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  #1  
Old 01-16-2017, 10:36 AM
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Snapolit1 Snapolit1 is offline
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Default Just don't get it with some sellers

Maybe someone could explain to me the logic behind this.
Let's assume a fairly obscure but not impossible to find card. From the 1920s. The last 3 sales on eBay were in the neighborhood of $700-800 for the card Authentic. Now there are 4 cards listed, all As, all about the same. 3 of them are appx. $850, but accept offers. The 4th is listed for $1800. Same condition.

I realize some people really don't want to sell a card, and list it at some dream price in case lightning strikes. The "I don't want to see my house but if someone rings the bell and offers me a million dollars for it of course it's for sale" routine.

But why take the time and expense of listing some for 2x what three or four other people are selling for? What are hoping for. It's just going to sit right? And the seller in the case I ran into last week was a sophisticated seller, someone whose name has been bandied about here in the past. I just don't see the plan with this kind of listing.

Last edited by Snapolit1; 01-16-2017 at 10:38 AM.
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  #2  
Old 01-16-2017, 12:17 PM
mattjc1983 mattjc1983 is offline
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At least if it's a rare enough card, it won't get drowned out in 100's of other listings for the same thing. What classic is when people way overpriced when there are hundreds or thousands of an item, where price is obviously going to be a huge differentiating factor.


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  #3  
Old 01-16-2017, 01:52 PM
Spike Spike is offline
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For scarce-to-rare cards, sellers with high eBay asking prices might be based on what they're asking elsewhere. I've seen Amazon sellers ask clearly too-high prices for sports cards, where they don't have the same competition (or educated audience) for listings.

One example: on Amazon, there are three E94 Close Candy cards listed and the "cheapest" is $1100+. Back on eBay, many E94 cards are $200 and under...including the same $1100 card. If someone goes looking for cards on Amazon, it looks like the most affordable when it's several times what an educated collector could find. But if you don't know that eBay is the deeper sports marketplace, you might think $1100 is an OK price.
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Old 01-16-2017, 02:11 PM
hangman62 hangman62 is offline
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Default waste

It a total waste of time is what it is !!
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Old 01-16-2017, 02:33 PM
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It's a waste of time to complain about it on a message board.
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  #6  
Old 01-16-2017, 02:50 PM
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ramram ramram is offline
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It's an inexpensive museum for people to show off what they've got. Not the place to be doing it as far as I'm concerned. Makes searches very frustrating.

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  #7  
Old 01-17-2017, 08:08 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by swarmee View Post
It's a waste of time to complain about it on a message board.
OMG !! Amen !!
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Old 01-17-2017, 01:06 PM
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glchen glchen is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Snapolit1 View Post
Maybe someone could explain to me the logic behind this.
Let's assume a fairly obscure but not impossible to find card. From the 1920s. The last 3 sales on eBay were in the neighborhood of $700-800 for the card Authentic. Now there are 4 cards listed, all As, all about the same. 3 of them are appx. $850, but accept offers. The 4th is listed for $1800. Same condition.

I realize some people really don't want to sell a card, and list it at some dream price in case lightning strikes. The "I don't want to see my house but if someone rings the bell and offers me a million dollars for it of course it's for sale" routine.

But why take the time and expense of listing some for 2x what three or four other people are selling for? What are hoping for. It's just going to sit right? And the seller in the case I ran into last week was a sophisticated seller, someone whose name has been bandied about here in the past. I just don't see the plan with this kind of listing.
As an ebay seller myself, I think sellers have a lot of different strategies on how they price their cards. Many times, they don't even compare what other sellers are selling that same card for on ebay. They might not have the time to compare or don't care. For example, they may just take the purchase price of the card for them, and then add a 50% markup to it, so that after ebay/paypal fees, it will still net out to a profit for them. If the card is the only card on ebay for that condition, they might put a high price on it, hoping that someone who really wants it, will bite.

Another factor is that the same condition for a card can vary greatly, if that makes sense. For example, a VG card can have a huge crease across the middle or it could be a beautiful card with just a speck of paper loss on the back. Therefore, the seller might price higher based upon perceived eye appeal for the card even if VCP for that card in that grade shows much lower average prices.

In addition, not everyone that buys on ebay are collectors. A lot of folks who buy on ebay are just buying cards as gifts. I've been on ebay selling for 6-7 years, mainly just prewar cards, and I've had around 1700 unique buyers. Many of the people who buy from me are collectors that I've heard of, but others just seem to be one-offs where they are buying cards for friends or family members. If they see a 100 year old card for $20, they may think that is a perfectly reasonable price for something that old, and not realize that others are selling that same card for $5.

Another possibility is that the seller is putting up a high price on ebay in hopes that you will contact him so that the purchase can occur off-ebay for a lower price and so that he can avoid the ebay fees that go along with it. Basically, fishing for an offer.

Finally, as mentioned, the card could just be in his personal collection where he is not planning on selling that card. However, he just slaps that huge price where "if somebody wants to offer me $X, then it's a no brainer that I got to sell it." That price may have no price in reality, but that's just the price the seller decided.
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