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I invest in Lego — it’s better than stocks, bonds and gold


Shane O’Farrell didn’t intend to get rich buying and selling Lego — all the 35-year-old from New Jersey, wanted was a connection to his childhood back in Ireland, where the modest Fort Legoredo was one of his favorite playthings.

Twenty years later, when he saw the kit going for hundreds higher than its 1996 retail price of $85, it was a lightbulb moment for the side-hustle seeker.

O’Farrell quickly jumped into what proved to be a lucrative market of buying and flipping coveted Lego sets online. That same set he loved currently sells for $2,405.

Shane O’Farrell of NJ found Lego to be a better investment than the stock market. Tamara Beckwith

The savvy service engineer is one of a growing number of investors shelling out their hard-earned cash on plastic bricks — at a time when Lego’s resale value has been growing by 11% annually and outpaced stocks, bonds, and gold, according to a 2022 study.

“I started trying to invest in stocks and realized the 8% a year that I’m making in the stock market is not really going to work. It’s not really going to get me where I want to go,” O’Farrell told The Post. “It would take decades.”

In the past two years alone, his toy trading has netted him nearly $500,000.

“The time it takes is very minimal, so I can do it on top of my full-time job and create a supplementary income,” O’Farrell said.

A plastic portfolio

O’Farrell has enjoyed hundreds of thousands of dollars of Lego resales. Tamara Beckwith

“You’re talking about a 400% return on investment in a year and a half’s time.”

Shane O’Farrell

He’s so enthusiastic about his part-time gig that O’Farrell even shares tips for prospective investors on his YouTube channel, called Brick Bucks.

What’s required is a standard-sized storage unit for inventory and a sharp set of eyes monitoring the companies, he said. O’Farrell reads annual Lego-released finance and trend reports while also keeping tabs on when sets are being retired to help determine future value.

After Lego stops selling a certain model, that’s when the shop opens for sellers like O’Farrell. Recently, that was the Lego “Star Wars” TIE Fighter Pilot helmet model.

“It was $60 before being retired in 2021. Then by about a year and a half of it being retired, it was $350,” O’Farrell said. “You’re talking about a 400% return on investment in a year and a half’s time.”

Lego collaborations with gigantic franchises like “Star Wars,” “Harry Potter” or Marvel don’t always guarantee an upped resale, he said.

Instead, scarcity is a key. Sets exclusively for sale at one store — since there will likely be fewer manufactured — tend to be best due to post-retirement demand.

There’s also a market solely for the mini figures inside a set. They’re so desired that bandits recently broke into a group of California stores and made off with $100,000 worth of them.

Recently, O’Farrell spotted a surge in demand for minifigs sold in Lego’s $460 Barad-dûr set from “Lord of the Rings.”

A new “Lord of the Rings” Lego set is in high demand for its mini figures.
“Lord of the Rings” mini figures are in extreme demand.

“People were selling just the minifigures from the set for $250,” he said of the towering Eye of Mordor model.

Over time, hobbit-sized Frodo Baggins, Samwise Gamgee, Gollum, and others will likely be worth even more.

‘A waiting game’

Lego sets can be worth more than stocks, bonds, or gold, according to an economic study. AFP via Getty Images

O’Farrell said that flipping Lego is easy since “value goes up over time.” You just need to be patient.

“You could just buy the stuff, put it away somewhere in storage and just wait for the price to go up,” he said. “The workload is quite low.”

Another seller and YouTube personality, David G — who doesn’t use his last name for privacy reasons and instead goes by DG Bricks — said, “It’s something like running a wine cellar.”

“I’m purchasing products available today. I’m storing them safely in anticipation of some future customer, years down the line. It’s a waiting game,” he told The Post.

The 27-year-old freelance videographer, based in Chicago, has sold $20,000 worth of Lego sets in his lifetime.

Out of the estimated thousand he invested in and held onto for years, only one didn’t pay off — a $12 Disney “Frozen” set he resold for $10.

Still, DG doesn’t call the Lego economy an investment cheat code. There’s tons of savviness needed to…



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