Hotchner: “Investing” in New Issues

“Investing” in U.S. New Issues
by John M. Hotchner

My Dad was a serious collector who knew his philatelic A, B, Cs. He loved especially U.S. and German stamps, and went so far as to make his own albums. I learned much at his knee; both things to do and things not to do. After an unhappy incident when I was 12, we came to an agreement that we would collect different countries; with one exception, which I will get to.

The incident took place at a meeting of the New Delhi, India, Stamp Club in 1955, while he was assigned to India as the U.S. Information Agency’s liaison officer to All India Radio.

The meeting happened to have an auction, and I had just gotten my allowance – the princely sum of 5 Rupees per week (or about $1 U.S.). Added to money I’d saved, I had about 30 Rupees burning a hole in my pocket, and when a lot of Indian “Service” overprints came up, half a dozen hands went up around the room. I was in the back, looking in the equivalent of a penny box. I joined in the fun.

As the bids passed 10 Rupees, the sport of it all took hold of me, and I was determined to get the lot. As bidders dropped out, I failed to realize until too late that I was bidding against my father. He may not have realized he was bidding against me. But when he dropped out and I got the lot, and had to announce my name and club number, the cat was out of the bag.

On the way home, he was characteristically quiet; as was I. I had no idea of the storm to come. He was quiet for a week, and ultimately it was my mother who told me that he was furious, and I was guilty of improper behavior. To make a long story short, that was the end of my India collection, and he and I agreed not to be competitors in the future; enforced by our splitting of our collecting interests – except for United States, which he would collect mint, and I would collect used.

As part of his collecting he had been buying several sheets of U.S. mint new issues since the end of World War II, and he continued to do so – along with a lot of other stamp collectors – as a hedge against inflation. He saw stamps from the 1920s and 1930s doing fairly well in Fine-to-Very Fine condition, and made the assum

Howard Hotchner

ption that the trend would continue. So, he made an effort to put away at least a few VF panes of each new issue until he was disabled by Parkinson’s disease in the late 1980s. On his passing, I assumed his rather nice India collection, among others, and was also heir to a two-foot-high stack of U.S. mint sheets, not to mention a hefty holding of plate blocks that he had stashed away over the years.

I was not alone. It seemed that a great many collectors had the same idea post-WWII, and the Post Office Department thoughtfully upped the production runs to make certain that there would be plenty of stamps to satisfy demand.

The result was, and continues to be today, that panes of mint US commemoratives from the late 1940s onward are pretty much a drug on the market. Oh, there are a few that are “better” than face because of the subject portrayed, or because of shorter than usual production totals, but I found out to my chagrin that the holding was not going to bring even face value if sold. It was a buyers’ market as lots of other heirs had bales of mint U.S. to sell in bulk.

Luckily, I was by then writing columns for several philatelic publications, and – this being before the era of widespread use of the Internet – I had a considerable correspondence, and began to use the stamps for postage. Here it is 25 years later, and I am still using some of Dad’s hoard.

But it seems that the collector community and the heir community never connected, because collectors continue to buy and salt away panes of mint U.S. stamps. What with multiple designs in a pane, and smaller panes with fancy marginal art, a higher percentage of these more modern emissions do have premium value in the secondary market. But for the original buyer trying to sell them among quantities of other mint stamps including plate blocks, booklets and coil rolls, face value is about what can be expected if one is lucky.

And that ain’t so good when one considers the impact of inflation, and the rise in postal rates. More often, quantities of US mint stamps sell in clubs between collectors at 80 to 85% of face. And if selling to a dealer, the offers drop off precipitously as the face values of the stamps offered decrease. In fact, I recently saw a dealer describe his business practices as follows:

“I own thousands of face value stamps in my warehouse, and rarely take any to stamp shows. Yes, if I buy for 25-40% of face depending on content and condition and sell it for 70-80% of FACE, that is a great percentage markup. In my experience, the volume of sales will not justify the table space regardless. I really am not a great buyer for postage except as part of a much larger and better collection.”

I do see dealers at shows selling U.S. mint at face from large boxes of stock. And there seem to be lots of collectors poking through the material though I don’t know how much actually sells. The point is that a dealer who has to make a profit, and pay himself for the time he or she has put into acquiring and preparing the material to sell, has to buy at 30-40% below the sale price.

