 coming in live. Hi everyone, this is Chichou. Welcome to my channel and welcome to another live stream. Today's live stream was a little delayed. How many hours? Three and a half hour delay. We had a little kitty cat incident happen, so apologies about being late. And today is February 2018, 2021. And we're doing an investing in personal finance live stream, specifically investing in comic books. We're going to take a look at the return on investment of the first comic book haul that we did. And I have some tables to go through with you guys. And we're going to go through a fair bit of info right now. And I'm going to reference some videos. And all the links will be in the description of this video. Once it's loaded on to sensor to be chewed and rumble. And for those joining in live, I'll be, I don't have the links handy. It's been a busy morning. But we've got all the tables and all the referenced videos, the images are going to pop up. So you should be able to find the information. Speedy Gonzales style. Speedy Gonzales spot. It was fantastic. I've been, I've been diving into these tables for the last three days. I've been going down the rabbit hole because it's not, it wasn't just generating tables. It was also referencing the information, trying to find the information. But I'll go through that. Once people start rolling in birdie here. How you doing? What's up? What's up? bureaucracy kills. Hey, dude, I saw the tables. Good stuff. I need to check up on some of the current prices of my stuff. Yeah, it's crazy, man. For me, I'll let you guys know, like some of the stuff is not available. Like you can't find a price for it. Like my comic shop used to have a lot of stuff. People are blown out their inventory. So like some of the stuff you just couldn't find on eBay. It was even hard to get a price because right now there's a lot of people selling that aren't grading the comics and the titles. So you have to dig down and they're not even grading. So you're like, man, what, what did this thing sell for? Crack. How are you doing? Good afternoon. Good afternoon. Spartan three, three thousand four. Hello. Hello, Cheryl. How are you doing? Ding, Bobber. How's, via is good. Via's passed out. Via's passed out. The doctors gave them some opioids. Let's do spreadsheets. Elder God, my man, indeed. I mean, going down the spreadsheet rabbit hole and looking at data and stuff for three days. Super fun, man. Taxing. I need to stretch out the back. Bertie here just opened a cold one from the local bro. Oh, dude, you're going to enjoy this. Elder God, Sal definitely did it. Dude, you know, you know, Sal did it. I'll tell you guys the story. The void. Let's go. Theocracy kills. So much stuff is only listed at stupid inflate. Some of the stuff is impossible to find. So even the low grade stuff, it's hard to find someone at a low grade price. As for the kitty cat incident, while we wait for people to roll in as for the kitty cat incident, Sal likes going on this window sill that we have. That's actually one story down because there's steps going down, right? And it's sort of a wine, not winey, but L shape stairs going down. So it's pretty dangerous. Okay. So Sal likes going there and instigated it through via and via decided to follow him. Now, Sal was making his way back and we built a barrier. So it was a little gap there. Sal was making his way back and via was going on the window sill and I turned around and said, hey, Sal, sorry, via with Sal on top of him with his leg, tried to turn around and come back and he slipped on the way down. He hit the metal. What do you call it? Try step ladder that we have on the way down. He hit that, flew over, hit the railing on the stairs and then landed on the steps. Me and my partner were both like, Sal was right beside me and Sal was like, there goes via and as soon as via hit the ground, Sal was like, don't jump down. Via, via, via, are you okay? Are you okay? It was like, oh my God, it was trippy. It was trippy. Crack. Where it gets tricky with eBay now is when a best offer is accepted. Hard to get a solid idea of selling products. Really crack. So difficult and some of the stuff people are getting, there's still amazing deals to be had on eBay. I've seen some stuff Sal when I was doing these searches, some stuff Sal for a dollar that should have been sold for like 80 and then some stuff that should be 80 was selling for 200. I sold two Rob books in the last two weeks on eBay was a gamble but I paid off. Okay, awesome crack. Good, good, good. Ding Bobber. Oh, no, Chico. Cats can fall from amazing heights. But damn, that sounds painful, painful. But we took them to the doctor and we had to hand them over. He can't go on COVID restrictions and they said it doesn't look like it's broken and for cats and dogs, supposedly every now and then, if they take a serious hit, their knuckles pop out. So it looks like it's broken and then it pops back in. So that's might have been what happened. But we're going to keep an eye on him and see how it goes. But pretty good so far. Tough little kitty. Sal, instigator. Gang, while we wait, we're going to wait four more minutes or so. Give it a 10 minutes, but I'm going to give you guys my little intro. He must be tripping. Yeah, they gave him some liquid opiates to put around the, don't not down the shoot, down the throat, but to be absorbed through the membrane, right? Talk about an entheogen, hardcore process. Gang, I am on Patreon, patreon.com forward slash chico chico chico. If you want to follow this work, if you want to know what this work is about, which is you're about to get an amazing stream that you're participating in to get a feel for what my work is about, which is basically all layered on mathematics, even the comic books, right? I don't put anything behind paywalls. Everything's great of commons, share and share life. If you enjoy this work, if you think this work deserves your support, support this work through Patreon. And for those of you who have been supporting this work through Patreon, thank you very much for the support gang. It is in large part because of your support that we're able to do this, as well as the support we're getting on Twitch. For those of you here on Twitch supporting this work, following, participating in the live stream, subscribing, liking, I don't think they have a like commenting, points, bits, conversation in the mods. Thank you very much for the support. It is in large part because of your support that we're also able to do this, right? I do announce usually these live streams 30 minutes before we go live on Parler, LL, Mines, VK, Gab and Twitter. And we do have a Discord page where people are sharing a lot of information. All you got to do is come to our Twitch channel anytime you want in the chat, type in exclamation mark social and the Discord page will pop up and you're welcome to join there and participate in the discussion. Elder God, cats can, kittens are a little more vulnerable. Yeah, agree. I was, me and my partner were shell shocked for kitten. Oh, and he was so good about it, man. We'll show, I think you just thought it was in trouble because Fowler, you heard me go, hey, we'll show 45. Hope everyone's doing well. My first live stream in a bit. We'll show welcome back. Yes, let's do this. Sounds exciting. Awesome. Mathematical statistical spreadsheets. Nice. Shout out to the mods. Shout out to the mods, gang. Shout out to the mods. Salut, salut. V62P. Salut, mon ami. If that means how you doing, I'm doing fantastic. Thank you very much. Gang, for live streams, we don't have any visuals and we definitely have visuals today. We've got spreadsheets, but when we don't have any visuals, we do upload the audio to soundcloud.com forward slash chicho and those podcasts should be available on your favorite podcasting platform including Spotify and iTunes. To be gin diagenesis. To be gin diagenesis. Hello chicho and mods. Been looking forward to this episode. Me too. Me too. I've been working hard on it. To loving the data, man. V26P. That does 62P. I come in here from time to time and it's quite chill love. Awesome. I'm glad you're enjoying it. Ding Bobber, thank you very much for the Twitch Prime sub. And we will be uploading this live stream, this amazing, amazing amount of data we're about to look at, both or two sensor tube, pitchute and rumble. Okay. If we have enough point, we'll upload to Odyssey as well, but for sure it's going to go on sensor tube, pitchute and rumble. And you can follow the work there. And if you want the information to come to you uncensored, then pitchute and rumble is where you want to be at. Okay. Aside from that gang, I'll do God. Hi, my friend. What's up translated. Hi, my friend. What's up translated. Awesome. Dune. Fantastic. Thank you very much. V62P. And I'm glad you're enjoying the chillness of these streams. Crack. I agree. I've been looking forward to this one. Nice. The real MC Mike. How are you doing? Gang, I'm taking these down. So now what are we doing today? What are we doing today? The first video I put out in 2015 regarding comic books was that I was going to share my love of comic books, but not just the love of comic books, but also the aspect of comic books, which is related to publishing comic books, which I've done, which we haven't got into yet, as well as the aspect of collecting comic books or investing in comic books, right? We've done teasers of what, where we're going with this information. We put out one video where we put a spreadsheet online open source where people can go and manipulate the data and sort of talked about what could be collectible, what may not be collectible and what not. But one of the things I wanted to do was link up what we're doing regarding the comic book haul videos, regarding the comic book videos in general, the comic book content was to link that up to personal finance and investing. And this is exactly where we're going with this. Right. What we're about to do. I've got a lot of stuff here. So let me show you, give you the intro of what we're about to do. I'm going to hop over a little bit because I'm going to fill the space up. Okay. What we're about to do, we're going to do an analysis of the comic book haul we had in 2015, where we bought two short boxes. And I showed you what those two short boxes was, what we ended up getting in those two boxes in the following two videos. And this was, both these videos were video number. We did an intro video. We did a, let me show you my comic book haul video. We did six readings of comic books and then we did tests. Right. So this was, these two videos were two of the, this was, this, this haul was the first comic book haul video I did online. Okay. And we're going to do a lot more of these and we're going to continue to collect comics, invest in comic books. Right. And the phase we're in right now is basically rolling through those comic book hauls and taking a select amount of data to analyze. Vintage Chicho. I remember those vids indeed crack. Quickly Chicho find a beanie. I almost always have a beanie with me, man. So I found the beanie. Right. So I thought it was just for us to, the first data set that we're going to look at, the first set of comic books that we're going to look at to see where, where the prices have gone was from the first comic book haul that we did. And in that comic book haul, we grabbed a whole bunch of valiant comics, whole bunch of random comics, a lot of horror comics and war comics. Okay. Kung Fu comics. And we grabbed 120 daredevil comics. I'll show you the spreadsheet on that. Okay. So this is in reference, what we're about to do, analyze the data in reference to these two comic book hauls that you see here. And this is the data that we're going to look at. Right. This is the spreadsheet that I uploaded during those comic book haul videos. Right. I sort of modified this a little bit, but not really. This is basically the spreadsheet that you saw during those two comic book haul videos. But I reduced the sick fakes. I took out the decimals and stuff like this back when Chicho used to just use just for, man, this is great. Just better. Right. So this is what we ended up buying. We bought Marvel comics, secret wars. We're going to dig into these, by the way, Marvel comics, secret wars, GI combat, vertical comic war comics. We bought