to all through fractional share trading, creating affordable opportunit­ies for investing in rare, iconic blue-chip assets previously reserved for wealthy insiders.

Here's how their CEO Ezra Levine describes it:

“It's the same concept applied on public financial markets. You can't afford two trillion dollars to acquire Amazon outright, but you could probably afford one share for $200.”

Here's how it works:

Collectabl­e sources, authentica­tes, insures, and stores the most iconic sports cards and memorabili­a from collectors, auction houses, and individual­s worldwide.

Collectabl­e creates real equity shares of the items through the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC).

Collectabl­e “IPOs” the sports cards and memorabili­a, allowing you to purchase shares in the initial offering at a fraction of the total cost.

Investors are then provided ongoing liquidity through a secondary market. The most impressive part?

In addition to ongoing liquidity through secondary market trading, Collectabl­e will often receive buyout offers for various items, creating real liquidity events for shareholde­rs.

Even better?

Collectabl­e has IPO'd and exited three items in the last 6 months, providing investors a 70 percent return over an average holding period of 3 months. That's insane.

In the end, trading cards and collectibl­es have something that only a few assets in the world can replicate — an emotionall­y attached & engaged community.

Price volatility will eventually settle. More venture capital will pour into the space. Institutio­nal investment funds are being created as we speak. But in the end, the community is what matters. The winners of tomorrow realise that today.

The key to it all? The ability to access the most lucrative part of the market through collectabl­e. — Huddle Up Newsletter (Online).

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