The trading card market hit record sales of over $616M in April, with 3.1M cards graded. GameStop's interest in eBay has sparked discussions about the collectibles market's future.
Neither Credible Nor Attractive: The GameStop & eBay Story
Howdy, Collectors.
The trading card market somehow managed to set records again in April, with Card Ladder tracking more than $616M in secondary-market sales and GemRate logging a record 3.1M cards graded, according to The Athleticâs Ben Burrows.
I get the same question all the time from collectors⊠are we in a bubble? This much Iâm sure of⊠nobody knows! But Iâm encouraged about the state of this Hobby, as the big dogs continue to invest for the long haul (e.g. Fanatics signing an exclusive deal with FIFA that doesnât kick in until 2031) and as collectibles news seems to always be circling around the front page (GameStopâs bid for eBay, anyone?). Even our buddy Josh Luber popped up on the Today Show this week.
So are we in a bubble? What do I know? But it sure feels like The Hobby has wind at its back.
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GameStopâs attempted $55B takeover of eBay lasted about as long as it takes to be disappointed by a repack unveil. eBay officially rejected the proposal, calling it âneither credible nor attractive,â while Wall Street largely treated the entire thing like a fever dream from the meme-stock era. The biggest issue was always financing: GameStop is dramatically smaller than eBay, the debt load would have exploded, and analysts questioned whether Ryan Cohenâs promised cost cuts would gut the marketplace itself. Cohen has signaled heâs not moving on, however, so weâre certain this is not the last time weâll write about the topic here in Above the Mantel.
PSA says it prevented more than $200M worth of counterfeit collectibles from entering the market in 2025, which shows just how widespread fraud has become across sports cards and TCG. Pokémon cards accounted for the majority of counterfeit submissions, while iconic cards like the 1952 Topps Mickey Mantle and 1986 Fleer Michael Jordan remained major targets for scammers (a free, probably obvious, tip: be extra careful when offered raw copies of grail cards). PSA also noted that counterfeiters increasingly focus on lower-tier cards with simpler printing technology, rather than just ultra-high-end grails, which should make all of us a little nervous.
Credit: The Inquirer
At the peak of the early-1990s card boom, Fleerâs Philadelphia factory was producing cards so valuable that employees allegedly tossed boxes out windows to waiting accomplices, while uncut sheets and cases quietly leaked into the market. The Olney plant, where iconic cards like Michael Jordanâs 1986 Fleer rookie were printed, became a neighborhood institution and symbol of the junk wax eraâs excess. Former employees recalled a factory culture where baseball cards felt âlike goldâ until overproduction, the 1994 MLB strike, and collapsing demand turned truckloads of inventory into what collectors now call junk wax. A cool story about a bygone era of sports cards.
Nikola Jokicâs hobby market finally hit seven figures after his 2015-16 Panini Immaculate Logoman RPA sold for just over $1M at Goldin, putting him alongside Giannis Antetokounmpo and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander among modern MVPs with monster card sales. But the spread between (active) former MVPs is massive: Giannis leads the pack at $1.8M, while Joel Embiid and James Harden trail far behind despite their on-court accolades (I can guess why). The common thread? Logomans still rule the hobby. MVP trophies help, but true 1/1 patch grails remain the cards that push players into another pricing tier.
Beckett is leaning hard into nostalgia with a full brand refresh that brings back its classic âB with laurelsâ logo while retiring the much-maligned B-Star branding. The company also unveiled a redesigned grading label with larger grades, cleaner subgrades, and upgraded anti-counterfeit tech including holographics, UV details, microprinting, and QR-based verification. Coming just months after PSA parent company Collectors acquired Beckett, the move feels like an acknowledgment that the brand lost its identity over the last decade and is now trying to reconnect with the trust and credibility that once made BGS slabs a cornerstone of the hobby. You love to see it.
Iâm a huge Dodgers fan, so I especially loved this piece from J.R. Fickle that alerted me to the amazing story of Patrick Copen, who might be the best under-the-radar buy in 2026 Bowman Draft. The Dodgers pitching prospect has elite strikeout numbers, a strong start at Double-A Tulsa, and one of the wildest stories in baseball after returning from an injury that permanently blinded him in one eye. Despite that, his cards are still dirt cheap because he hasnât cracked the mainstream prospect conversation yet. There are risks â some scouts project him as a reliever and the Dodgers rotation pipeline is crowded â but this is exactly the kind of low-cost, narrative-driven prospect play collectors usually notice way too late. This is not investment advice, but Iâm going to be a buyer.
The trading card market recorded over $616 million in secondary-market sales in April 2023.
In April 2023, a record 3.1 million trading cards were graded.
Fanatics signed an exclusive deal with FIFA that will take effect in 2031.
GameStop has shown interest in acquiring eBay, which has generated discussions about the collectibles market.
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