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  #1  
Old 12-21-2014, 08:41 PM
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Default How do I retract a bid on Ebay?

I ran out of items on my watch list yesterday. I made a couple of min bids - just so I could monitor the auction. I checked myebay tonight and somehow, it has an extra 0 on my bid - which would be 3x VCP if it is bid up to that amount. It is well on its way from a few low feedback bidders with high % for that seller.

It was my mistake and I am willing to take the medicine if it is seen as unethical. It doesn't end for another 5 days and 22 hours, so I feel that it if I pull back now while it is still under VCP, I am not doing the seller harm - however, I don't want to send a note to him asking for a bid retraction explaining that I accidently hit an extra 0 - thus showing what my max is and opening myself to that number being magically hit.

Any help would be appreciated.

Thanks
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  #2  
Old 12-21-2014, 08:49 PM
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Default retract

Kevin,

go to:

http://offer.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?RetractBidShow

then enter your user name and password and it will walk you through it from there.

Be sure before you do this that you write down the item # as you will need that. Also, do this ASAP because if the item ends within 12 hours of when you try, then Ebay will not allow it.

peace, mike
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  #3  
Old 12-21-2014, 08:55 PM
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Thank You for the help. I hope that I don't have to do that again as it feels icky doing it. If I was confident that the auction would go to the natural market level, I would have just left it there and assumed that it would have worked out fine. It didnt' seem like that was happening, however, so now I can rest assurred.

Take Care,
Kevin
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  #4  
Old 12-21-2014, 09:12 PM
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Default no sweat

As they say on the "bay".....stuff happens!

It is a tool to use exactly as you used it. No one is perfect!

peace, mike
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  #5  
Old 12-21-2014, 10:46 PM
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Originally Posted by vtgmsc View Post
As they say on the "bay".....stuff happens!

It is a tool to use exactly as you used it. No one is perfect!

peace, mike

Or you can do it 93 more times, and just blame it on your fondness for ice cream.
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  #6  
Old 12-22-2014, 01:35 AM
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If retracting a bid makes you feel icky you could either take a NPB (which really means nothing these days) or file a "item not as described" return (which is as easy eating cake these days). Not knocking you OP, I actually place a ton bids on my phone so I've often typed too many 0's with my fat fingers and had to correct them before I confirmed so I understand how it could have happened, but if it's really a card you want and think it still might fall under your intended bid you can always let the bid ride and there is literally 0% chance you'll be stuck with the item at a heavy price thanks to a buyer friendly eBay.
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  #7  
Old 12-22-2014, 07:26 AM
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Or you can do it 93 more times, and just blame it on your fondness for ice cream.
+1
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  #8  
Old 12-22-2014, 08:55 AM
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If retracting a bid makes you feel icky you could either take a NPB (which really means nothing these days) or file a "item not as described" return (which is as easy eating cake these days). Not knocking you OP, I actually place a ton bids on my phone so I've often typed too many 0's with my fat fingers and had to correct them before I confirmed so I understand how it could have happened, but if it's really a card you want and think it still might fall under your intended bid you can always let the bid ride and there is literally 0% chance you'll be stuck with the item at a heavy price thanks to a buyer friendly eBay.
At this point in the auction, the proper thing to do would be put in a retraction, and then put in the actual bid he intended to make in the first place. Waiting until the auction ends and then not paying/returning hurts the seller in this transaction. Retracting a bid with plenty of time left in the auction is the proper response.
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  #9  
Old 12-22-2014, 09:08 AM
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Originally Posted by swarmee View Post
At this point in the auction, the proper thing to do would be put in a retraction, and then put in the actual bid he intended to make in the first place. Waiting until the auction ends and then not paying/returning hurts the seller in this transaction. Retracting a bid with plenty of time left in the auction is the proper response.
+1..just retract the bid and put in the intended bid. It is when people just retract for no reason, and do no bid again that we block. If they retract a bid and then resubmit their intended bid, they are allowed to do that
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  #10  
Old 12-22-2014, 09:38 AM
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Originally Posted by bobbyw8469 View Post
+1..just retract the bid and put in the intended bid. It is when people just retract for no reason, and do no bid again that we block. If they retract a bid and then resubmit their intended bid, they are allowed to do that
Good point. Some sellers are vindictive and will put you on their blocked buyer list if you retract a bid...

