Is there a generally accepted rate of increase in value as tobaccos age?
For instance, "High quality tins increase in monetary value by approximately 10% (relative to MSRP) per year cellared, beginning at year three..." or anything remotely like that?
I've never aged tobacco long (unless you count 1 oz. sample baggies from a decade ago, which apparently I didn't love...), but I just wound up with 3 tins of 2009 Escudo, and it has me wondering if there's a way of estimating the value of what I was given.
Or is the value of cellared tobacco the personal sort which does not have monetary expression?
For instance, "High quality tins increase in monetary value by approximately 10% (relative to MSRP) per year cellared, beginning at year three..." or anything remotely like that?
I've never aged tobacco long (unless you count 1 oz. sample baggies from a decade ago, which apparently I didn't love...), but I just wound up with 3 tins of 2009 Escudo, and it has me wondering if there's a way of estimating the value of what I was given.
Or is the value of cellared tobacco the personal sort which does not have monetary expression?