- Animals
- Famous Men
- Sports
- Medical/Nursing
- Flora
- Religion
- Birds
- Railroads
- Americana
- Ships
- Fairytales/Folktales/Disney/Mythology
- Marine Life
- Space Exploration
- Insects
- Geological Features
- Music
- Fine Arts
- Literary Subjects
- Military Subjects
- Aviation
The survey is useful as far as it goes; certainly, some notion concerning the popularity of a topic should be taken into account when attempting to evaluate the investment potential of a stamp.
The dearth of demographic data regarding this and other areas of the stamp market illustrate one of the differences between investing in stamps and investing in equities. While information concerning the supply of a stamp may sometimes be known or estimated, getting anything clearer than a fuzzy, nebulous view of demand trends is usually impossible. A philatelic investor who knew how many "serious" collectors specialized in particular topics and which topics were growing in popularity, and by what rate, would not have to make "educated guesses." Contrast this with stocks, which are frequently analyzed based upon a veritable feast of numerical and technical information. With stocks, tragedies occur only as a result of mis-analysis, hysteria, or when the numbers reported by a company turn out to be lies.
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