searcher451
Member
Two things come to mind:
1. The gun is worth exactly what someone is willing to pay for it. What shows up as an Asking price on GunsAmerica or a Buy-it-now on Gunbroker doesn't mean that anyone is willing to pay that fare. Lots of guns hang around on the auction and for-sale sites for a long, long time.
2. If you hang around long enough -- say, a hundred years or so -- your chances of greatly increasing your original investment improves dramatically. The trick is hanging around for another hundred years or so.
1. The gun is worth exactly what someone is willing to pay for it. What shows up as an Asking price on GunsAmerica or a Buy-it-now on Gunbroker doesn't mean that anyone is willing to pay that fare. Lots of guns hang around on the auction and for-sale sites for a long, long time.
2. If you hang around long enough -- say, a hundred years or so -- your chances of greatly increasing your original investment improves dramatically. The trick is hanging around for another hundred years or so.