Panini Blockchain might be the easiest side gig I've ever stumbled into. You can do it from a beach chair, poolside, halfway up a hiking trail — anywhere your phone gets a bar of signal. Buy a few cards you like. Open the collection, sort by best offer vs. average price, and the inefficiencies show up on a silver platter. Sell the ones bid above average, take the proceeds and pick up the ones sitting below it. That's it. That's the whole playbook.
It's basic finance — buy low, sell high — except the market is small enough and new enough that those gaps are wide and obvious, and they reset constantly. In a mature market you grind for basis points. Here you're catching whole percentage moves before lunch.
Compare it to anything else. Physical cards? You're packing mailers, taping boxes, dropping off at UPS, eating shipping costs, dealing with PSA backlogs, arguing about centering with a buyer in Ohio. Robinhood? You're trading the same names as ten million other people against algos that see your order before you click. Real estate? Tenants. Crypto? Good luck.
PBC is a phone, a thumb, and a fledgling market that hasn't been arbitraged flat yet. The hard part isn't finding the trade — it's deciding which lounger to take it from.
The same setup could theoretically work on Candy, Top Shot, or VeVe — if any of them ever solves their supply problem by burning excess inventory or otherwise turning the firehose back into a trickle.
#paniniblockchain #cappedsupply #kaboomIP