Sneaker futures are making Wall Street look like a swap meet. High-end kicks are becoming the currency of choice in New York, and one 16-year-old is taking advantage of the trend — using his own five-figure stock of 45 mint-condition basketball shoes to open the world’s first sneaker pawn shop.
“Young kids don’t have jewelry. They don’t have cars,” said Troy Reed, dad of young entrepreneur Chase “Sneakers” Reed. “But what they do have is the thousands of dollars worth of sneakers in their house.”
Chase, a 10th-grader at Frederick Douglass Academy in Harlem, still marvels over pictures of the freshest sneaker designs online and waits in line for hours to add to his collection. Only now he and his father are also getting them from fellow “investors” who want quick cash. They have all sorts of reasons for selling short.
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Kobe 9 Elite “Masterpiece,” 2014, $650 |
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Air Jordan 2 High DB “Charity, Doerabecher,” 2007, $1,200 |
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Lebron X, Crown Jewel, 2013, $1,400 |
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Air Foamposite 1 PRM, "Weatherman, "2013, $250 |
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Air Force 1 BHM, 2013, $350 |
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Air Jordan 1 Retro High OG, 2013, $900 |
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The Nike Air Yeezys cost $263 when they were released, but now they go for up to $15,000 on eBay. |
The $30,000 in seed money for Sneaker Pawn came from Chase selling off his own
collection — which peaked at 200 pairs.
He and his dad came up with the idea when Chase asked to borrow $50 spending
money after waiting all night to dole out his father’s hard-earned cash on a new
release.
“I was like, ‘Are you serious?’ I’m holding these sneakers until I get my $50 back,”
said Troy Reed, who got his start in business making and selling documentaries
about Harlem druglords like Alpo and Rich Porter.
But Chase didn’t just plant the seed for the idea or help raise start-up money.
After school, he does homework and then stays up late custom-painting sneakers.
Typically, he’ll earn between $150 and $250 for each custom paint job.
“Luckily when the store opened, school started slowing down,” he said.
By Michael Gartland
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