This is not a trading card — it is a postage stamp. Issued in 2010 by the Union des Comores (the Comoros, an island nation in the Indian Ocean between Madagascar and the East African coast), it belongs to a small Jordan basketball series captioned ‘Les joueurs de Basket Ball,’ with a face value of 350 Comorian francs. Jordan is shown driving in the red Bulls road jersey against a purple field — the ‘Purple’ in the PSA label distinguishes this color treatment within the issue. The object itself is exactly what it appears to be: a genuine perforated, gummed stamp, blank and white on the reverse, which is how PSA encapsulated it. Foreign-issued sports and celebrity stamps from this era are a niche and sometimes contested corner of philately — many small-nation issues of famous athletes were produced largely for the collector market, and some are flagged by postal authorities — so this lives at the intersection of philately and Jordan collecting rather than in the mainstream card world. What makes this particular slab compelling is its scarcity within the graded population: only two copies are recorded at PSA 10, and PSA has since discontinued grading this issue, which means the census is effectively frozen — no new gem-mint examples can enter it. There is no public sales history at all; with a closed population of two and nothing trading openly, the card has no auction record, and its estimated $5,000 value reflects private, collector-to-collector pricing for an item that is essentially impossible to replace. DimeLabs owns one of the two.