Tomb of Dracula. What a payout that that lot was. Wow. Wow. Wow. Tomb of Dracula, giant sized werewolf, and a whole bunch of other ones. And we bought Master of Kung Fu. And those lots that we bought in the green that you see, they were in really good shape. They were very fine plus to near mint. That was the description of the videos that the person was selling. We looked at them then and I looked at them after that video as well. And they're pretty much that. Right. And gang, just so you don't forget, Free Assange, Free Assange, Free Assange. Julian Assange is a publisher and journalist that is being crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capital as power to humanity. For more information, see wikileaks.org and or wikileaks and Julian Assange play Lessa. What did we do before Excel? What did we do? Right. Lotus. Lotus one, two, three. That's what I was using before Excel. Right. And then the purple color that you see there is valiant buys that we had. And the red that you see there is the daredevil comics that we bought. What we bought. All of these comic lots that I ended up buying, they were listed at Buy It Now with Make an Offer. Right. So the Buy It Now price, if you scroll down the last three columns, the third one up, total without shipping. Right. The Buy It Now price, if I was just going to pay whatever he asked for, was $622 and all of these funds are US dollars. Right. I made him an offer on all these and he took all the offers, except for one that I wish he he had taken as well. Right. But my funds were limited. I could only go for so high. Right. We ended up making an offer of $467. Okay. And he took it and it was $68 in shipping and we ended up paying a total of $535 US. He's about to call it a print. Yo, it's you, Joe Starsky. How are you doing? How's it going? I was waiting for this. Awesome. You're catching it right at the beginning, brother. Okay. So this was the spreadsheet we did and we opened up, you know, it was a nice comic book haul ASMR video. We're opening up the packages, unboxing and taking a look at all of these comics, which is a total number of comics that you see there was 275 comics and per unit price, it came out to $1.95, including shipping. Now, oops, we don't want that one. We want this one. This is the initial spreadsheet that we shared. This is the updated spreadsheet. Okay. Now, all I did was take three columns from the previous spreadsheet, the price we paid. Okay. Total savings, $165. Oh yeah, I didn't calculate that, but $165 savings. Fantastic. Right? So from the previous column, from the previous spreadsheet, we brought over price paid in February 2015. Now, I uploaded the videos in February. I can't remember if I bought them in January or February, but February 2015. Right? Now, void. The number of comic books we kept, right? We got 275 comic books, right? Unit price without shipping was $1.70. Again, I went down the bottom, right? Three columns, $1.70 with shipping was $1.95. I ran the price that you see there, the darker green, the darker purple and the darker red. That's average price. Now, the average price, we're going to dig into these rows. Each one of these rows has, well, the green has its own spreadsheet. The purple has its own spreadsheet, but the daredevils, I broke them down into number one to 10. Each one has its own spreadsheet as well. Okay. And all the links to these spreadsheets are on our Patreon page, and I'll have the link available in the description of this video. Do you see a mistake? Elder God, tell me, man. I've been going three days on this, right? I'm trying to check prices. You find mistakes. You let me know. I'll update these images, right? Starsky. Yo, do you still hold Tesla? No. Stock shot up to over 800. Do you believe they will rise over one point? I don't know, Starsky. The market can do anything, right? If a stock that I was recommending three months ago, four months ago, six months ago, that was trading at $253, can go from $253. And in the last month, last week, hitting $67, while Tesla going from $800 to $1500 is only double your money. A $3 stock going from $3 to $67 is a way better return, right? Mean average. Mean average. Oh, the average is from four different websites. Okay. This is what I collected the data from. Okay, let me bring this up. Legend. I'm going to show you this legend because we're going to bring up, we're going to dig down into this thing, right? And by the way, before I show you this, the average price that we ended up getting, we paid $535. This is the last row that we're looking at right now. We paid $535. And the stuff, according to the average of the four websites that I could find, right? We used two price guides, one retailer, and eBay. Okay, auction site, right? And this is estimate. Okay. It's going to be, it's basically almost $2,000, which is 267% return if you include the shipping paid, right? So unit price we paid was $1.95 US. The unit price right now is 214 US. Now, you have to keep in mind that this information, let's go so far. Okay, awesome. The price, what we have right now, this information, okay, is compiled from the data we're going to dig into. It's compiled from four, again, websites. eBay, MyComicShop, Comics Price Guide, and Comic Book Realm. And when I'm buying comic books, when I'm doing heavy buys, I check all of those websites, basically, at least three out of four, I check to see what something is being sold for. It's even, it's it, if it's even available to be bought, there's some comic books that like half the comic books in this list, you couldn't even buy on MyComicShop. Used to be able to buy almost anything on MyComicShop. Not anymore. On eBay, some stuff you could buy, some stuff was going for crazy price, right? Ding Babur, Chih-Chou, my friend made 16, going trillion dollars and 30 minutes only by entering his social security information in their insurance website. He hasn't received the money, but yeah, but I already sold my house. Funny thing about it. I love it. The check's in the mail, the check's in the mail, okay. And by the way, this little note down here, italic prices in the tables are estimate. There are no italics in this because this is the average data that I collected from all those, right? But in the next 12 tables that we're going to look at, there's going to be italics in there. And the italics are mainly used for MyComicShop and eBay, okay. The reason I use italics for MyComicShop was because it was really hard trying to find the comic books in the grade that I had them in listed. So I was either doing an estimate based on the above comics or previous or comics that came afterward or I was estimating from MyComicShop, okay. Or looking at the grade that they had and doing a multiple to get the price of the grade that I had that we did in this buy. For eBay, it's all italic, I believe. It should all be italic, maybe like there's a handful that aren't. Okay, just so you know, don't take this data as set in stone, okay gang? Must be one of them. I just made it up. That's what it was. It was a funny joke. Now, let me take these down. Now, keep this in mind, okay. This is the table. Now, obviously, we got formulas going on here, right? And here are the formulas that we're using. We're using return on investment, which is basically interest rate calculation or rate of return, same deal, right? And it's return on investment ROI and his current price minus price paid divided by price paid times 100, which is a percentage. Now, before we do this, let me show you one thing first of all. Now, these formulas, right? We covered in a video like three days ago, two or three days ago, two days ago, I believe, right? In this video right here, because I knew we're getting into this, we're going to do this. So I did a little quick during our ASMR math tutoring session. We went to our ASMR math tutoring board and we did our calculations of how to calculate return on investment, which is also calculating interest rate, which is also rate of return. And we went through how to calculate amortized yearly amortized or amortized return on investment ROI, which is basically taking your compound interest formula and rewriting it and calculating it for DR, right? Just a little algebra. And if you want to know how to do this mathematics, if you want to avoid, if you want to know how to do this mathematics that we're doing in the spreadsheet, this is the video you want to go to, right? I don't have it up on BitShoot and YouTube and Rumble yet. It will be up tomorrow. For those of you that are watching this video on SensorTube, BitShoot, or Rumble, the video is already up and I'll have the link in the description of this video. And keep in mind, what we did there was basically a summary, a shorter condensed version of what we did here for investing in personal finance videos, where we looked at return on investment ROI, how to calculate it in relation to US dollars versus Canadian dollars versus Bitcoin. And this is part of the series that we're putting out on SensorTube as a playlist. And I can't remember if this video is available on BitShoot or not. If it's not, I'll try to get it on there as well as Rumble. So to return on investment stuff, this is the video you want to look at. If you want a little more detailed information with data, actual real life data, right? And if you want to know how the compound interest formula works, compound calculations, interest calculations, where we actually do figure out the amortized return on investment. This is the video right here that you want to take a look at, which is basically part of our ASMR mathematics, math and real life economics. And this should be part of our personal finance, but I haven't included in the personal finance playlist. This video right here, we'll talk about how to use that formula that you see right there. And those are the formulas that you're seeing here, okay, which is covered in this video right here. So if you watch this video, it'll explain all of these formulas. I'm so glad I watched and got a refresher. I still love the investment videos for your children. I am still saving money for my nieces. Nice, nice. So these are the formulas that have been used to do the ROI and the amortized return on investment and to do future calculations, because I did a little calculation you'll see on the tables. Okay, let me take these guys down. Now, what we're going to look at first, this is the table where we're seeing what the return on investment was based on the comic books we bought. And the first table we're going to look at is in the green. Okay gang, up here, this guy here. And this one, we ended up paying a total of $137 U.S. Included 74 books, okay. And right now, and this is the one that the prices are pretty accurate actually, this one, except for the GI combat and the Vertigo War comics, which is the second column down, which total is $156, except for those ones, the rest of them are pretty solid accurate numbers. Okay. So we ended up paying $137 for 76, 74 books, which was $1.85 per unit per comic that it cost us. And right now, with me doing a price check, it ended up being a total of $824 U.S., which is a 500% return, right? And annualized return on investment, basically the, if you calculate that, because this is over a six year period, right? We bought these things in 2015, and right now they're 2021. So six years, same month, February, right? So after six years, it was a 500% return and a 500% return split over a six year period comes out to annualized 34.88% per year, which is a phenomenal return. Okay. Phenomenal return, which basically ended up making the comics per unit be worth about approximately $11 per comic book, right? Cashier and Sins. Wow. Good return. Seems better than my stocks. How do you know which comics to buy? Well, that's the kicker. I'm not only buying comics based on investing, right? I buy comics because of the love of it as well. That's one thing I wanted to really get across through my comic book videos. And I really planned it out from the first comic book video we put out, which was a 15 minute introduction to a set of comic books that we're putting out, right? And in that, I said, look, there's multiple reasons why I am in this genre, right? Investing is one of them. The love of comic books is another. The historical importance of comic books is