My husband spends some time reading through these threads now and then. Last night he told me that he observed an unusual similarity between the discussions going on here and the one's he used to read when he was actively trading stocks 7 or 8 years ago. He said the comment posted reminded him of daytraders (are any of you former stockhouse junkies?) His point was that there are traders and there are investors. Here we have "domainers", "speculators", "investors" and maybe a few other categories.
Most interesting is the fact that several of you post that a domain is junk and you would never buy it at a certain price, and those same people are the ones bidding the highest price at Pool, Namespro, etc.
The other more controversial point he made was about how he remembers the daytraders had multiple login accounts on the discussion board. He questioned whether there was any attempt to influence prices here, either up or down? For example, many discussions about the LL.ca names and then sales crossing hands at $12K or $15K, but are these real sales, or simply intended to help raise the price of a LL.ca being auctioned at Sibername?
Don't mean to be too, too controversial, but these are observations that I wouldn't have personally made, that have come through a formerly avid stock trader who sees several similarities in the posts here vis a vis Stockhouse.
Also, as far a value, if you are a true "domainer" looking to generate click revenue from your domains, it is in your best interest to keep prices low, so that you get maximum return on your domain purchase.
On the other hand, if you are an investor, you likely have a longer term horizon and will be more flexible in how much you pay.
North.ca is a great example - a domainer looking for click ad revenue only, would likely not pay too much as it has no specific product or service audience. On the other hand, as a value domain investor, I would likely pay much more with the understanding this domain will be worth 2x-3x selling price in a few years or less. I could give a bunch of examples...
Jen