Last edited by D.P.Johnson; 12-22-2014 at 12:00 PM.
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  #11  
Old 12-22-2014, 09:42 AM
1952boyntoncollector 1952boyntoncollector is offline
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Originally Posted by D.P.Johnson View Post
Good point. Some sellers are vindictive and will put you on their blocked buyer list in you retract a bid...
right some weird sellers out there...if you retract just one time they do that..cant imagine Macys barring a customer for returning one item...
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  #12  
Old 12-22-2014, 10:37 AM
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Originally Posted by 1952boyntoncollector View Post
right some weird sellers out there...if you retract just one time they do that..cant imagine Macys barring a customer for returning one item...
Comparing a collector/seller and what they should do to Macy's is almost too ridiculous to even comment on. Almost.

I'll block a retractor because life is too short and I don't play games. In the OP case, it's obviously a mistake. But otherwise, I'll block you. When my revenues get to the point of Macy's, I'll change my practices.
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  #13  
Old 12-22-2014, 10:50 AM
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I'll block a retractor because life is too short and I don't play games. In the OP case, it's obviously a mistake. But otherwise, I'll block you. When my revenues get to the point of Macy's, I'll change my practices.
+1...A bid retractor is usually a problem bidder. Online auction houses (Huggins & Scott, Robert Edwards, et al) do not allow bid retractors. Why should Ebay be any different. If someone retracts a bid with me and doesn't rebid their "proper" bid, then YES, they will get blocked. They are abusing the bid retraction policy and we don't allow that. Now if only Probstein and PWCC would follow suit.
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  #14  
Old 12-22-2014, 11:01 AM
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Default Bid retraction

I retracted about 10 bids about a year ago. I saw those "Christmas Rack Packs" and they were being sold as a Topps item. So I bid away. Then I thought hmmm... maybe I better do a little research. After my bullshit meter finally went off, I retracted all the bids I had placed. I guess I just needed to confess this to someone since bid retractions are looked at with such disdain.

Mark
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  #15  
Old 12-22-2014, 11:09 AM
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Default Confession

Do you feel better now Mark
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  #16  
Old 12-22-2014, 11:38 AM
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Absotively, posolutelty I feel better!!!
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  #17  
Old 12-22-2014, 11:44 AM
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The best thing to do is to retract the bid and immediately go to the item web page and enter your correct bid. Not all sellers are scrooges and they will understand, especially if they check and see the bid retracted was a mistake. The longer you wait, however, the worse it will be so do it right away.
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  #18  
Old 12-22-2014, 11:50 AM
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Not all sellers are scrooges and they will understand, especially if they check and see the bid retracted was a mistake.
I wouldnt necessairly say a seller is a scrooge because he blocks you. In almost all of my instances, the retraction is usually between 2-3 days later after the initial bid. It is though the buyer just simply changed his mind. Unacceptable. No other auction house allows retractions. Try doing that at Robert Edwards, Greg Bussineau, etc.
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  #19  
Old 12-22-2014, 12:05 PM
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Bobby, I wasn't thinking of you when I wrote the post, I know you're a stand up guy. I simply meant that the theory that all ebay sellers flip out on a bid retraction if it is an honest mistake isn't true.
You are definitely right about the AHs not allowing that. I accidentally entered a bid with a major house when I forgot I already had the card and didn't even attempt to contact the AH because their rules are firm. I won it and ended up flipping it on ebay.
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  #20  
Old 12-22-2014, 12:30 PM
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If somebody sends me a message and explains their retraction, or re-enters their correct bid if they chose "bid wrong amount" (which they never seem to do), I don't worry about it.

