Just caught wind of something pretty interesting in the collectibles space. AJ Scaramucci, son of Skybridge Capital's Anthony Scaramucci, apparently just grabbed one of those ultra-rare PSA 10 Pokémon cards that used to belong to Logan Paul for roughly $16.5 million. Yeah, you read that right.



What's wild is that same card was going for around $5 million back in 2021. So we're talking more than a 3x move in value over a few years. That's the kind of appreciation most crypto holdings would kill for, honestly.

Anthony Scaramucci mentioned that this deal actually pulled serious mainstream attention, which helped AJ make his entry into the collectibles market. And here's the thing that's getting me thinking about this more carefully—the Scaramucci family is clearly positioning collectibles as a hedge against currency debasement. When you've got that kind of capital, you're not just collecting for fun.

Looking at the broader market, analysts are projecting the U.S. collectibles space will balloon from around $32 billion this year to nearly $48 billion by 2033. That's real growth trajectory, not some pump-and-dump narrative. AJ Scaramucci's move into this space isn't random—it's part of a bigger shift we're seeing where serious money is diversifying beyond traditional assets.

The more I think about it, the more it makes sense. When fiat keeps losing purchasing power, tangible rare assets with limited supply start looking pretty attractive. Whether it's Pokémon cards, fine art, or other collectibles, the logic is the same as what drives people toward Bitcoin and other scarce assets. Different asset class, same macro thesis.
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