another. Their beautiful art is another. The storytelling is another. There's multiple reasons. The chill factor of just amazing opening up a comic book to read, and it takes you away to places that nothing else can take you because one of the things that I've began to realize, and I've heard other people say as well, one of the reasons graphic novels, comic books are so powerful is because they work the right and left side of the hemisphere at the same time, right? You're seeing visuals, art, and you're reading text. So that's incorporating both the left side of your brain working together. There aren't too many things that do that in regards to consumption of entertainment or knowledge or information, right? So what I invest in is what I love, right? What I find interesting. And this return wasn't the same as you can tell from the table. And the purple is probably, that's the least accurate, right? Because you could probably buy those on the cheap cheap on eBay instead of going to the, going with the price guide listings, right? Except for like a handful of the issues there. Okay. But the green is legit. Okay. Now what we're going to do is we're going to dig down into the green. Let me show you what we got here. This is the green broken down. Take a look at that table for a second. And let me show you what I got as a snack. We had to reward ourselves. We went and got some more lemon meringue pie. What a beautiful thumbnail right there, right? What a beautiful thumbnail. Lemon meringue pie and comic book data layered with mathematics and a little statistics and investing in personal finance. A nice greenery in the back. Right? I hope you got delicious snacks, gang. I hope you got delicious snacks. Right? I hope you got delicious snacks. Chih-chou update. My friend, friend's bank account has been emptied now. No, not, not to trust someone on the internet who claims to be an African king from Nigeria, most likely. But my friend now has a deal with someone who has inherited a small fortune and needs my help to prevent taxation. Funny, funny. Now for what I understand, if someone has your bank account number, they can pull money out anytime they want, which is very trippy to me. So delicious. Crack. I'm glad to see, Crack is mentioning, I'm glad to see you've tried to pull from different sources. The Price Guide is classically overpriced. Some of the stuff is underpriced. Check this out. There were mainly the Price Guides, the comic Price Guide and most Price Guides, comic book realm. They were, they're mainly overpriced for most of the books. However, they are underpriced severely on some very important collectible books that are going for a lot more. I've noticed that. So don't sell your comics based on comic book Price Guides listings because they might be fetching a much higher price. It's lemon meringue pie. It's fantastic. Kenny Roberts. I've eaten a lot of pies during the streams last year or two. Right? I would imagine Price is also based on what people are willing to pay indeed, Bertie here. As availability gets low, if you get the right buyer, the price can increase a lot. Yeah. I'm still looking out for a detective called the whole man. If I ever get it, we're going to read it. Crack. Modern comics are more difficult to track with the guide. Necked up. Modern variant covers. Hard to track. Hard to track. Crack. Kenny Roberts. Yeah. I used to make lots of those at my diner. Nice. Kenny Roberts. Cheryl. Castle, the usual Thursday ski night due to an icy road. Oh, no. Which means Chico Stream. Chico Stream. Warm blanket and a gorgeous cherry stout. Excellent constellation. Ah, so Cheryl. I'm glad you're set up nicely. Cozy indeed. Chico, I still can't believe my sister got given my aunt's comic book collection and sold them all in one go to a pawn shop for lump sum. What a tragedy. There were a few hundred from the 70s early. Oh, dude, check this out. Crack. Good point, Chico. Don't rely on one source for, do not rely on one source. Okay. We got that. Oh my God, lemon meringue. Do you ever use Go Collect? It listed graded book sale prices. I've gone there. It's hard to find all the comics that you're looking for. And I like reading the descriptions as well. Right. And I found even Go Collect had issues with it. Crack, man, selling an entire collection at once never pays up. It's tough, but selling one at a time is so time consuming. Yeah. Brutal thing, Bobber. Now take a look at this thing. We bought in the top row in row number two, these ones up number, row number two, secret wars from 2004. Right. We bought two sets, two full sets, number one to five. And there was three copies of number five. And there was one copy or two copies of the one shot, one copy of the one shot that came out. We paid $25 for it. Right. On eBay is going for 120. On my comic shop, approximately 100. Remember, those are italic. Okay. My comic book price guys was listing them at $96 and comic book realm had it at 76. So this is a perfect example crack of the first place that I noticed that eBay prices were a lot more than comic book guide prices. Right. So I averaged those across and it came out to $98. And that's the average price that we're using in the main spreadsheet right here. Right. The average price that you see here, this column right here. Right. That's the last column. Okay. That you're seeing on all of our spreadsheets in here. Okay. This column, that's the average column in the main spreadsheet. Okay. Most weren't exactly worth a lot. Very good example. Very good example. Luckily it was one of the first ones we hit up. Right. Now here's the other one. Check out GI combat. Okay. Now the GI combat lot that we bought came with the vertical comics. Right. So row number three and row number four were together. That's why you see a dash on vertical war comics because that's incorporated with the $35. Okay. Now the vertical war comics you can get for cover price on eBay. If you're lucky someone's got an auction going on, you can get them cheaper. Otherwise, most of the people were listing them at cover price. Right. We're selling them as a bundle, which came out to like $20. And tell you the truth. It didn't even list. It said, it didn't even list in the description of the video all the comics that were in that lot. And I didn't, in the video that I made in the comic book haul, I didn't even show all the videos. I went through it. So this is an estimation because he said there was 37 comic books there and they were, they were graded from, and what you see, by the way, the grade that you see there is the average grade that he was giving. Right. So the average grade for GI combat for the vertical war commons that were meant for the GI combat, the average grade is seven. He had graded them between six and eight. Okay. So he had graded them between fine, very fine to very fine plus. Okay. So that's the grade he was giving them, or very, yeah, I would be very, no, it would be very fine. Okay. So he was grading them between six and six and eight, and I averaged them out. And that's the same thing I did for all the spreadsheets that you're going to see. The grade that you're seeing there is the average grade he was giving them. Right. Between here and here, I averaged it. And we took a look at those comics at that time, and they were, this green, very accurate. We looked at the giant size Dracula number five. And where is it? And giant size chillers number one, and that was a mint condition. And that baby is going for a lot of money. Right. She was, she sounds like a lovely moment. Yeah, well, most weren't exactly worth a lot. And, and here's the story about the collection. My aunt thought my uncle loved comic books and bought him many for many years, but he never had the heart to tell her he didn't like them anymore. Oh, oh, yeah. And you didn't tell her she was she passed many years ago, which is why he eventually gave them to us. Okay. Master of Confucius. No, no, no. So take a look at this thing. So GI combat and stuff, GI combat prices are high for higher grade. One thing I noticed when I was digging down to these comic books, right, the prices for these things, the lower grades, they've done a little bit of move up. The high grade comics, they've gone through the roof. Their, their prices have gone up a lot, a lot, a lot. So GI combat at the time wasn't that expensive six years ago when I was buying it, right? Right now, trying to get a GI combat from that period. And the numbers, you have to watch the comic book haul to see them, right? The what numbers they were. But the GI combat from that period from the seventies, they were all in the seventies, these ones are going for a lot. Okay. So the average price of the GI combat on eBay, I said $110 on my comic shop was a lot. It was approximately $184. I thought. And again, on comic book price guides, on comics price guide on legend sites, on comics price guide, they were only listed at like 74, 75. But on comic realm, they went up to 163, right? So one of them is adjusting their prices. The other one hasn't got around to adjusting them. Oh, I'm going to time you out. Baal. Are we timing out Baal? I'm going to time him out. Oops. That's time. Time to do it out. Oh, where did we go? That's time. I'm out. Actually, let's ban him. Oh, nice. You got to take it out. Elder God, you're welcome to bring out your sword and take off some heads. We're talking horror comics right now. So it's justified. I thought I was getting timed out for asking for Dracula. No, no, no. Sorry, think about it. Beat you. I think you did, Elder God. Now, that's the prices for GI combat. GI combat was going, had gone up. Master of Kung Fu, right? There was a lot that we bought. It was Master of Kung Fu. The guy had listed it for $1250 and I think I paid $12 for it. I mean, I was going to buy it for $12, but I just had to make an offer. It's a $1250, right? They're high grade. They were very fine plus to near minted list in a math, right? We bought it for $12. On eBay, they're going for around $92. My comic shop for $130. Comic book price got it $120 and $146. That was a good buy, right? That was a great buy, right? The Dracula comics, six issues. They were high grade. They're going for more on my comic shop than eBay or the price guide. Again, the comics price guide is the cheapest listing that I could find, okay? Giant size Dracula number five. Again, the price varies a lot. So we take the average. Giant size children number one has shot up, especially in 9.0. Bam. Already done. Now, the one that has really gone up is Giant size children, which is the first appearance of Dracula's daughter, right? And the copy we have, those copies that we have, the really fantastic shape. I need to track those ones down if I can. Good, Elder God. Good, right? And then those are the rest of the prices. Giant size werewolves, two and three are fetching a good price, right? The Doctor Strange stuff was, that was where I saw huge discrepancy. On eBay, they're going for cheap cheap, but on my comic shop, they're going for a lot more. Same with the price guys. They're listed higher. So the way I see it, if you're going to be doing buys for the things that haven't shot up a lot, that aren't hot, it's, you could usually find pretty good deals on eBay, okay? For things that are just, or sorry, things that have shot up a lot, my comic shop or my comic shop usually adjust pretty correctly. But some of these price guys actually have forums where you can buy and sell comics, right? I've never done it on their, on their sites, but it might be better hitting them up than going on my comic shop or eBay, because things that are hot are going for a fair bit on eBay, right? On the flip side, if you're trying to buy randoms, I mean, remember again, when I ended up buying this six years ago, this was random, right? We paid $65 total for the Dracula's for stuff right now that is worth. Take, take it. Oh, I forgot to number the rows. Oops, I see a mistake. Row number eight and then I forgot to number nine, 10. So my numbering is off there. I have to correct that, right? But take, take from row number six all the way down, right? All of those comics together, we paid $65 for, right? Where you see price paid. Look at what they're going for now, right? 110, just on eBay, right? 