If I go to their bid record and see this is a regular occurrence for them, they get blocked. They are manipulating auctions, plain and simple, not only that, they are manipulating MY auctions.

I don't care what they do over at Probstein or PWCC or wherever, but once they start doing it to me, then it is an issue for ME.

After reading I don't know how many threads on here about people being worried about "shilling" every time they see an auction with retractions, or a bidder in the mix with a ton of retractions, and that is going to affect the way "they" bid in the future with this particular seller, I'm surprised at the attitude of some about a seller who might want to be proactive about a subject like this.

I certainly am not being vindictive, and it doesn't happen a ton, but there's no reason to encourage it, unless somebody has a good reason.

......and yes, I would expect somebody selling Christmas Packs on a regular basis, would expect some bid retractions once people did a little reading up about them.
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  #21  
Old 12-22-2014, 12:46 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by D.P.Johnson View Post
Good point. Some sellers are vindictive and will put you on their blocked buyer list if you retract a bid...
I run into one of those vindictive sellers yesterday. I asked if their obviously altered card was real and if it would pass a grading company. Sellers response was "you are now blocked". Bet that card was real.
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  #22  
Old 01-01-2015, 09:27 AM
1952boyntoncollector 1952boyntoncollector is offline
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Originally Posted by Jaybird View Post
Comparing a collector/seller and what they should do to Macy's is almost too ridiculous to even comment on. Almost.

I'll block a retractor because life is too short and I don't play games. In the OP case, it's obviously a mistake. But otherwise, I'll block you. When my revenues get to the point of Macy's, I'll change my practices.

Well JC Penny would do the same thing as Macys in terms of allowing people t bring stuff back and they are losing money so maybe they shouldn't let people return items...since they are losing money im assuming your revenues are better than jc penny..
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Old 01-01-2015, 09:30 AM
1952boyntoncollector 1952boyntoncollector is offline
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\

......and yes, I would expect somebody selling Christmas Packs on a regular basis, would expect some bid retractions once people did a little reading up about them.[/QUOTE]


id rather have someone bid retract than 'win' the item and deal with the headache of them trying to return it.....Im sure if you win Christmas packs you can return after 'winning' them ...
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  #24  
Old 01-01-2015, 10:26 AM
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Originally Posted by D.P.Johnson View Post
Good point. Some sellers are vindictive and will put you on their blocked buyer list if you retract a bid...
Quote:
Originally Posted by 1952boyntoncollector View Post
right some weird sellers out there...if you retract just one time they do that..cant imagine Macys barring a customer for returning one item...
This is silliness. Blocking a bidder who negatively affects your auction, and who doesn't contact you to explain, is good business sense: you lose one 'customer' who didn't buy anything from you and who might have pissed off other customers who actually planned to, and by doing so you keep other real customers. I have even given refunds to winning bidders, based on ignoring someone's bids who might have looked like a shill to the winning bidder.
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Old 01-01-2015, 10:29 AM
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Would this bid retraction have anything to do with Ice Cream memorabilia? Snicker, snicker.... just kidding everyone.... oh yeah, Happy New Year to all!
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  #26  
Old 01-01-2015, 10:53 AM
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Would this bid retraction have anything to do with Ice Cream memorabilia? Snicker, snicker.... just kidding everyone.... oh yeah, Happy New Year to all!
I think in almost all cases bid retractions are bad - bad for the seller in that they 'usually' look bad to his other paying customers. But Phil showed us an example of where perhaps they are not bad for the seller: if Phil is sending the seller lots of business, but the only way he can do this is by sometimes retracting bids, and he informs the seller(s) of this in advance, then as a buyer I would be stupid to block him, unless his retractions make him appear to my other customers that he is a shill. I like money as much as the next guy.
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Old 01-02-2015, 12:34 AM
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I think in almost all cases bid retractions are bad - bad for the seller in that they 'usually' look bad to his other paying customers. But Phil showed us an example of where perhaps they are not bad for the seller: if Phil is sending the seller lots of business, but the only way he can do this is by sometimes retracting bids, and he informs the seller(s) of this in advance, then as a buyer I would be stupid to block him, unless his retractions make him appear to my other customers that he is a shill. I like money as much as the next guy.
When he is an underbidder on a lot and he shows 93 retractions in the last 6 months, he looks like a shill to a lot of people, at least according to an untold number of threads on NET54 in the last several years dedicated to PWCC, Probstein, etc....