Many feel that this is unfair given what they or their collector relative put into the stamps. But “fairness” really does not enter into it. Supply-and-demand is what governs. And there is far more U.S. mint material for sale than there is demand to absorb it. Just like selling stocks at a loss, sometimes you win, and sometimes you lose.

My father was not looking to get rich quick. He bought prudently, in small quantities with low amounts of money, and based on what he saw as past performance. It was not irrational to expect that 20-25 years down the road, he would reap a modest profit. But, as it turned out, he would have done better to put the same amounts into, say, used $5 Columbians, or other premium U.S. stamps.

And yet, there continue to be collectors who follow the path of investing in mint panes, booklets and coil rolls. A few dynamics make this problematic. First, though the production quantities have decreased markedly, so has the percentage of collectors in the population. Add in the facts that inflation continues to rise, and postage rates continue to rise, while mail volume has declined and will likely continue to do so.

What this means is that the Postal Service is the only guaranteed winner in this equation. They get to use the money right now that collectors pay for stamps they stockpile and don’t “redeem” for many years into the future. And make no mistake: a great many of these “old” stamps are indeed ultimately going to be used for postage.

There are several lessons here. First is that buying mint U.S. stamps in quantity as an investment strategy will likely not turn out well. Second, if you decide to sell your accumulation while you can still benefit, do not sell everything as a single lot. Do your homework, and don’t be in a hurry. Watch buy prices for thematic commemoratives, booklets, coils, etc. that have acquired some premium value. You may not make a lot more than face, but at least you will do better than the 50-60% you would be offered for a large accumulation.

Third, find ways of selling what is left to other collectors at a small discount rather than to dealers at a large discount. Being a member of a stamp club is a plus because many collectors like to use older colorful stamps on their mail.

Fourth, be grateful that you are getting something back on your investment. For most hobbies and pastimes, you are buying pleasant memories, and maybe an investment in physical fitness, but you will get nothing back on the money you have spent on event tickets, golf club entry fees, tennis balls, etc.

Fifth, unless you are a movie star or a sports hero at the professional level, there is no such thing as easy money; and even for them that spigot can be turned off in a hurry if their performance or drawing power drops off. If you want to make money you have to work for it. And in stamps that means what may seem like an easy and sensible scheme, be it in mint stamps, first day covers, plate blocks, gold-replica stamps, or foreign new issues, rarely pans out. To be a successful investor, one must study the investing alternatives, past performance, collecting trends, supply versus demand, the real liquidity of different kinds of investment alternatives, and then make informed, clear-eyed, choices that are still only educated guesses.

But all of this is work, and in some sense is incompatible with why we start a hobby in the first place – to occupy our free time with a pleasurable activity. Investing may seem like a natural extension of collecting, but it is a different level of effort if done seriously; and one that can lead to disappointment with what had been at one time a fun hobby.


Should you wish to comment on this editorial, or have questions or ideas you would like to have explored in a future column, please write to John Hotchner, VSC Contributor, P.O. Box 1125, Falls Church, VA 22041-0125, or email, putting “VSC” in the subject line.

Or comment right here.

8 thoughts on “Hotchner: “Investing” in New Issues

  1. Being concerned about the fate of my postal history collection, I donated it to the university where my wife and I were members of the faculty, in order to fund an endowment in memory of my late wife. Both the university and I were delighted.
    I gave my wife a measure of worldly immorality, and my executor does not have to worry about how to sell a philatelic collection. I caution other collectors not to wait too long before disposing of their collections.

  2. Very good reading, thank you.
    As a stamp collector myself, i know that the value in terms of money is not great. I’m reading a lot of articles that mention that prices and values often goes down. And honestly, i don’t really care!
    I think most of us, collectors, collect stamps not as an investment but rather as a source of knowledge, pleasure and a way to relax.
    Nevertheless, i love reading you.

    Sylvain
    Thailand

    • Sawadee Sylvain, Although I have been a stamp collector from about the age of ten, I often took a break from collecting at times. Regrettably one of those times was during the 13 months I was in Thailand in the early seventies (Living in Ban Chang near U-Tapao.) Wish I had still been active so I could have invested in Thai stamps while I was there. Enjoyed reading your post here. La te sawat.

