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Old 02-12-2016, 08:40 PM
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Bliggity Bliggity is offline
Dan Bl@u
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Join Date: Dec 2014
Location: Raleigh, NC
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Quote:
Originally Posted by irv View Post
Thanks guys.

I knew there were fees, but had no idea they were that much.

So in reality, if you paid the $65,000 total, all fees in and wanted to or had to sell the card in a month or two, would you list/reserve it for the $65,000 you paid or the $55,000 that it is actually worth? (Rounding numbers only)

Also, if it gets listed in VCP, is the $55,000 price the one that gets entered or the $65,000, total cost amount?
You would list the card for $65k because that's what it's "actually worth." Bidders will take the premium into account when bidding. Therefore, if a bidder believes the card is "actually worth" $X, then the bidder will only bid 80% of $X, knowing that the total amount will add up to what the real value is. So for example, if a certain T206 usually sells for $500 on eBay, you would expect the high bid at an auction house for the same card to be about $400 (depending on the specific percentage of the buyer's premium).

VCP records the full cost, including the buyer's premium.

ETA: Jesse is correct that you'd probably take a loss on a quick sell for a couple reasons. If you were the high bidder at auction, that means the next highest person in line to buy the card when you sell probably isn't willing to pay as much as you, or else they would have won it the first time. Also, although bidders "should" take the BP into account when bidding, it's easy to get brainwashed by the lower number that appears on the bid screen, and end up bidding higher than you should. This has been discussed ad nauseum before, and is a foolish thing to do, but is human nature I suppose.
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Last edited by Bliggity; 02-12-2016 at 08:43 PM.
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