When Super Bowl ticket sales didn’t follow the trend

The exception to this trend was in 2015, when ticket resellers, counting on this pattern of declining prices, engaged in a naked short of the Super Bowl ticket resale market. Sellers were listing tickets they didn’t actually have while prices were high, counting on being able to buy cheaper tickets later to supply to the early buyers. When the short sellers all tried to buy at once close to the game, they drove prices back up since the number of remaining available tickets was lower than expected. Since then, more safeguards have been put in place to discourage ticket speculation.

At last year’s Super Bowl in Tampa, capacity was limited to 25,000 fans (plus 30,000 cutouts) due to covid-19 restrictions. This put a premium on ticket prices and made them some of the most expensive on record. This year, Inglewood, California’s SoFi Stadium is expected to be at full capacity of 70,000 people. But the fact that the game is taking place in the hometown of one of the teams, the Los Angeles Rams, means that strong local demand is likely to make prices stay higher right up till the end.

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