110, 110. That's 220, 250, add another 50, 300, add another 30, $40, $340. We pay $65, you get $340, right? And at the bottom, okay? Yeah, valuable comics random buys, right? There's some amazing comic books put out there. And by the way, gang, the quality of the art, the quality of the story does not dictate price. You will see when we look at some valiant comics and some other comics, in the daredevils and even Dr. Strange, right? The most expensive comics are not necessarily the best drawn, written, or story comic books. They're just the ones that have a key issue happening or they're rare or whatnot, right? But basically what you see at the bottom four rows there is the calculations that we did with the formulas, right? With these formulas, okay? The return on investment, right? The row number, unfortunately in this spreadsheet, the numbers are off. Row number 11, fourth from the bottom, return on investment is basically our top formula there that you're seeing, which is return on investment ROI equals current price minus price paid divided by price paid times 100, which is basically 100%. So you're talking about percentages, right? So the return on investment on this buy would range between 400% or 370% based on the comics price guide to 650%, right? On my comic shop with average being 500, right? The annualized return on investment is this formula that we're using, which is the bottom formula, okay? The bottom formula is the middle formula rewritten to isolate the R, okay? Is the bigger goal to sell some or all listed to then add that dollar amount to the spreadsheet? At some point, we've already sold some by the way, crack, and I've already created spreadsheets for those, right? I just hadn't done it for, actually, some of the comics that we sold were part of buys that we did recently. So at some point, we're going to look at some of the comics we sold last year on eBay and do a price track and stuff like this. But unfortunately, I didn't do it at the time. So the prices have done movements, right? Like we sold Venom number three and four. We sold Venom number three for $10, the most recent Venom or $20 and Venom number three for $60. Venom number four is going for $200 and Venom number three is right now is going for, in the condition we sold it, is going for $300, $200, $400 or something like this, right? So the prices have moved. So I wasn't able to zap the prices at the time of what do you call it? We did sell it at the time, but it didn't do the averages, right? But we're just going to build data. I wouldn't lie, my grandparents were loaded and when I inherited my grandfather's collection, I got some very good tribute stuff, nice, crack. That would be interesting to see the whole story, purchase price, average, and then actual, yeah, yeah. That's the plan, crack. That's the plan. Unfortunately, my parents were indifferent to these stupid comics. Those are the best places you can buy comics. Those are the best places you can buy comics, right? So this was a fantastic buy. Out of the whole buys that we did, this was the best buy. And the last two rows that you see there, okay, what I did was took the annualized return on investment, the third row from the bottom, the row that's called number 12 right now, but it's not really number 12, right? Number 12, Jason White, good evening, right? I took that return 30% for example for this one, for eBay listing, right? And I extrapolated out using compound interest of what the comic books would be worth in 2030, right? 10 years from now, 15 years from date of purchase. And the formula we use is the middle formula, the compound interest formula. And that's the video that we put out with maximizing revenue, right? So what we did, we used the first formula to figure out return on investment. We took that return on investment that was over a six year period. We did the calculation, reverse calculation to find out what that interest would be compounded if it was per year, right? Annualized return on investment. And then we used that per year calculation to figure out, extrapolate out what the comics might be worth in the future, right? So take the future calculations, the bottom two rows with a huge grain of salt, right? We paid, according to this, we paid $137 in 2015, right? Right now, on average, they're worth $824, or on eBay, $690, which is, gang, that's legit. I know I have an italic, right? But that's pretty close to what they're worth, right? So 400% return, if you're calculating eBay, and some of the stuff you can't find on eBay, you would have to go to my comic shop and my comic shop prices are like a thousand or go hit up somewhere else. And I know people buy from my comic shop, right? So average 500% return, pretty legit. And that came out to a 50% return annualized, sorry, it was 34.88% return per year compounded, right? Over a six year period. And if we extrapolate that, if we assume that that's what is going to grow for the next 10 years, which is a pretty big assumption, then the $137 that we spent in 2015 would be worth $12,000 in 2030. So this is the way you're reading this data set. Now, this row here, these two rows is what I'm talking about, right? In 2030, that seems far-fetched, right? Really, that seems far-fetched. Are these prices maximum prices right now? I don't know, for some of these, they're going to do movements, right? They're going to do movements. There's a reason why Giant Chillers number one, with the first appearance of Dracula's daughter, is selling for such high prices. And I was actually lowballing this a little bit, right? Because I couldn't believe what it was going for, okay? And some of the other comic books from this might be lowball. Some of the lower-end ones might be highballed a little bit, right? But relative to the high-price ones, they don't contribute too much more. Jason, I love such streams about investing in personal finance. Awesome, Jason. It's basically a fair chunk of what we're doing. They sell stupid comics as well. Fortunately, I was able to remove the 1930s box ahead of time. Oh, can I ask you, Jason, why it says, why can't they just reprint the same comic book which would decrease their price? They do reprint, Jason. They do reprint, for sure, right? Their Marvel comics right now is putting out something called the facsimile edition, which is, every page is exactly same as the original printed, including the advertisements, right? You can find the reprints with new advertisements. You can find compilations where a certain story arc is told in one volume, right? Sometimes it's anywhere between six comic books to 20 comic books, like they're thick, right? But that doesn't really decrease the value of the original prints. If anything, that to a certain degree kicks up their value because they're more sought after because they're being remixed, reprinted again and again and again, so it gives them more, it means there's more demand for them, right? It's a scarcity-based, like collectibles are based on scarcity and desirability, right? And importance, of course. I don't seem to have much of, much of, in fact, yeah. They often reprint their old stories, crack says. Nothing beats the original, no. Nothing beats the original. And it is a collectible. A collectible market has been around longer than fiat currency, longer than empires. The collectibles market has been around since humanity's been around. It will remain with us long after every other form of currency is gone, including gold, including gold, right? Earrmark a few specials for the little three. Yeah, chichou. 100 years interest plan. Crack. I've got to run, I've got to run a Marvel's collector's items classic. It reprints a lot of key stories, some that came out a very short time before their reprints, but they are worth a fraction of those originals indeed, right? So if you extrapolate out, the prices go through the roof. Now a lot of people might say, oh man, chichou, there's no way these comic books are going to be worth $12,000 in 10 years. I doubt it too. I doubt it too. However, however, however, however, however. Remember, remember what we talked about last video, not last video, two videos ago. The M1 number. And if you guys want to know what this is all about, I don't have the video up on censor to bitch you to rumble yet. We did the stream three days ago, and we talked about what the money supply, what was happening with the money supply in the United States, that's US dollars coming into circulation. And in the last year, there has been a 40% 75% relative to where it started, but the total amount of money, liquid money, fast money that's in circulation right now, which is around $7 trillion created by the Fed, right? 40% of that was created in the last year, right? There's a reason why there's a huge spike up M1 number, right? There's a reason why there's a huge spike up in certain items, including stocks, including collectibles, including land, where people are trying to get their hands on hard assets because their purchasing power is decreasing. And if purchasing power is decreasing, if purchasing power is decreasing, then you know what? When purchasing power decreases, there is the possibility that your money is going to be worth less. It can't buy as much, so you need more of it to buy certain things. Okay, that's why it's not a good idea just to sit on cash. Cash is king when you need it. So you should always have a little bit of cash on hand, but you should never be 100% cash. Crack. I've got the run, okay, adjacent one, but why are people interested in the original if it's the same exact paper? It's not the same exact, same advertisements. I mean, it's the date, right? What is the inherent value in it? The inherent value is what we give it. Human beings give it. It's the collectability of it. It's the importance of it. For example, nobody would deny, I don't care who you are, the importance of Superman in our cultural lives, right? And Superman, first time it appeared to humanity, was in action comics number one. It's important. Keep in mind, Jason, right now there are people based on religious belief, based on philosophical beliefs, based on whatever beliefs that they have, they save for their whole lives to do, to go visit some land somewhere based on their beliefs, right? Because that has value to them. Consider collectibles on the same level, right? Just people's interest in the original. Yeah, original art. Look at Van Gogh. You could buy prints of Van Gogh and Dali or any artist you want. You could buy prints with posters. I have some, right? Fantastic. But they're never going to be worth the same as the original, not even a fraction of it, right? What if that interest is gone over time? For sure. At some point, some collectibles are not worth anything anymore. It seems the world is getting more and more digital and such paper copies might not be the most interesting thing for new generations. Here's the thing, Jason White. I tend to disagree, right? What is Bitcoin? Bitcoin is just a digital collectible. Really, at this point, Bitcoin is a digital collectible. So personally, for me, I rather, right now, collect a tangible item than a digital item, right? All the cryptocurrencies, not all of them. There are the cryptocurrencies which are functioning as currencies, right? But Bitcoin is a digital collectible. Now wrap your head around that, right? Wrap your head around it. A digital collectible that has the benefits of liquidity right now. Even those plus price fluctuations are fairly high. Beta is fairly high, right? But it's more liquid than comic books, than lower-end comic books, I guess. High-end comic books, you can always find a buyer for Action Comics number one. You will always find a buyer for Giant Chiller, the row number three that you see here, Giant Chiller number one, which is the first appearance of Dracula's daughter, right? Crack, agree, Jason? My point exactly, those reprints are still on the old newsprint, still aged to the same degree. It's just not the original comic. If you really dig down into any collecting, you're going to find some strange things, indeed, very strange. The most liquid money, basically. M2 is less so. Yeah, M2 is less so, right? I mean, the collector's item classics, when I'm talking about repress, yeah, thank God. Let's remember Superman was just super in the, but the comic book industry, in large part, was driven by the Jewish