It also keeps the value up for other “collectors”. I see this with NES game auctions. It’s always the same 6 people buying each other’s games to keep their own collections highly evaluated.
Comment on A Sealed Copy Of Fallout 3 DLC Is Selling For Over $2,000, And Fans Have No Idea Why
ms_lane@lemmy.world 3 days ago
‘Collectable’ or ‘Fine Art’ is being sold for lots of money
It’s Money Laundering.
CluckN@lemmy.world 3 days ago
neon_nova@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 days ago
I don’t really think so, the person buying it would need to use laundered money to buy it otherwise it could draw suspicion.
MrZee@lemm.ee 3 days ago
Not the person you replied too, but I think this is still considered money laundering. If a person is selling illegal drugs (or whatever illegal product) and wants to receive the money “cleanly”, this would be a way to do so. Instead of selling the illegal item, they sell (or pretending to sell) a legal item but provide the illegal item. The seller now has clean money. I think this is still called money laundering.
catloaf@lemm.ee 3 days ago
Right. And that’s probably not what’s happening here. This is not important enough to actually read the article, but if it’s just being listed for sale at that price, not actually been sold, then nothing has actually happened.
Also, $2k is not enough money to need laundering.
Fredselfish@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Could be simpler then that. Look I got a Pokémon card here for sale lets say I want 500 dollars for it. Is it worth that? No but what I’m asking. Why because you can ask for any price you want, doesn’t mean someone going buy it. This isn’t news let me know when it sells for that. Then I would say your correct.
MrZee@lemm.ee 3 days ago
If the item does sell for that much, money laundering seems like the most likely reason. The article says “selling” but it’s only “selling” in the sense that someone is trying to sell it for that price. There’s all kinds of shit listed for crazy prices.