Ken_4fun said:
Shorty -
I have bought and sold probably 20K in cues in the last few years. My advice is try to buy them better than you sell them. What I mean by that is look for a real deal if you are going to try to resell. I wanted a Gina and I have paid pretty much list or retail for that cue, but that cue isnt one I was going to try to turn.
Meucci, Joss, Scruggs seem to turn well for me and I can usually buy very cheap, usually do some tip work, clean shafts and sometimes even have them refinished. Giggle all you want, I can turn a Meucci in less than a week and make 100+. No, I dont play with them, but they sell pretty easy.
I never have lost money on a cue. Broke even at worst, otherwise I will hang on to cue. But for me the key is to buy them right. Selling to make a profit is realitively easy. If you pay too much, you will lose. Trust me someone trying to sell a cue is much more motivated than I am buying it otherwise I walk away.
My thoughts, and good luck.
Your friend
Ken
I totally agree on the buying issue. However, I too will pay full bore if I want a cue for my collection. You can't bargain-hunt and get everything you want.
I no longer buy to turn over for a profit - it takes too much time. However, some things come up that are just too good, for example a "buy-it-now' might be drastically underpriced. I've bought cues that way and made a 100% profit overnight. The greed gets the better of me.
I firmly believe that if someone were an expert in antiques, such as collectibles, billiard stuff, books and and musical instruments, they could make a reasonable retirement type of living on e-bay scanning the new listings all day and using "buy-it-now" or making offers to buy undervalued items.
I used to do that with billiard stuff for fun and almost every day would buy stuff at half the auctionable rate. I know a guy who bought a package of Tim Scruggs sneaky petes and other stuff on e-nbay and made about a $2000 profit on just the one deal. I've made $1000 profits on single cues and a lot in the $500 profit range on single cues.
I've also overpaid for what I though was a good deal. The most I lost on a single cue was $300. It was one of theose re-issued McDermott Masterpieces. When they first re-issued them, I didn't know they had done it and paid about $750 for it. I went to re-sell it and found out it wasn't an original one, so I sold it for $450 with an updated description.
I took some real risks too. I bought poorly advertised cues from people that couldn't be recognized by the photos. I ended up with a garage sale Palmer "I" with a Szamboti splice that was barely recognizable under all the crud. My Palmer 1st catalog Model 11 was not recognizable because the finish was so bad. I have not seen another one for sale. My model 9 1st catalog with the ebony Titlist I picked up for $550 in an auction with two shafts and a case because the photos were not recognizable and it is a great cue.
Then every once in a while you get derailed. I've also bought some cues that needed too much work or were modified or had poor reapirs done to them.
It's all part of the gig.
Chris