community, right? Like really, it was fantastic. They had a story to tell, and they told it through the realm of comic books. Why not? They saw an opportunity to get together and create, and all those people, right? It's like from Jack Kirby, Joe Simon, Schuster, like really, Stanley is not, but there were others, right? A lot of people, friends, just companions, when they were younger, they got together and said, hey, there's a new industry popping up. Let's create. Let's write. Let's draw. Let's tell stories. Why not? Why not? Crack. Going digital might spike the price of the original paper copies. Indeed, that's my take on it. Crack as well, right? That's my take on it. 100%. I've been looking for a superhero's first appearance and related events in the years that followed. Very interesting. Very interesting. Gang, we spent a long time on this one because we were breaking it down, right? Let's take a look at the other ones. Here's the valiance, the purple, right? This is the purple we're going to look at, and the purple, take this one, the gains with a grain of salt, because you could buy lots on eBay, really cheap, except for two or three of the comics and the valiance. I'll leave that up so you guys can take a look at it for those of you who are interested in valiant comics, right? And movies shoot the value to the moon, and movies shoot the value to the moon. And scarcity. Scarcity is huge. I have comic books that, like graded comic books and non-graded comic books, that there's only like two of them in a database upgraded for CGC, right? Barang, barang, barang, barang, barang, barang. Just a meringue. Everything is connected. Heck, yeah. They do, Cheryl. Yeah. Now, Chit, take a look at this one, valiant comics. Now, remember what I said? It doesn't matter. The price does not really reflect the quality of the story being told in the comics, right? Because what you see here that I bought in this purple lot, right, is the valiant comics, huge chunk of them of the relaunch in 2012, and a handful of them from the original valiant run from 1992, right? I bought them at a good price at the time. Like, for example, take a look at row number six, harbinger 0 to 19. This series ran for 25 issues, right? I paid $28 for it, U.S., in mint condition, right? Mint, near mint, mint, near mint. The guy listed it in mint, it's just near mint, basically, right? It was collector. I paid $28. On eBay, you could probably get it for $20 if you're lucky, right? And I took the lowest one I could find. On my comic shop, it goes for $60. On the comics, price guide is $80 and $80 together. An average came out to $60. But basically, I paid more for it six years ago than it's going for right now. That comic book run, harbinger number 0 to 25, right, is one of the greatest comic book series ever written, one of them. There are hundreds of them. It is one of the greatest comic book reads of series that I've ever done, right? That, along with the bloodshot that you see above, 0 to 18, which ran for 25 issues, I believe as well. As well as the one above that, which is row four, which is the harbinger wars, the row four, five, six, if you complete the series for bloodshot on harbinger, are some of the most amazing comic books ever told if you love superhero comic books. And they're going for the cheap. They're cheaper now, in large part, except for harbinger wars, than they were when I bought them. Doesn't reflect. Price does not reflect quality. Okay. Jason White. Would you say that investing in collections in general as a category, whether comic books or art or anything else, consider a risky investment? Not necessarily. For example, Salvador Mundi. Mundi painting was sold for $4 million in 2018. But can you imagine that in 2005? It was sold for like 10,000. And the art was made like 500 years ago. So it took it 500 years to be very well appreciated in the market. What are, what are your thoughts on that? Money laundering. Huge chunk of it could be considered. You could attribute it to money laundering. Okay. It's just our current economic system. That's the way it works. It's a tax haven. It's a tax using the tax system manipulation. Huge chunk of it is related to M1, the monetary supply coming up, inflation, devaluation of the currency. There's a lot of things at play. There's a lot of things at play. And the odds are, or there's a possibility that this thing two years from now may only sell for a million. Right? It's risky. Right? But so is the stock market. I asked those people that had their life savings in Enron or Xerox. Right? Fibylshos house. Sorry. This is a bit off topic. Do you own any stocks right now? I think you have the perfect mentality to do well in the long term. I have, I know how to trade stocks. I know how to trade stocks. I did a fair bit of it 20 years ago. And we do talk about stocks, by the way. Crack. I pulled out pure gold story telling wise from the dollar bins. Still worthless to this day. But some of my favorite stories crack right there with you. Right? But it's not worthless. I would not get rid of the comic books that I bought for a dollar, which are amazing stories for $10, 10 times return. Or $20, 20 times return. Because I would have to go find them again. And I might not be able to find them. Right? Jason White. It was bought by Saudi Arabian government, not money laundering. Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia to be put in art exhibit. Yeah. The Prince of Saudi Arabia bought it. It's money laundering. It's payback. It's paying debts. It's devaluation of currency. That is literally the definition of money laundering in our current economic system. It's using the tax system, the bureaucracy in play right now to do what you want with the currency that you have. Okay. Apparently to promote tourism in Saudi Arabia in the future. Yeah. There's more to it. There's more to it. Crack. Should have put worthless in quotes. Worthless to some. But not to me in the least. Yeah. Me too. Crack. I would love to see a graph of grade versus age of comic in your collection. Sorry. I have my reason. Yeah. Elder God. At some point we'll get into it. A while ago, I started looking at the prices of grades. And that's one thing I was doing, trying to get the feel for it. That's one of the reasons I bought the comic book price guys, over street comic book price guys. Because what's happening right now? Consider this. Okay. In the real estate sector, developers, large developers, this is what they do. They buy chunk of land. Right. And let's say they're going to be building 100 homes on that land. 100, 200 homes on that land. Right. Detached houses or condos or whatever it is. Right. And I know this because I have been in the industry. Right. They buy huge chunk of land. Let's say they have 200 homes that they're going to be building and selling. What they do on top of the hill. Right. Where everybody can see it. They built their show homes. They built the high end stuff. Right. So out of 200 homes, let's say they have, they're going to build around 10 of them that are million plus dollar homes or 2 million or 5 million dollar plus homes. Right. And the rest of them, they're going to build ranging in price from $150,000 for duplexes or condos to $500,000, $800,000. Right. And then what they do, they set up their show home on top of the hill in these mansions. Some of them not run lotteries and say they're going to give away one of these homes. Right. They furnish them and they sell 9 out of 10. They give one away and while they're selling these really expensive homes. Right. One by one, they build them or two by two, they build them. They start building the other layers of homes and they sell a lot of those homes. Sometimes that inflated prices. The reason being is because they're directly linked up with these high-end homes. Right. So what you see in the collectibles market as well. Right. Is with a princess market. Sorry, that's something in my throat. I want these spikes in prices for low, great high price. Yeah. And elder God, this is what's got, this is my prediction of what's happening right now is right or my analysis to a certain degree. There is, there are runs where they have one or two key issues or maybe five or six key issues or six or seven key issues. Right. Or they came out during a key period. Right. The key period may be certain artists were working on those comic books or the print runs of those comics were low. And we're seeing that in a lot of the comics that came out in the late 1990s. There were low print runs and some of the prices on the low print runs of the last few issues of some of the runs from Marvel and DC and other comic book companies are higher than the number ones that came out. Right. Because there's more of the number ones around. So scarcity based and whatnot. Right. But what we're seeing right now or what we've seen is the key issues or perceived key issues or the hot issues are going through the roof. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. Right. And there is certain runs out there where the lower grades are really cheap relative to the high grades. They're really cheap. Right. That to me means the lower grades haven't started doing the movement yet. Right. So if you know your industry well. Right. What you can do is it doesn't need to be comic books could be other industries. For example, the person buying this art, they knew maybe, maybe. Right. But if you know your industry while your collectible market well, you can find the issues that are hot keys and then ride the wave of the rest. Right. Either in high grade or low grade. Some of these comic books you cannot find in high grade anymore. That means anyone that wants to get them has to go down to a lower grade. Right. That's going to increase the demand of the lower grades and kick up the prices. Okay. It's just extrapolation and gang. Don't forget free Assange, free Assange, free Assange. Julian Assange is a publisher and journalist that has been crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. For more information, see WikiLeaks.org or our Julian Assange playlist on censor two. And by the way, let me point out two things here. Okay. The ones that you see here. Solar number three, exo man of war, number one. And then up here in the shadow man run, we have the first appearance of punk mumbo as well. So that shadow man run, I bought, you know, zero to 14. I bought for $20. And just one of the comics there, shadow man number 13 is the first appearance of punk mumbo, generally selling for more than that, $20. Okay. And the run that you see here, exo lot that I bought here for $20. Okay. Included a whole bunch of comic books, exo number two, exo number, whatever, whatever, whole bunch of exos, bunch of solar comics. And in that lot that I paid $20 for, it included exo number one and solar number three, the first appearance of Herata, first appearance of exo man of war. Those two alone are worth $30. I paid $20 and the rest of the comics I just on eBay, I just priced it out at $40. So that $20 buy basically covered the whole buy that we did for everything else. I'm looking for everything, artists, release numbers, social events and the moments. And now, yeah, and El Lugod, here's another thing you can look at. We're going to see it in the Daredevil comics. Advertisements of first issues that are going to be coming up are advertisements of first appearances of a key character. One of them we're going to see in Daredevil comics is an advertisement for Incredible Hulk number 181, which is a first appearance of Wolverine or first full appearance of Wolverine. And in the Daredevil comic, there was an advertisement for actually, I believe for Incredible Hulk number 181, and it's going for a higher price now on eBay. It's kicked up, right? Is it that easy to distinguish the originals from non-originals? For sure. Legally, they actually have to put the date. Is it the first print, second print, third print, fourth print? Now, what you're talking about is counterfeit comic books, and there are counterfeit comic books out there. One of the best known counterfeit comic books out there is Seribus number one. Seribus number one is a comic book that was created by one of the greatest independent comic book creators in history, which is Dave Sim. He came out with Seribus in 1978, I believe. Crack