This post literally makes me want to bang my head into a wall. I almost don't want to bump it.
"Domain sales activity has slowed down in the realm of excessively long domains, such as 6N, 7N and beyond. Whoever
hyped those types of domains, better start refreshing their
information on current market conditions."
Here's a convenient link to 7N sales on Namebio:
What's perhaps MORE interesting than the above link is this link:
What is it and why is it more interesting? So glad you asked. The above link is 7N sales on NameBio sorted by reverse date -- namely OLDEST sales first. Why is it more interesting? Because
before September 2015 only 16 7N had sold for more than $100.
Aside from that, just the mere suggestion that 1.3 billion people in China (ignoring anyone else interested in domains elsewhere) are going be friendly enough to just split up the literal
handful of names that exist in the 2 to 5 character space and be done is almost mind boggling. Let alone if anyone should, dare I say it, own more than 1 of the things.
As for 6N, a
sk yourself this: If you had put $10,000 into 4N in September/October (which admittedly would have been tough unless you were part of a buyer pool) and $10,000 into reg fee'd 0/4 6N in September/October, what would have given you the better return? Statistically, I'm pretty sure the latter 6N investment would've yielded you the best return. Anyone care to claim that's not the case?
For help, here's the small amount of 4N sales on Namebio...
See also:
https://www.namepros.com/threads/066698-com-bin-reduced-current-bid-115.918950/
Name registered June 1st, 2015 -- currently $125. Assuming $10 reg fee, that's 1,250% in 7 months. While someone or few may have found a random deal here or there, I think you'd be hard pressed to show me even a handful of 3N or 4N that traded with 1,250% return in 7 month. Any that did came at the expense of massive work and research and hunting on the part of the flipper.
Final Note: This isn't at all to say that short names aren't going to do great. For sure, if the extended market is going to grow, it is dependent on the prices of short names going up, which opens pricing room for these longer strings. So yes, are short names going up? Yes, I think they certainly are. I'm just taking issue with some notion the rest of the market is dead.