Danny continues his retrospective on a set of trades he tracked last Fall, to see how his trading fundamentals weathered the test of time.
Arid Mesa
Danny reflects on a series of trades that he documented last autumn to see what lessons can be extracted.
Matthew Lewis believes the effect of Cube on ROE singles prices this go around will follow a different pattern than with ZZW queues. He compares the two formats and explains why.
David Schumann comes back from GP Las Vegas with advice on some weekend movers and shakers, as well as hidden travel costs you may not be considering.
This year’s Modern season departs with one last huzzah, GP San Diego. Mike Lanigan looks over decklists and discusses the last-minute developments.
There are lots of tournament results to pore over, but before getting to them Jason Alt examines the missed opportunities in the Shallow Grave debacle.
Ryan checks in with some initial thoughts on the directions Modern, Pauper, and Standard are heading.
Cube is back paying out ZZW and Wizards has announced the imminent release of more shocklands in Dragon’s Maze. Matthew Lewis explains what all this means for MTGO prices.
Do splashy mythics make bad speculation targets? Do cheaper rares fundamentally have more growth potential than the chase cards? Dig into Tucker’s slice of card finance philosophy to see if it agrees with you.
Modern season is in full swing, and with it comes some significant price peaks. Sigmund has decided to sell off some major staples this Modern season. In this article, he describes the psychology and rationale behind his decision.
2012 was a wild ride as far as MTG Finance goes. Sig takes a look back at some of his most valuable lessons learned and plans out how he will make some strategic changes next year.
Mike shares a recent brew of his combining Jund with elements of Boss Naya from years ago, notably the machine gun kill of Staticaster plus Nightshade Peddler.
While common sense dictates that we should strive to maximize profits, sometimes this just isn’t possible. But the thrill of profiting, even if suboptimal, can be invigorating. Sigmund talks about why it’s okay to sell prematurely sometimes.