When he retracts a bid on a lot, and it shows he has 93 retractions in the last 6 months, he REALLY looks like a shill to everybody else who is left bidding on that lot.
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Old 01-02-2015, 12:40 AM
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Originally Posted by 1952boyntoncollector View Post
\

......and yes, I would expect somebody selling Christmas Packs on a regular basis, would expect some bid retractions once people did a little reading up about them.


id rather have someone bid retract than 'win' the item and deal with the headache of them trying to return it.....Im sure if you win Christmas packs you can return after 'winning' them ...

I would rather not have to field bid retractions OR somebody returning something that is exactly what it was advertised to be.

It's not a one or the other choice.

I sell collectibles, I'm not a loan service or a vessel for others to suss out the bid ceiling so they can screw with other bidders AND my auctions.

Last edited by D. Bergin; 01-02-2015 at 12:42 AM.
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  #29  
Old 01-02-2015, 10:48 AM
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Dave, it is about the agreement with the seller. If the seller is okay with him appearing to be a shill, why do you personally care?
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Old 01-02-2015, 11:57 AM
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Dave, it is about the agreement with the seller. If the seller is okay with him appearing to be a shill, why do you personally care?

You think he has 93 bid retractions with a single seller he had a conversation with?

I didn't see him mentioning a conversation or an agreement was made with ANY seller he made a retraction on. Just that they were lower end items, they didn't involve baseball, and thus it didn't matter that he pulled his bid on those auctions.

As long as he wasn't affecting the higher end baseball market, it was ok in his mind.

......on top of that, there's enough paranoid bidders that Ebay has helped cultivate with their practices, that every time Phil shows up as an underbidder on a "higher end baseball" auction, and the other bidders do a simple click of the mouse, they see the guy they are bidding against has more retractions then they have won items on his record. Generally they either run to NET54 and wonder out loud if the guy they are bidding against is a shill (10 other guys jump on the bandwagon and say they will never do business with this seller again), or they don't say a word, and they temper their bidding accordingly.

It's not just this board either. I've ventured on Ebay buyer boards on occasion and they are littered with threads of people asking "Have I just been shilled". Sometimes they were shilled, but 90% of the time I believe it's a situation with a bidder like this in the mix..........but most don't want to hear that, usually it's the seller that gets demonized in the process, not the ones interfering with the auction.

Right now he has bid on 11 items in the last 30 days, he has 5 bid retractions in that same amount of time.

He has 93 retractions in the last 180 days. 93. That's not a "whoopsie". If he has the blessings of other sellers because of this, he's either building up his retractions, to scare other bidders away on the items he REALLY wants, or he's just inconvenienced 93 others sets of sellers and bidders on items he DIDN'T really want.

I really have a hard time believing there's some benevolent reason for this.

I personally care, because this type of bidding has become epidemic on the site. It affects the entire realm of collectibles and it affects bidder confidence in general.

I've spoken to more then one collector over the years who say they don't bid on Ebay anymore because of the shenanigans that they think go on there. Whether their fears are founded or unfounded doesn't really matter. The perception is there.
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  #31  
Old 01-02-2015, 12:26 PM
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You think he has 93 bid retractions with a single seller he had a conversation with?

I didn't see him mentioning a conversation or an agreement was made with ANY seller he made a retraction on. Just that they were lower end items, they didn't involve baseball, and thus it didn't matter that he pulled his bid on those auctions.

As long as he wasn't affecting the higher end baseball market, it was ok in his mind.

