Hunt for World Cup stickers drive Argentina into a frenzy

World Cup stickers
Lucas Perrone pastes World Cup stickers with his kids in Buenos Aires. File photo: Reuters/Agustin Marcarian

Buenos Aires: In convenience stores around Argentina, kids - and their parents - are caught up in a new craze: the hunt for soccer World Cup stickers that have driven the already sport-mad country into a frenzy and left many shops with no stock left to sell.

In the birthplace of soccer legends Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi, signs in some shop windows read "no more stickers or albums", referring to the 2022 collectible sticker albums ahead of the November tournament in Qatar.

The trend has generated a wave of social media memes and satire, and even the creation of an app that allows you to track where to get the coveted stickers. New stock has been selling out in a matter of hours.

"It's frustrating not being able to find any," said Exequiel Claverie, a 38-year-old media professional and father of three children who are fans of local club River Plate.

"I arrive home every day to (my children) saying: 'Hey dad, did you buy stickers?' There are none!"

World Cup stickers
A woman holds World Cup stickers in a street shop at Parque Rivadavia in Buenos Aires on Sunday. File photo: Reuters/Agustin Marcarian

Argentina, which won the Copa America last year, will head to Qatar along with other Latin American and Central American countries Brazil, Uruguay, Ecuador, Mexico and Costa Rica.

Sticker manufacturer Italy's Panini says this year many adults are also collecting stickers, adding to demand.

The suggested price of a package of five stickers is 150 pesos (close to a dollar at the official rate), but the shortage has led to prices doubling or tripling in informal markets, including one at Buenos Aires' Rivadavia park.

World Cup stickers
A street seller offers World Cup stickers for sale at Parque Rivadavia in Buenos Aires on Sunday. File photo: Reuters/Agustin Marcarian

Completing the 600-sticker album could cost an estimated 20,000 pesos, a steep amount in a country facing deep inflation and a serious economic crisis.

"The full cost of filling the album is a lot. In reality though you rarely have to buy it all yourself: Grandma or auntie always gives you a gift," said Lucas Perrone, 39, a graphic designer, as he put stickers into the book with his two kids.

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