me if I'm wrong on this. But 1978, Seribus number one hit the stands, right? And Seribus, the story of Seribus ran for 300 issues, three decades around for three plus decades, right? Three decades, right? So an issue number one at the time in the early 1990s, late 1980s, it was selling for a couple of hundred dollars or so and counterfeit, someone created counterfeit copies of Seribus number one and was selling counterfeit copies of Seribus number one. The counterfeit copies are not considered to be worth a fraction of what the originals are worth. Some people don't even pay anything for the counterfeit. Some people do, right? My interest is social. Free Julien Assange. Jason White, do you have a video on YouTube where you compare original versus non-original? Original versus non-original. We've read Second Prince. Check out one of the on-sensor tube, my comic book playlist. Scroll down, find reading of Solar Man of the Atom number 10. We see the first print and we see the second print. The second print has a two on the cover, right? Inside is identical, okay? But the second print goes for a quarter or one sixth the price of the first print, okay? Crack. Then you get into Marvel Stamps in some books, yeah. Mark Jules inserts. Yeah, Mark Jules inserts. Crack. They say it's very important to the world of self-publishing. Indeed, extremely important. I hadn't heard that story of Seribus. Yeah, yeah, yeah, Crack. There's counterfeit versions of Seribus number one. I looked into this a while ago and I believe the counterfeit version, the cover is more orange. I've never had the opportunity to buy Seribus number one, so I don't... There was a time I was looking for it, so I read up on what the differences were, so I could make sure I didn't buy a counterfeit, but I forget what it was. Okay, so this is the valiant. Let's get into Daredevil DD. Here's Daredevil the first row, and let me bring this up again. And by the way, I bought these comic books in anticipation that the Daredevil TV series on Netflix was going to be good, and it was. The prices then do a huge move up, okay? You can see here, we paid the average price, the orange that you see here, these guys here. So I bought 10 Daredevil lots. One of my favorite Daredevil. Yeah, I love Daredevil, right? So I bought 10 Daredevil lots, okay? And what we're going to do right now is take a look at each one of those lots in its own spreadsheet. So far previously, all we did, we looked at the green and the purple in one spreadsheet complete. We're breaking down the Daredevil because that contained 120 bucks. That was a fair chunk of the buy, and those are ones that the price fluctuations were significant. Significant. Simulation of SIM. Crack TV doesn't seem to have much of an effect on prices for now. I wonder if the new wave of Marvel TV shows will change that. Yeah. Gang, and look at Marvel. Disney comics came out a few months ago, bought the right to Predator and the rights to Alien. Predator number one, for years, for years from Dark Horse Comics that they put out, for years you could have bought it for $10, $15, right? Up to a year ago, you could have bought Predator number one from Dark Horse Comics that came out in 19, is it late 1980s? Late 1980s, I believe, for $10, $15, right? Disney comics bought, Disney buys it, Disney, which is Marvel. Predator comics number one shoots up to $150 to $200, goes up 10 times in a matter of two weeks. I approve of that joke. As I said that, I approve of that joke. I don't know what joke that was. Simulation of SIM. Simulation of SIM, Dave's SIM, is that what it was? Elder God, I approve too, Crack. I knew you would appreciate it. Crack at the point that it out, it didn't ring too much with me, but it does now. Jason White, comic book reading, solar matter number 10, that's the one. Okay, Predator number one, I have that, you have that. Elder God, if it's in really good copy, mid-grade, it's going for a couple hundred bucks. Last time I checked, which was like a month ago or something like this, right? And by the way, there are Predator comic books out there that we bought. I bought, remember a comic book haul, we did like five months ago or something, we bought Predator number, because I already have number one. So, so, I don't know, I don't know. Disney's got the rights to Predator. Are they going to link up Predator with Spider-Man? So, so, if I had five copies of someone, right? But what do you call it? What was I going to say? Oh, I forgot my train of thought. Oh yeah, Predator, because Predator was a four issue miniseries, right? So, we bought issue number two. I have issue number one, and I think I have issue number two. I didn't know if I had three and four, but we bought two, three and four for like a dollar each. Right now, I'm pretty sure they're a lot higher than a dollar each, right? And it's return on investment, right? If number two, three and four, for example, if Predator number one was selling for $10, now it's selling for $200, right? That's 20 times your return. If you bought Predator number two for a dollar, and it's selling for $25, that's 25 times return. Better return than if you had Predator number one, right? So, it's not the actual total value that has gone up. It's the rate of return, right? Rate of return. This row here, this percent right there, rate of return. That's what you're looking for. Whenever you're doing investing, and what you're looking to do on a yearly basis is hit this up. Annualized rate of return. How much you're getting per year. If you put your money in a savings account right now, you get zero at best one in Europe, negative percent. That means you're losing money every year that your money stays in the bank, right? If you make a good investment on the stock market where they're giving you dividend, yield, right? You're getting great return is 5% yield, right? Your great return on the stock market on average before all these bubbles, if you're making 6% return per year, annualized, you're doing phenomenal. Over a six-year period, we did 24% return, okay? Take it with a grain of salt, call it 15% return. Pretty damn good. Pretty damn good. You haven't read it? Don't read it. You reduced the grade, right? Check out Daredevil. Okay, now I wish I remembered which one was the one. I think it's this one. I think it's Daredevil number 43. No, it won't be Daredevil number 43, right? And these are the average prices. No, sorry, for this lot, for lot number one on Daredevil, he actually listed the grade for each one because there were lower numbers on there, right? So for me, I paid $30 for this lot, which included one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight comic books. $30 US for eight comic books that were low grade, two to four, right? And these were the actual grades that he gave them. And the price movements, and I did a price per unit, that's what I did. I took the $30 divided by eight, you get 375. That's the price I paid per unit. And those are the movements that you see there, the return. And right now, for these ones that you see, they're a lot lower than what we're getting on the Dracula, on the random bias, right? Check out the random bias. Oops, check out the random bias. We're talking annualized rate of return of 34, 30 to 40%, right? The DD is between 10 to 20%. Jason White, this is completely new world to me, but I'm willing to diversify. Perhaps I put $5,000. Do you recommend someone like me who doesn't read comic books to invest in this field? Or do you think interest in comic books is a requirement for good investment in this field? No, Jason, why? Why? This is like any type of investment. Obviously, if you know your comic books, you'll be able to find the great deals, right? You'll be able to find the ones that are going to be the hot ones, right? You're going to find the artists that you love, right? You're going to know more about the industry. But there are people that buy comic books as a divestment. And by the way, right? Take a look at this thing. This is considered this diversifying within an industry, right? Sort of. This is just one haul. So if you look at my complete, we have 43 comic book hauls over the last six years, seven years that we've done, right? If you look at the comic book hauls that I've done, I'm diversifying over that with my buys, right? Within the field of investing in comic books, I'm diversifying my portfolio, right? There are people who specifically focus on a certain company or a certain character. They only buy that, right? For me, I'd like to diversify. The green up top, you see, it was me diversifying. The rate of return on the green was a lot higher than the rate of return on their daredevils and definitely on the valiance, right? Because the valiance, you've got to take with a huge grain of salt, that one, okay? So you can diversify within a certain field, okay? War walls. Being in charge of creating a nation's credit is a lucrative business indeed. So is owning a bank that is insured by such an institution. Such a bank can make all the loans it wants and always get their money back. That's the best business I've ever heard of. Yeah. And another great business is some of these technocrats that have been given permission to roll out their own currencies. We'll see if it happens or not. I hope not. But that is, again, centralizing more and more power, right? More interesting looking money. Just to answer your question, by the way, Jason, went off on a tangent. To answer your question, yes, you can invest in comic books. Do a little bit of research. And no matter where you plan on investing, if you're going to buy stocks, you better do your research. You better not just go out there and buy a stock because people said buy it, right? Do your research. If you're going to do investing in any industry, do your research. But investing in comic books is a legitimate place to invest in. I've had this discussion with multiple people over the years and some people just can't wrap their head around collectibles being one of the best places you could have parked your money over the last 500 years of humanity. Really, especially in the last 100 years of humanity, collectibles have been an amazing place to park your money. But some people just can't wrap their head around, right? Because they don't understand that, you know, maybe they think investing means you have to invest in a factory, right? They don't grasp it. And if they don't grasp it, this might not be your thing. But investing is just about the numbers. It's just about the tables. It's just about the mathematics of it, right? If it's not a hobby, right? If you're investing in something, look at the numbers, see and think about it this way. It's the Lindy effect that, what's his name, Nicholas Talib, Nassim Nicholas Talib mentions it, and other people have mentioned it. Think about it this way. Something that has been around a long time, the odds are it's still going to be around for the same amount of period, right? So for example, Action Comics number one, the first appearance of Superman is a sought-after book, Fetches High Prices. In the early 1990s, Action Comics number one, graded at 9.0, sold for $140,000 and that was turning heads. People were like, oh my god, who would pay $140,000 for Action Comics number one, first appearance of Superman? What a ridiculous product. That's really expensive, right? The last one sold that I know of was three years ago, sold for $3.2 million, right? So Action Comics number one is a sought-after comic book, and we, in our personal finance videos, we did, if you, on censor tube, on YouTube, if you go to my personal finance videos, we did a comparison of where was a good place to park your money, the S&P, the housing, art, Bitcoin, Action Comics number one, representing collectibles and different types of funds, gold and all this jazz, right? Action Comics number one was the third best performing, provide the third best performing rate of return over a 100-year period, right? Number one was Bitcoin, number two was a fund that started auto trading in 1994 and in 10 years, they had a rate of return of 78% per year, right? And Action Comics number one was, I believe, the third one and nothing else came close to them. So do your research, it doesn't have to be comic books, there are other collectibles out there, there are