......on top of that, there's enough paranoid bidders that Ebay has helped cultivate with their practices, that every time Phil shows up as an underbidder on a "higher end baseball" auction, and the other bidders do a simple click of the mouse, they see the guy they are bidding against has more retractions then they have won items on his record. Generally they either run to NET54 and wonder out loud if the guy they are bidding against is a shill (10 other guys jump on the bandwagon and say they will never do business with this seller again), or they don't say a word, and they temper their bidding accordingly.

It's not just this board either. I've ventured on Ebay buyer boards on occasion and they are littered with threads of people asking "Have I just been shilled". Sometimes they were shilled, but 90% of the time I believe it's a situation with a bidder like this in the mix..........but most don't want to hear that, usually it's the seller that gets demonized in the process, not the ones interfering with the auction.

Right now he has bid on 11 items in the last 30 days, he has 5 bid retractions in that same amount of time.

He has 93 retractions in the last 180 days. 93. That's not a "whoopsie". If he has the blessings of other sellers because of this, he's either building up his retractions, to scare other bidders away on the items he REALLY wants, or he's just inconvenienced 93 others sets of sellers and bidders on items he DIDN'T really want.

I really have a hard time believing there's some benevolent reason for this.

I personally care, because this type of bidding has become epidemic on the site. It affects the entire realm of collectibles and it affects bidder confidence in general.

I've spoken to more then one collector over the years who say they don't bid on Ebay anymore because of the shenanigans that they think go on there. Whether their fears are founded or unfounded doesn't really matter. The perception is there.
Well said. I am a small seller on Ebay. Not even a drop in the bucket compared to Probstein and PWCC. However, I do have one thing in common with those other two guys. I like to run .99 cent auctions. Not many sellers run .99 cent auctions anymore. That being said, I have to work alot harder to protect my auctions than those other two guys. All is takes is one bad bidder to wipe me off the map.

Others might not agree with me, but that is why I work so hard to ensure my auctions are clean from that kind of stuff. So yes, I block bid retractors. Not the ones who it is a true mistake where they entered the wrong bid. However, that is very seldom the reason. The current policy is being abused. I have retractors who are the high bidders, then three-four days later, decide they no longer want the item. They falsely use the tired old "can't contact the seller", or "entered the wrong amount". Those guys get blocked.

Last edited by bobbyw8469; 01-02-2015 at 12:27 PM.
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  #32  
Old 01-02-2015, 12:26 PM
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Unless it's a seller that I know well I don't assume that many of my ebay transactions are "arms-length." That's just ebay and the hobby. Frankly I've gotten to the point where I don't even look at other bidders and whether there are retractions, "0" feedback bidders, bidders with 90+% activity with this seller. That's just the stuff you can point to, who knows what else is going on.

Edit to Add: I am SURE there are many up and up sellers on EBAY but it is a minefield.
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Old 01-02-2015, 12:42 PM
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Scott, I completely agree with Dave here, and I'm surprised you don't see this as a problem. Shill bidding is one of the big reasons ebay is going downhill. I am astounded the forum has let someone with so many retractions slide.

Ken
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Old 01-02-2015, 01:06 PM
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Ken, I was thinking entirely of it as a problem between Phil and the seller, and that any bidders would avoid the seller if they had a problem with it. Giving it more thought, there is the obvious problem (which was going right past me) of the winning bidders being shilled up by Phil. Phil was, in effect, acting as a shill for the seller, whether he intended it or not.

Sorry about that - oversight on my part, as I was trying to play devil's advocate for Phil.
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Old 01-02-2015, 01:32 PM
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To try to be clear from my standpoint in as few words as possible.

I don't even see it as a shilling issue for the most part. To me it's a perception of shilling that is damaging, along with a strategic interference in auctions that more often then not, drive prices down, rather then up.

Shilling and bid retractions in the Ebay world, is a much different animal then those same concerns in the auction house world, IMO.

An auction house has one on one control of every aspect of their bidding experience. You decide whether they are trustworthy or not, based on their individual reputations.

