I agree-- on the whole-- but I think it also depends on who "people" are, in context. There ARE people who can afford to buy half of Kansas or a couple of Picassos as a store of value... personally, I happen to be a rare stamp collector, and I have often found that old rare stamps are a good store of value when the economy heads south. And they can be acquired in small "units" so a "moderately broke" person can get in. Where the value of collectibles matters to me is that they have both an "intrinsic" value, as well as an "expert" value... that is, I can add to the value of my holding through having expertise others don't have.
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I'm a proponent of investing in what you know. I don't know a lick about stamps (yes, pun intended). But if that's what you know, you think they're a good store of value, and your expertise helps you add value, it sounds like it could be a good bet.