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Why sneakers are a great investment

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    This is the Air Jordan 3 Black Cement.
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    This might be the most
    important sneaker in history.
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    First released in 1988,
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    this is the shoe that started
    Nike marketing as we know it.
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    This is the shoe that propelled
    the entire Air Jordan lineage,
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    and perhaps saved Nike.
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    The Air Jordan 3 Black Cement
    did for sneakers
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    what the iPhone did for phones.
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    It's been re-released four times.
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    Every celebrity's been seen wearing it.
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    There's a site about what to wear
    with the Black Cement.
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    It's been right under
    your nose for decades
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    and you never looked down.
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    And right about now,
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    most of you are probably
    thinking, "Sneakers?"
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    (Laughter)
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    Yes.
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    Yes, sneakers.
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    Some extraordinary things about sneakers
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    and data
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    and Nike
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    and how they're all related, possibly,
    to the future of all online commerce.
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    In 2011,
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    the last time the Jordan 3
    Black Cement was released,
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    at a retail of 160 dollars,
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    it sold out globally in minutes.
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    And that's because people were camped
    outside of sneaker stores
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    for days before it went on sale.
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    And just minutes after that,
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    thousands of those pairs were on eBay
    for two and three times retail.
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    In fact, there's over 1,000 pairs on eBay
    right now, four years later.
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    But here's the thing:
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    this happens every single Saturday.
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    Every week there's another
    release or two or three,
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    and every shoe has a story
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    as rich and compelling
    as the Jordan 3 Black Cement.
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    This is Nike building
    the marketplace for sneakerheads --
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    people who collect sneakers --
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    and my daughter.
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    (Laughter)
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    That's an "I love Dad" T-shirt.
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    For the brands, sneakerheads
    are a very important demographic.
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    These are the tastemakers;
    these are the Apple fanboys.
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    Because who else is going to buy
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    a pair of $8,000
    Back to the Future sneakers?
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    (Laughter)
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    Yeah, 8,000 dollars.
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    And while that's obviously the anomaly,
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    the resell sneaker market
    is definitely not.
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    Thirty years in the making,
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    what started as an underground culture
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    of a few people who like sneakers
    just a bit too much --
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    (Laughter)
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    Now we have sneaker addictions.
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    In a market where in the past 12 months,
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    there have been over
    nine million pairs of shoes
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    resold in the United States alone,
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    at a value of 1.2 billion dollars.
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    And that's a conservative estimate --
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    I should know, I am a sneakerhead.
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    This is my collection.
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    In the pantheon of great collections,
    mine doesn't even register.
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    I have about 250 pairs,
    but trust me, I am small-time.
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    People have thousands.
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    I'm a very typical
    37-year-old sneakerhead.
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    I grew up playing basketball
    when Michael Jordan played,
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    I always wanted Air Jordans,
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    my mother would never buy me Air Jordans,
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    as soon as I got some money
    I bought Air Jordans --
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    literally, we all have
    the exact same story.
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    But here's where mine diverged.
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    After starting three companies,
    I took a job as a strategy consultant,
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    when I very quickly realized that
    I didn't know the first thing about data.
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    But I learned, because I had to,
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    and I liked it.
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    So I thought, I wonder if I could
    get ahold of some sneaker data,
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    just to play with for my own amusement.
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    The goal was to develop a price guide,
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    a real data-driven view of the market.
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    And four years later, we're analyzing
    over 25 million transactions,
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    providing real-time analytics
    on thousands of sneakers.
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    Now sneakerheads check prices
    while camping out for releases.
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    Others have used the data
    to validate insurance claims.
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    And the top investment banks in the world
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    now use resell data to analyze
    the retail footwear industry.
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    And here's the best part:
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    sneakerheads have sneaker portfolios.
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    (Laughter)
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    Sneakerheads can track the value
    of their collection over time,
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    compare it to others,
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    and have access to the same
    analytics you might
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    for your online brokerage account.
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    So sneakerhead Dan builds his collection
    and identifies which 352 are his.
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    He can see it's worth 103,000 dollars --
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    frankly, a modest collection.
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    At the asset level,
    he can see gain-loss by shoe.
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    Here he's made over
    600 dollars on one pair.
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    I have one of those.
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    (Laughter)
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    So an unregulated $1.2 billion industry
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    that thrives as much on the street
    as it does online,
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    and has spawned fundamental
    financial services for sneakers?
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    At some point I asked myself
    what's really going on in the market,
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    and two comparisons started to emerge.
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    Are sneakers more like stocks or drugs?
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    (Laughter)
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    In fact, one guy emailed to say
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    he thought his 15-year-old son
    was selling drugs
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    and later found out
    he was selling sneakers.
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    (Laughter)
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    And now they use the data
    to do it together.
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    And that's because sneakers
    are an investment opportunity
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    where none other exists.
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    And I don't just mean the kid
    selling sneakers instead of drugs.
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    How about all kids?
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    You have to be 18
    to play the stock market.
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    I sold chewing gum in sixth grade,
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    Blow Pops in ninth grade,
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    and collected baseball cards
    through high school.
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    The cards are long dead,
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    and the candy market's
    usually quite local.
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    For a lot of people, sneakers are a legal
    and accessible investment opportunity --
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    a democratized stock market,
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    but also unregulated.
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    Which is why the story
    you're probably most familiar with
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    is people killing each other for sneakers.
