Imo, everify hits the nail squarely on the head. Someone else compared LLLL.coms to a stock IPO in another thread saying they settle down eventually and stop going up by leaps and bounds. However, the true statistic is that most IPO's trade below their offer price 6 months after they come to market.
Example
So, obviously the opportunity lies in being able to get in cheap and get out in the frenzy. I think the same is true of the LLLL.com hype now. Truthfully, if I owned any more than the few I do now, I would be a heavy seller in this market. I'm not sure exactly what a LLLL.com "naysayer" is. Obviously, any LLLL word is worth a lot and an acronym is worth something. There can't be much argument against that.
However, the argument that non-us countries see certain letters as premium is irrelevant imo. Even if we were to assume that all 26 letters are "premium" I don't see most of or all 457,000 of them ending up in end-user hands - certainly not if prices increase at the rates that some are projecting. This raises two areas of concern that people are banking on. 1) end users and 2) cost to own.
1) Lorenzo says that there are 350,000 LLLL.coms already in end-user hands. I really want to see how you get to this number. I've tried a few random samplings and the most I ever get is 10%. Even that seems high to me. And I don't think you can consider a domainer website selling the name an end-user. But let's be optimistic and say that there are 350k already being used by end-users. What's preventing the rest from being used? If they were available for reg fee last year that means nobody wanted them. But now they are all bought up in a fenzy by domainers who are selling them for 10 - 100x higher prices? And the only ones buying them now are other domainers who "see the potential"? Doesn't make much sense to me.
2) So let's say I want to "get in the game" now. I want to add 100 high quality LLLL.coms to my portfolio. According to Reece's blog, my
minimum cost is $40,000 - and that's assuming I'm not buying any nice CVCVs. (More realistically, $50k-$60,000 but lets go with $40k). It's pretty safe to assume that most all these names earn little to no revenue. So now I'm sitting on these names long-term, paying about $1,000 per year in renewals (which is adding to my expense) and I have two choices. Wait for end-users that may never come or try to resell to domainers at a profit. I may have some success in both choices but if what I said above in point 1 is realized by everyone, I'm left holding a very expensive bag with $1,000 annual renewals on top of that. So, imo, the only people who are going to fare well in the LLLL.com craze are those who got in at reg fee or are finding a few bargains at a time and flipping them.
So I guess this brings me to my official question for your blog, Lorenzo;
"People who bought at reg fee will make a killing if they sell now, but how much can someone expect to make if they buy now, at these prices?"
Obviously, you don't know the answer to that - nobody does. But I think that anyone who has ever been around the block in any kind of investing before sees the huge downside risk here for any considerable LLLL.com holding. Do you know why most people lost more than 1/2 their portfolio value when the stock market fell in 2000? They were emotionally attached to their investments and didn't know when to sell.
just my 2c