  3. If those 3, 4, and 5 cent stamps that Howard Hotchner and other collectors stashed away in the 50s and 60s had been forever stamps, we’d be seeing a different outcome today when they’d all have a face value of 55 cents. The first forever stamp was issued on 2007 and cost 41 cents. It’s value has has appreciated 34 percent in face value today. What I’m suggesting is that “investing” in forever stamps may not be such a bad thing. At least I don’t think you would be losing money.

  4. Loved the article. It had a lot of great information about stamp investing. I certainly agree that this is the one hobby where one can enjoy collecting, yet still make a little bit of money. But like you said, you have to be careful and know what you’re doing.

  5. While collecting new issues of the US from the 1950s-2000s might not have been a good investment, US new issues of the last 10 years or so, as well as modern/new issues of many other countries do tend to appreciate well given lower print runs, less dealers and collectors saving them, etc.

  6. I realize this article is about U.S. postage stamp collecting. I too inherited a large number of 1940 and 50’s stamps from my Dad. He was more of an accumulator rather than collector. I use modern U.S. postage stamps to this day and I keep maybe one of an issue. I have to admit I really like Train themed stamps and kept a whole sheet of the recent railroad stamps issued by the USPO.

    I wonder if he same is true for other countries. I collect Vatican, FSAT, BIOT and other counties with artic themes. I find every time I look in a new issue of the Scott catalog the prices seem to go up. I also have quite a hard time finding dealers who supply those issuing countries. I subscribed to a couple of new issues services but I find getting 4 copies of say PRC leaves me with many modern duplicates. I have plans to organize them and try to trade them away or attempt to sell them in the APS stamp store or something.

    I spent 40 years of my working life buying and was very slow at organizing so I now spend my retirement years mounting and organizing a huge amount of stamps into a collection. I hope I live long enough to get everything mounted and the duplicates off loaded so my children will not be faced with a pile of stamps they have no clue about.

    Lesson I learned don’t let your accumulation get too far out of control. I had 12 moving cartons of stamps and now I am down to about 3 not counting all the duplicates. I suggest if you buy you make those stamps into a collection not just a box full of stamps AKA an accumulation.

  7. Excellent article.

    I collect coins and stamps and the guiding principal I have is one gained from an excellent you tube channel on numismatics: “Most coins are common and you will get at best a very small premium. If the coins contain precious metals or metals that has its price increasing and can be melted , you may gain a little on the coin’s metal content but you may also lose — metal markets are volatile.

    With stamps their commonality is even more pronounced due to their increase in print runs from the 1930’s to about the late 1990’s. Forever Stamps issued by the USPS do offer a better chance of getting some return —- at minimum singles and mint sheets of first class mail commemoratives can be used for years despite rate increases.

    Strangely, what may happen is that some used stamps will attain a healthy premium over mint stamps. One example are the US Priority Mail and Priority Mail Express stamps. Not used often by public and postal employees (often they just print the amount paid in a strip and affix to the mail piece), such stamps may be scarce. The problem is finding one that is in good shape. I tried to remove a few self-adhesive stamps from postage and the results have been disappointing. One cancelled Iceland stamp from 2018 I simply cut it from the envelop and keep in a Vario sheet as the stamp and cancel were so nice. Possibly these items may become more desirable in the future.

    Another item that also may be desirable are pre-cancelled stamps. I have only one – from UN New York from 2009, $1 denomination. The UNPA offers this option to have your stamps pre-cancelled. This is the only cancelled to order stamp I have in my young collection. Haven’t gotten more only because I prefer mint stamps but I hope to get more.

    As for myself, I get commemorative sheets of ultra-modern stamps for their design. I take into consideration production run and for my own benefit, I get a few to use to help reduce the number of mint stamps in existence (I do the same when I get not intended for circulation coins that are legal tender, I chose a few of the best ones and spend the rest).

    Well as you can easily infer, I do not see my stamp collection as an investment. If it survives miraculously for 200 or more years, then that would make it quite valuable. My areas of acquisition are for US: Priority Mail, Priority Mail Express, any attractive $1 – $10 stamps I can afford, the butterfly non-machinables, and any commemorative panes I especially enjoy and have, if possible, a modest print run. World stamps – I like the engraved stamps from Austria, TUK stamps, and then whatever catches my eye and heart. Of course budget determines everything.

    I think if you go into any collectible with eyes open and always research, you will not be disappointed.

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