Then I see broad statements about Ebay.........and "Ebay" is not trustworthy. I stay away from "Ebay", because of this experience and that experience with nameless bidder, seller, buyer, consignments house, etc......

It should be broken down into all the individual sellers on Ebay on a case by case basis, but a lot of collectors don't want to be hassled with that, so we all get painted with the same brush........and as a result business suffers.

The company Ebay itself is responsible for much of this. In their pursuit of buyers and bids, along with the illusion of now anonymous bidding, they have encouraged this behavior, when at one time it was penalized. Essentially telling bidders they can retract or cancel a transaction any time they want.

It's now up to individual sellers to police this behavior, but even those who do, are affected tremendously by those who don't. Whether it's to continue misguided shilling practices, or it's triggering the desperation train of thought that "any bid is a good bid"........if I let this guy f*#k with this auction, he might spend more money on my next auction.

It becomes just as maddening as my shoddy attempt to make my point in "as few words as possible".

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Old 01-02-2015, 01:37 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by D. Bergin View Post
Then I see broad statements about Ebay.........and "Ebay" is not trustworthy. I stay away from "Ebay", because of this experience and that experience with nameless bidder, seller, buyer, consignments house, etc......

It should be broken down into all the individual sellers on Ebay on a case by case basis, but a lot of collectors don't want to be hassled with that, so we all get painted with the same brush........and as a result business suffers.
I see your point.
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Old 01-02-2015, 01:40 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by D. Bergin View Post
To try to be clear from my standpoint in as few words as possible.

I don't even see it as a shilling issue for the most part. To me it's a perception of shilling that is damaging, along with a strategic interference in auctions that more often then not, drive prices down, rather then up.

Shilling and bid retractions in the Ebay world, is a much different animal then those same concerns in the auction house world, IMO.

An auction house has one on one control of every aspect of their bidding experience. You decide whether they are trustworthy or not, based on their individual reputations.

Then I see broad statements about Ebay.........and "Ebay" is not trustworthy. I stay away from "Ebay", because of this experience and that experience with nameless bidder, seller, buyer, consignments house, etc......

It should be broken down into all the individual sellers on Ebay on a case by case basis, but a lot of collectors don't want to be hassled with that, so we all get painted with the same brush........and as a result business suffers.

The company Ebay itself is responsible for much of this. In their pursuit of buyers and bids, along with the illusion of now anonymous bidding, they have encouraged this behavior, when at one time it was penalized. Essentially telling bidders they can retract or cancel a transaction any time they want.

It's now up to individual sellers to police this behavior, but even those who do, are affected tremendously by those who don't. Whether it's to continue misguided shilling practices, or it's triggering the desperation train of thought that "any bid is a good bid"........if I let this guy f*#k with this auction, he might spend more money on my next auction.

It becomes just as maddening as my shoddy attempt to make my point in "as few words as possible".

I agree, I should have said perception of shilling, too. I had one buyer retract a bid for me earlier this year, (oops, last year!) and I got a little panicky. I watched him a while, and he never retracted it again, surely a harmless typo. But I almost wanted to send an email to the high bidder letting him know nothing evil was going on.
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Old 01-02-2015, 02:15 PM
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Originally Posted by earlywynnfan View Post
I agree, I should have said perception of shilling, too. I had one buyer retract a bid for me earlier this year, (oops, last year!) and I got a little panicky. I watched him a while, and he never retracted it again, surely a harmless typo. But I almost wanted to send an email to the high bidder letting him know nothing evil was going on.
As a seller I am always concerned about perception of shilling.

I don't run straight auctions often, but when I do, and I see any bidder who could be perceived as a shiller, I send him a message asking for a response. If I get a halfway reasonable response I proceed as normal, but if I get ignored I remove all of his bids and add a message to the auction.

Only once have I done this and had the bidder complain that I removed his bids. He explained and I allowed him to continue bidding.
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Old 02-06-2016, 08:51 AM
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Didn't want to start a new thread on this topic.