certain collectibles that collapse, the stamp collecting industry collapsed, okay? Maybe you'll pick up again at some point, right? Maybe you'll pick up again at some point, maybe it's a great time to buy, right? Legendary robot Chico, when are you going to start offering diversified comic book ETFs? Man, as far as I'm concerned, if I could, I would. And it's not a bad thing, like what you're saying is a legitimate thing to do. Just imagine if I had the ability to create a fund on the stock market and it was like, I'd be surprised if there isn't one out there. Like consider this, right now there are hedge funds buying into Bitcoin, right? They're not buying into Bitcoin as a cryptocurrency, they're buying into Bitcoin as a collectible, right? It's the collectible market being bought by funds, right? That are on Wall Street stock market. Now I'd be surprised if this is the first time the collectibles industry has come into the stock market. I'd be willing to bet that there are funds out there that actually invest in collectibles, right? I'd be surprised if there aren't funds out there that have been buying up key comic books over the years. If they haven't, they're dum-dums, because if I was given the opportunity, let's say someone gave me a billion dollars right now and I had the abilities to open up a fund, I would open up a collectibles fund right now and I would be buying up, I would use half that money to buy key comic books, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, right? That's what I would do. And then what I would do is set up a museum somewhere where the cost of real estate was extremely cheap or I could use tax loopholes to make sure it didn't cost me anything to maintain that building and you could do it, right? There's lots of people that do it, lots of funds and corporations that do it. I would take all of those comic books that I bought, right? And I would set up a museum, right? And I would sell tickets. That's the dividend, right? That would be the yield that I would be giving back to people that invest in my fund. What that yield would get, you would have to have to run the numbers. But as a safe investment, that would be a safe investment. That investment, like people recommend buying gold to protect your investments, right? To protect your capital, right? Gold, again, is just, it's a precious metal, right? It takes energy to consume out of the earth and stuff like this. Comic books take energy to produce, right? So they're on the same level of gold. People say hedge, you know, hedge your bets, protect your capital, have some money in precious metals. Hedge your bets, protect your capital, have some money in collectibles. You might be surprised at what the rate of return is. If you got expendable income and you aren't using it towards combating climate change, it turns, crack. Investing in comments, whoa, boy, lots of research, lots of research, but amazing research, fun research, and joy, legendary robots. Comic investing won't do well during apocalypse though. Who's going to pay $50 on an old comic book when you're too busy fighting zombies? Yeah, agreed. But who's going to want to buy stocks on Wall Street when you're fighting zombies? Who's going to want to carry a bar of gold with them when they're running away from zombies? You want the can of beans, because that's going to keep you alive for at least another couple of days. It's relativistic. Don't label me a geek, but I also collect old currency. Yeah, old currency. Crack. He says in a stream where we are talking about comic book investment. Nice, Cheryl. Money for me is old comic books. Yeah, like REITs for comics. It could totally work. Cheryl, it could totally work. It would 100% work. And if I had money in REITs right now, I'd be pulling that money out. Gotta be crazy. But again, don't forget the M1 table, right? Some of the history you see on coin. Yeah, it's like a story. Yeah, Elder God. Follow Martin Armstrong. He's an economist that I follow. He is one of the best known coin collectors in the world. He tells the history. He understands world economics based on coins, old coins. As far as I know, he's one of the well-versed people on collecting coins, historical coins, crap. Subscribers contribute to a big purchase of a major key to own a part of it. Yeah, totally, Elder God. My wife recently got back into her coin collecting. Juman Hat spent 3,300 Canadian dollars, I guess, on Harry Potter trading cars. They have exploded in price. My collection is worth over 20K. Really? Ah, good on you, man. Good on you. Right? Jason, why? Why don't you make that idea? Well, I just did. Creating a hedge fund, not expensive to create a small one, and make it investable for the public and display your actual ROE on the hedge fund as a whole. And anyone that invests in it, you get a percent of AUM. So ROE is the amount of money that the person managing the hedge fund gets, right? Like collects, right? So ROE sometimes they say, oh, this hedge fund is yield is three and a half percent, but they don't tell you that the managers take one and a half percent of that. So you're getting two percent, right? That a percent, maybe like two percent or five percent or whatever, you'd be able to have more access to comic books because you'll have more money and people will have more access in this field, making it a more liquid market. Almost all hedge funds earn less than 20 percent. Oh, yeah, they earn way less than 20 percent, right? And Jason White, I don't like bureaucracy. There's a lot of bureaucracy involved in that. I rather just manage it for my own self, which I am right now. And I'm sharing with it as much of it as I can with you guys, right? Capitalism is evil. Say that name again. I was grabbing a beer, I forgot. Who's that crack? Dinner calls. Great stream. Looking forward to feature visit this topic. Thanks, all. Good to see everyone. Good to see you too, crack. And enjoy your dinner. Enjoy your dinner. Oh, wow, we're almost coming up to two hours. I'm going to zoom through these Daredevil tables, gang. All the links to these tables will be on our Patreon page, okay? I've linked them up. We already found one error, but that's just a numbering error down the side. I'll fix that up. Speedy Gonzales style, okay? So this is row one, okay? Let's zoom through these. Here is the row two. Take a look at that. These are Daredevil issue numbers, right? The Daredevil's that were the higher grades have done movements, okay? Here's the first one. The goods haven't gone up too high in price. The higher grade you go in the Daredevil comics, the more they're worth, their price increases have gone up more significantly than the lower grade ones. So the lower grade comics haven't done a price movement. Maybe they never will, right? But maybe they will. But this is mid grade that basically price paid per unit was 255, right? And if you take a look at that, it's ranging anywhere from 10 to $15 now, right? While the previous one price paid was 375 and price paid per unit on eBay is $2. So I lost money on that one on the lower grade. So the lower grades have gone down actually in value, right? But if you go to mid grade or higher, you're seeing the prices have not only stayed the same, they've gone up, okay? Across the board on eBay, my comic shop, comics price guide and comic book realm, right? So these are Daredevil 46 to 97 and they were graded between 4 to 6.5 and I just averaged that out to 5.5. I know it's 5.25, but I kicked it up to 5.5, okay? Jason White, thank you for opening my eyes into collectibles as a place to diversify. I have 0% of collectibles on my portfolio. I'll change that because of your stream. Awesome, Jason White. I hope it works out for you. And be careful, man, and don't buy into the hype. Do research. I usually categorize my portfolio based on risk. Would you think collectibles in general should be categorized as a very high risk? So little percent of total per... Yeah, it really depends, man. Like for me, this is what I invest in. You shouldn't have all your eggs in one basket, but my comic book basket is pretty large. The other basket I have money in is the content that I create, right? I'm diversifying in a different way than what Wall Street and stuff. Wall Street says diversify within Wall Street into precious metals, oil, commodities, retail and all this. To me, that's one sector. That's it, right? Wall Street, to me, is gambling more than anything, right? So do your research, but certain things are more volatile than others. Golden age comic books in general are... Some of them are very, very treat relative to modern age comic books. Modern age comic books do the high movements, right? Consider them the pink sheets or off the main radar, right? Of the high end collectibles to a certain degree. But there are some that are extremely valuable, that are modern, especially since their print runs are ridiculously low. Okay, so there's a lot of comic books on that front as well. It's just... It is what it is, right? And so those of you that are interested in Daredevil, this is number two and I'm going to bring up some of the other ones while I read you the following information. Here's number three. Don't forget gang. Free Assange, free Assange, free Assange. Julian Assange is a publisher and journalist that is being crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity, right? For more information, see wikileaks.org or our Julian Assange WikiLeaks playlist on censor two. Okay. And here's Daredevil 43. Now check this out. Is Daredevil 40... What was the last one? I believe is Daredevil... Oh, which one is the one with Captain America? 43 or 46? Oh, I forget which one it was. I should have made little notes here, but it was going through so much stuff. There's one of them where Daredevil is fighting Captain America and that one is going up in price, especially the mid to high grades. Cashern sends, thank you for redeeming 500 points, but remember at some point this year we're going to hold auctions where you can redeem your points for things that we're going to be auctioning off, especially some of the comic books that I printed. Okay. Here's Daredevil on the four and some of these there were multiple copies. If you look at row number four, I had three copies of issue number 84. Okay. That's why the price is 625 per unit and eBay sold is $12. And Daredevil number 84 is the first firing work at Marvel, I believe. John Byrne, not Byron Byrne, John Byrne, I believe this is the first John Byrne work at Marvel. One artist, one of the first artists, his first work there. I would like to see these spreadsheets again. I can't zoom too well into which. Oh, okay. Elder God, go to our Patreon page. I posted high res. They're on Patreon. Yeah. On my Patreon page, the last post that I, no, the last post was me saying, hey, I'm back. Via is doing well. So the second last post that I made in Patreon. And if you're watching this video after the fact, after the live stream on censored to bit shooter or rumble, I'll have the link in the description of this video where you can see all of these spreadsheets. Okay. Here's, here's the fifth Daredevil lot. Okay. These ones didn't do price movement barely any, right? Jason White. I'm looking for a book to introduce me, how to properly invest in collectibles, want to look for, etc. Do you know of a good book? I actually don't. I'm sorry. Crack. He's on, he went on dinner break, family dinner. He might know. But one thing you can do, Jason White, we do have a Discord page. You can go to our Discord and go to our personal finance. That's our Discord link. You go to our personal finance playlist, not playlist folder and ask a question there. And someone might have a link for you. Okay. Or post, we have a comic books folder as well. You can post a question there as well. Okay. Here is the sixth lot that we bought for Daredevil. Okay. And again, these were great at very fine, fine minus, right? Ended up paying $20 for these. And these are into the, you know, hundreds now, right? The issue number, right? And the rate of return is not bad on them, right? Not bad at all. Even on eBay, right? And there's a reason why some of these are making a move. I think it's issue number. Yeah. I believe it's issue number. By the way, with the, I believe the Incredible Hulk advertisement, Incredible Hulk