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    And while that definitely
    happens and is tragic,
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    it's not nearly the epidemic
    some media would have you believe.
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    In fact, it's a very small piece
    of a much bigger and better story.
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    So sneakers have clear similarities
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    to both the stock exchange
    and the illegal drug trade,
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    but perhaps the most fundamental
    is the existence of a central actor.
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    Someone is making the rules.
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    In the case of sneakers,
    that someone is Nike.
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    Let me walk you through some numbers.
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    The resell market,
    we know, is $1.2 billion.
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    Nike, including Jordan brand,
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    accounts for 96 percent of all shoes
    sold on the secondary market.
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    Just complete domination.
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    Sneakerheads love Jordans.
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    And profit on the secondary market
    is about a third.
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    That means that sneakerheads
    made 380 million dollars
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    selling Nikes last year.
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    Let's jump to retail for a second.
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    Skechers, earlier this year,
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    became the number two
    footwear brand in the country,
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    surpassing Adidas --
    this was a big deal.
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    And in the 12 months ending June,
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    Skechers' net income
    was 209 million dollars.
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    That means that Nike's customers
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    make almost twice as much profit
    as their closest competitor.
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    That ...
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    (Laughter)
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    How is that even possible?
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    The sneaker market
    is just supply and demand,
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    but Nike's gotten very good at using
    supply -- limited sneakers --
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    and the distribution of those sneakers
    to their own benefit.
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    So it's really just supply.
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    Sneakerheads joke that as long
    as it's limited and Nike, they'll buy it.
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    Shoes that sell for 8,000 dollars
    do so because they're very rare.
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    It's no different than any other
    collectible market,
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    only this isn't a market at all.
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    It's a false construct created by Nike --
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    ingeniously created by Nike, in the most
    positive sense -- to sell more shoes.
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    And in the process,
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    it provided tens of thousands of people
    with life-long passions,
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    myself included.
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    If Nike wanted to kill the resell market,
    they could do so tomorrow,
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    all they have to do is release more shoes.
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    But we certainly don't want them to,
    nor is it in their best interest.
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    That's because unlike Apple, who will sell
    an iPhone to anyone who wants one,
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    Nike doesn't make their money
    by just selling $200 sneakers.
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    They sell millions of shoes to millions
    of people for 60 dollars.
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    And sneakerheads are the ones
    who drive the marketing
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    and the hype and the PR
    and the brand cachet,
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    and enable Nike to sell millions
    of $60 sneakers.
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    It's marketing.
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    It's marketing in the likes of which
    has never been seen before --
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    this isn't in any textbook.
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    For 15 years Nike has propped up
    an artificial commodities market,
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    with a Facebook-level hyped IPO
    every single weekend.
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    Drive by any Footlocker at 8am
    on a Saturday morning,
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    and there will be a line down the street
    and around the block,
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    and sometimes those kids
    have been waiting there all week.
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    You know those crazy iPhone lines
    you see on the news every other year?
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    Nike lines happen 104 times more often.
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    So Nike sets the rules.
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    And they do so by controlling
    supply and distribution.
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    But once a pair leaves
    the retail channel, it's the Wild West.
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    There are very few -- if any --
    legal, unregulated markets of this size.
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    So Nike is definitely
    not the stock exchange.
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    In fact, there is no central exchange.
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    By last count, there were 48 different
    online markets that I know of.
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    Some are eBay clones,
    some are mobile markets,
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    and then you have consignment shops
    and brick-and-mortar stores,
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    and sneaker conventions,
    and reseller sites,
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    and Facebook and Instagram and Twitter --
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    literally, anywhere sneakerheads
    come into contact with each other,
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    shoes will be bought and sold.
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    But that means no efficiencies,
    no transparency,
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    sometimes not even authenticity.
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    Can you imagine if that's
    how stocks were bought?
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    What if the way to buy
    a share of Apple stock
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    was to search over 100 places
    online and off,
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    including every time
    you walk down the street,
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    just hoping to pass someone
    wearing some Apple stock?
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    Never knowing who had the best price,
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    or even if the stock
    you were looking at was real.
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    That would surely make you say
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    [WTF?]
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    Of course that's not how we buy stock.
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    But what if that's not how
    we need to buy sneakers either?
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    What if the inverse is true,
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    and what if we could buy sneakers
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    exactly the same way as we buy stock?
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    And what if it wasn't just sneakers,
    but any similar product,
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    like watches and handbags
    and women's shoes,
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    and any collectible, any seasonal item
    and any markdown item?
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    What if there was
    a stock market for commerce?
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    A stock market of things.
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    And not only could you buy in a much more
    educated and efficient manner,
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    but you could engage in all
    the sophisticated financial transactions
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    you can with the stock market.
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    Shorts and options and futures
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    and well, maybe you see
    where this is going.
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    Maybe you want to invest
    in a stock market of things.
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    Because if you had invested in a pair
    of Air Jordan 3 Black Cement in 2011,
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    you could either be wearing them onstage,
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    (Laughter)
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    or have earned 162 percent
    on your money --
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    double the S&P and 20 percent
    more than Apple.
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    (Laughter)
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    And that's why
    we're talking about sneakers.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Why sneakers are a great investment
Speaker:
Josh Luber
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:51
  • The headline for this talk was changed on May 6, 2016.

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