Check out this bidder's habits:

http://offer.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.d...Buyer_ViewLink

I was (am) the high bidder all week, then this person outbids me by less than a couple bucks the other day, then this morning (just more than 12 hours left in the bidding) retracts his bid. It's funny how it was retracted just before the required 12 hour limit.

I am not accusing the seller of anything shady (he does have perfect feedback).

But why would someone retract just before the 12 hour deadline?

How can eBay allow someone that has 216 retractions in the last 6 months to continue to bid? I wanted to cancel my bid out of frustration, but feel bad doing it for "no good reason".

Can anyone find someone with more than 216 retractions in the last 6 months?
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Old 02-06-2016, 10:39 AM
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If someone retracts a bid early in the auction and then corrects his bid and resubmits it I have no problem with that. But if someone retracts a bid and then does not bid again, I will block them.

If there are multiple retractions by the same bidder, then I will go the next step and call eBay. Last week, I had a situation where a bidder retracted 6 bids on 6 different items and did not place another bid. This brought down the price of each one of the items. I called eBay to complain about the bidder.

Here is what they told me. First thing to do is block the bidder. In cases where the bidder retracted their bid in the final hours or if they retracted multiple bids, I should call eBay like I did. I was told that even if I didn't call, eBay keeps track of all retractions. If a bidder has multiple retractions, then eBay would restrict their bidding. So, by reading a previous post I see there was a bidder who had 216 retractions. But don't worry, eBay is restricting their bidding. Yeah right.
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  #41  
Old 02-06-2016, 12:31 PM
1952boyntoncollector 1952boyntoncollector is offline
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[QUOTE=pgellis;1500901]Didn't want to start a new thread on this topic.



But why would someone retract just before the 12 hour deadline?



I can answer that one, some people put in the wrong bid but don't want to be known as a retractor, so they wait to see as long as possible if their bid beaten so that way they don't have to retract it.....of course i know you are assuming the bad side of things..but it could also be what i stated.
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Old 02-06-2016, 02:41 PM
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[QUOTE=1952boyntoncollector;1501015]
Quote:
Originally Posted by pgellis View Post
Didn't want to start a new thread on this topic.



But why would someone retract just before the 12 hour deadline?



I can answer that one, some people put in the wrong bid but don't want to be known as a retractor, so they wait to see as long as possible if their bid beaten so that way they don't have to retract it.....of course i know you are assuming the bad side of things..but it could also be what i stated.
The reserve was $29.95. I place a bid for $30.01. This bidder placed a bid of $31.00. How can that be a wrong bid?
And oh yeah, he has two more bid retractions since I posted this today. Up to 218 bid retractions in the past 6 months...a little more than 1 bid retractions per day over that period.
It's not a mistake, but can't figure out what he's doing or why? And how does eBay allow this?
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Old 02-06-2016, 03:08 PM
1952boyntoncollector 1952boyntoncollector is offline
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[QUOTE=pgellis;1501061]
Quote:
Originally Posted by 1952boyntoncollector View Post

The reserve was $29.95. I place a bid for $30.01. This bidder placed a bid of $31.00. How can that be a wrong bid?
And oh yeah, he has two more bid retractions since I posted this today. Up to 218 bid retractions in the past 6 months...a little more than 1 bid retractions per day over that period.
It's not a mistake, but can't figure out what he's doing or why? And how does eBay allow this?
yeah that sounds bad...did card sell at 30.01?
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Old 02-06-2016, 03:52 PM
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It's at the opening bid of $29.95 with about 3 hours to go.

This is the only item that this seller has active, so I don't think he has anything to do with it. But why would someone continually retract bids? Can't be drunk eBaying can it?
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Old 02-06-2016, 05:02 PM
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Quote:
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It's at the opening bid of $29.95 with about 3 hours to go.