issue number 181 advertisement that was in the Daredevil comic that's kicking the price up. I think it's issue number 115 of Daredevil. Okay. Chichou, I don't follow on Patreon. I have real trouble with that app on my phone. Okay. Elder God, I'll post them on Discord. Okay. I'll post them on Discord as well. I'll post them probably in the comic books folder. Okay. That way we keep there. I might create a new folder, images and pics. Actually, probably have to do that. I have to do that for the math stuff. So maybe we're going to create a new main folder, which is basically reasonable rate of return, reasonable rate of return. Right. So we'll talk about it. We'll talk about it. Maybe create a new folder. We'll call it something where I'm going to load up a lot of images and tables and stuff. Here's the seventh Daredevil lot that we bought. Right. Again, 126. Yeah. 126 went up. I'm not sure why 126 was on the higher level. Maybe that's the Incredible Hulk one advertisement. Right. And the higher grade, not bad return. It's okay. Not compared to the Dracula stuff though. Here's the eighth row. The higher grade ones were, the higher numbered Daredevils that I bought were in better condition. Right. We're in better condition. But the rate of return on this wasn't very good. Not very high. Right. We made 30%. I see you figured out how to move folders. For some reason it started working for me and other God. It wasn't working for me before. I'm doing exactly the same thing. Here's row number nine. Check that out. Issue number 163, 64 and 60. Yeah. 163 and 64 are going for a good price on eBay. They're also listed at a good price on my comic shop, comics price guide and comic book realm. The two price guides there too. Right. So they did a move, which was good. And they're related to Electra. That's the Electra story arc with Frank Miller writing stories. Anything that beats the US stock market is a great investment. The only thing that is missing in those spreadsheets is a measurement of risk, but the returns are crazy. The returns are crazy. There's one other thing that's not, that's also missing. Right. So the beta is missing on us, the fluctuation in the prices. Right. The other thing is missing. This is book value. Right. So in the stock market, you can sell your stock, you pay your fees, you're done. The fees for this, depending on where you're selling them and who you're selling them to and how fast you're selling them. Right. Is not included. So comic books are not as liquid. If you want to dump everything in one shot, you're not going to get primo price. If you sell them one at a time and wait for the right buyer, you'll get pre price. Right. The other thing is the fees involved in selling. So if you sell your comics through auction house, auction house takes anywhere between 20 to 33 percent of whatever they sell things for. Right. Or maybe let's say 15 to 33 percent. Okay. eBay takes, you know, if you're going through eBay and PayPal, you're losing about 20 percent. Right. Of the selling price. Right. So you can, you know, there is a certain cost in liquidating these assets, these collectibles, and there is the time constraint. It's not as liquid as the stock market or as digital collectibles, crypto collectibles. Right. So there is that factor associated as well. Probably, probably an update. It was stupid. It wasn't automatic. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Probably an update regarding this court. Legendary Rob Boss. Have you had success investing in any of the ESG funds out there? ESG ESG. What's ESG stand for? Legendary Rob Boss? I forget. Jason White. Why does selling on eBay make sellers lose? Because they charge fees if they take a certain percentage of the selling price. And then you also have to, they also have to pay you through PayPal. They, supposedly eBay is disconnecting from PayPal. So interesting. But also PayPal takes fees. Right. So you lose some environmental. So all social and governance factors. No. The ones I looked at were like 15 years ago, 20 years ago, and they were, they all closed, closed their funds. They weren't giving any returns. They couldn't compete with unrestrained capitalism. Right. Environment, social governance. Yeah. No. They might start doing well now because a lot of taxpayer money is going to be going in that direction. Right. And here's the, the 10th lot of their double books that we bought. Okay. And these, these ones haven't really done a move. Right. They're, they're all great at a four. So they were lower grade, mid-lower grade. Fun. Fun. Really. Super fun. Super fun. And again, take these with a grain of salt. Then, and the prices vary on this a lot. Here's eBay. eBay, you know, I spent 20, I spent 15 to get these books. And on eBay, I estimated that it was going to be, you could sell it for like 20, $20. So it's $5 return over six years, which is chump change, 32% over five years, nothing. Right. If you went to my comic shop, it was a lot higher. Right. And then those three, my comic shop is a retailer and consignment. They sell consignment and these two are price guides. So according to those, it wasn't, it wasn't bad, but according to eBay, where auction house, it was, it wasn't that great. Right. So I'm going to put this up again. The final data, which is, that's what we looked at. Right. Unit price paid in 2015, $1.95 that included shipping. Unit price that is worth in 2021, $7.14. Right. Which is 267% rate of return, return. Right. And annualized it's 24%. Right. Legendary Rob Boss Chucho, when investing in REITs, how can you be sure if the dividends are coming from rent payments or wholesales only? I don't want to invest in rentals. I don't know. You have to look into it, brother. I've actually never invested in REITs. They really hit the scene in a big way after trillions of dollars was given to Wall Street after the 2008 scam that happened when Citigroup was basically took over Obama's administration. Right. And they bought out all the, all the houses and threw out like 10 million people into the streets and stuff. Right. Allergot. Sorry, Chucho. I purposely leave out information while talking to you. Notice a very interesting fight. Fun. One of the kitty cats is awake. I wonder which one it is. One more bite of lemon rang pie. Pop and one more. Pop and one more. Look at that goodness. Gang. I hope you enjoyed the live stream. Apologies about delaying today's stream, but family matters. I'm so bored. Monday things have become fascinating to me. Data is great, Eltergon. Dig into the data. It's beautiful. Keeps me occupied. That's for sure. Gang. I'm going to take down the table. Don't forget. Free Assange. Free Assange. Free Assange. Julian Assange is a publisher and journalist that is being crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. For more information, see wikileaks.org or follow the work that we're doing on censored tube on our Julian Assange on Wikileaks playlist. Ding Bobber. Chucho. Via will be up and running around after the opiized leave a system I know. He needs to rest for a couple of days though. We just want to make sure he's okay. Okay, gang. And I'm going to go check on him now. And as far as this stream, we will follow this up. Maybe we're going to do four or five more comic book calls that we've done. Take some of the data. And then once we got a little bit more data, and I want to diversify the information we have, right? So we're going to look at the prices of things that we bought, you know, golden age romance, golden age Western, you know, other types of comic books we bought, just to see, get a feel for what it means to diversify your investment in comic books. And do, and then we'll do more mathematics and look at some of the other metrics related to prices of comics and definitely look into how much the grade prices fluctuate based on grade and how the prices of grades have fluctuated over time. But if we're going to be at this for a long time, it's going to take us a while, right? Jason, why Chucho, can you check this image? I found a book where it has listings of many different collectibles in it. Jason, why you can't post links on our chat. It's sort of a thing we put up, right? You can post links on our discord. And by the way, Jason, why looking to over street, over street price guide over street price guide, this is one of the companies that puts out price guys for comic books, and they have, they put out booklets for different types of collectibles as well, including, you know, they have Star Wars toys and stuff like this. They're mainly focused on comic books, but they do have booklists that they put out yearly on collectible industry, and they list important stuff and whatnot. Look into that. Okay. That should give you a good starting point. Sal, come here. I need you. All the gods said just what it talks about different kinds of collectibles and how the price changed over years and reasons, etc. I just got this book now while watching your stream. Awesome. Awesome. Jason, join our discord man. Let us know what the book is and what you think about it. Okay. Because I love the comic book collectible industry. Second belay. Gang. Thank you for being here. Ask for what this is all about. I am on Patreon. Patreon.com forward slash chico, ch-y-ch-o. If you want to follow this work, if you want to support this work, if you want to know what this work is about, which as you should be able to tell right now is layered on mathematics, follow our work on Patreon. Okay. I don't put anything behind paywalls. Everything's creative, common, share and share like. And if you believe this work deserves your support and if you want to see more of this type of content rolled out, support this work through Patreon. That'll ensure that we're able to continue to do what it is that we are doing. We are live streaming on Twitch, twitch.tv forward slash chico live, ch-o-c-ch-y, ch-o-l-i-v-e. If you want to participate in the chat that's happening on this side today. Okay. Twitch is where you want to be at. And gang, for you as well, and the gang on Patreon, thank you for the support. Thank you for being here. It is in large part because of your support that we're able to do this work. Okay. I do announce these live streams usually 30 minutes before we go live on parlor, alo, mines, vk, gab, and twitter. And we do have a discord page. Martin's memory. Nice stream. Thank you. I'm glad you enjoyed it. And hello. You can go to our Twitch channel anytime you want. And in the chat type in social exclamation mark social and all the links will pop up. Okay. And at the bottom you'll see our discord page where you can join our discord server. Lots of love. Lots of love to you as well, martins. Martin's memory. Thank you for popping in, sending us some love for live streams. When we don't have any visuals, we will be uploading the audio to soundcloud.com or slash chichou. CHYCHO is a podcast and those audio files, podcasts will be available on soundcloud and iTunes. Okay. I will join. Awesome. Martin's memory. Thank you very much for joining movies. Next batch, please. I can only watch Allboy once. Yeah, for sure. Allboy was fantastic. Allergod. It was awesome. And we will be uploading this live stream, this video, to yes, indeed Allergod, to YouTube, BitShoot, and Rumble. And if we have enough points, to Odyssey. And if you're on those platforms, you can support this work by liking, sharing, commenting, following. And if you're on YouTube, you can join YouTube membership. And there's a button down there that you can use. And for those of you who are supporting this work through YouTube membership, thank you very much for the support gang. I hope you enjoy this content. Oh, I need to catch up on the movies. I only got one more to go. District nine. I got to rewatch. And then we do in the next batch, we do movies for sure, gang. Okay. Aside from that, thanks for being here. I'm going to spend the next few days uploading content to a sensor to BitShoot and Rumble, sorting things out. And I'll probably announce the next set of streams about three days from now, three or four days from now. I'll announce the next set. And we'll definitely have two movie streams in there. Aside from that, gang, thank you for being here. Good afternoon, all is Bitcoin legend, digital collectible, digital collectible. Bye, everyone.