This is the only item that this seller has active, so I don't think he has anything to do with it. But why would someone continually retract bids? Can't be drunk eBaying can it?
They are bidding to see what the top bid is. They now have an advantage over the top bidder in that they know what they are willing to spend on the item. They retract and then decide if they want to bid on the item again, usually with a snipe.
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Old 02-06-2016, 10:55 PM
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It really is disgusting that Ebay lets this go on. Between shilling, the perception of shilling and straight up sabotaging of auctions, there's no reason they should allow more then a few genuine retractions a year from any particular bidder...and even that's giving the benefit of the doubt.
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Old 02-07-2016, 06:19 AM
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They are bidding to see what the top bid is. They now have an advantage over the top bidder in that they know what they are willing to spend on the item. They retract and then decide if they want to bid on the item again, usually with a snipe.
+1

Despicable.

There are so many reasons I use a sniper service. Until ebay changes ( which just is not going to happen, as they are making MORE money because of shills) I will never make anything more than a minimum bid prior to 5 seconds of the gavel drop.
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Old 02-07-2016, 08:01 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by D. Bergin View Post
It really is disgusting that Ebay lets this go on. Between shilling, the perception of shilling and straight up sabotaging of auctions, there's no reason they should allow more then a few genuine retractions a year from any particular bidder...and even that's giving the benefit of the doubt.
still ebay a LOOT better than auction house...if someone retracts a bid you know about it and you can get the seller to cancel the sale if you 'win' the item a lot easer with ebay then another AH where you don't even know that you are being shilled...plus if someone retracts a bid you may have enough time to retract your own bid as well...
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Old 02-07-2016, 09:07 AM
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still ebay a LOOT better than auction house...if someone retracts a bid you know about it and you can get the seller to cancel the sale if you 'win' the item a lot easer with ebay then another AH where you don't even know that you are being shilled...plus if someone retracts a bid you may have enough time to retract your own bid as well...

What if you're a seller and you have to deal with this dipsh*t behavior. As I've explained before, a lot of the time it isn't even a shilling situation. It's a bidding strategy to sabotage an auction.

Hell, even in non-retraction situations it's getting ridiculous out there. I had an item up several weeks ago that I'm convinced two bidders drove up to a very high level, with zero intention to pay, in order to drive up the realized price of something they already had in their collection.

Within a short time of the auction closing, both the first and second high bidders start trying to negotiate with me to sell them the piece at a fraction of what they originally bid on the item. I filed a non-paying strike and blocked the high bidder. I doubt there were any consequences to him however.

Meanwhile, I have two of the exact same item in the ended auction listings on Ebay, with two very different results, and to anybody doing the research, I'm probably the one who looks like the bad guy here.

There are zero repercussions for buyers with bad intentions.
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Old 02-07-2016, 09:19 AM
1952boyntoncollector 1952boyntoncollector is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by D. Bergin View Post
What if you're a seller and you have to deal with this dipsh*t behavior. As I've explained before, a lot of the time it isn't even a shilling situation. It's a bidding strategy to sabotage an auction.

Hell, even in non-retraction situations it's getting ridiculous out there. I had an item up several weeks ago that I'm convinced two bidders drove up to a very high level, with zero intention to pay, in order to drive up the realized price of something they already had in their collection.

Within a short time of the auction closing, both the first and second high bidders start trying to negotiate with me to sell them the piece at a fraction of what they originally bid on the item. I filed a non-paying strike and blocked the high bidder. I doubt there were any consequences to him however.

Meanwhile, I have two of the exact same item in the ended auction listings on Ebay, with two very different results, and to anybody doing the research, I'm probably the one who looks like the bad guy here.

There are zero repercussions for buyers with bad intentions.

understand....the seller better chance to get screwed on ebay, the buyer more chance to get screwed off ebay with better chance of shilling due to having zero information on who is bidding....sellers that have their cards shilled don't complain, its the buyers..

I do think ebay is tougher on buyers that don't pay then sellers doing all the questionable stuff that has long been discussed... of course buyers can start more and more new accounts..but we can block buyers on ebay with less than x amount of feedback

Last edited by 1952boyntoncollector; 02-07-2016 at 09:19 AM.
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