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Bidding Strangeness - More Probstein123
Don't get me wrong, I love that I finally won a nice T206 Hal Chase Trophy SGC 60 for what I believe to be a very good price last night - $170.50. But check this out....
05/25/2014 Same card sold for $252.00 to "O***B (945)" http://offer.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.d...p2047675.l2565 Last night, the same dude "O***B (945)" bid $135 for the same card I just won last night: http://offer.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.d...p2047675.l2565 And here's a kicker -- in the first auction in May, "O***B (945)" also started his bidding activity with a $135 bid. The easy money is on this being a shill. Frankly, I'd love to hear plausible alternative explanations. But, if it is indeed a shill, it certainly isn't a very good job. He left bids of $216.55 and $260 on the table from last time. Not sure there is anything formal to be done about this, but I would certainly take final prices seen in Probstein123 auctions with a grain of salt. And, I would adjust my final bids accordingly, as I did successfully in this case. Oh, and my name is P.au1 M.if5u.d. |
Never mind the man behind the curtain.
I'm willing to take wagers on how long it takes the usual apologists to defend yet another Probstein auction and about how these threads are useless because they "accomplish nothing". |
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Bidding on a probstein auction is like swimming with sharks...you may not get bitten...but there is a good chance you will! |
It certainly looks like the guy placed a bid on his own consignment. It's peculiar that he placed such a low amount that wouldn't have won the auction in any case. As if he wanted to still be a shilling jerk, but wanted to be a useless shilling jerk.
If you look at other items he's bid on it seems as though he placed a few other "safety" bids on Probstein auctions and didn't win any of them. I guess this is the risk of bidding in an auction :/ It would be interesting to know if this was a forum member. |
How do you see the other items he's bid on?
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At that price level, he was just bumping it along, not seriously shilling it.
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Probstein should be "Seller 10" on this list and you can see he placed a single bid on several items early in the auction and none of them won. If you want to find specific items you need to go to Probstein's completed listings (last night's listings aren't available at the time of this post). I have consigned with Probstein on a couple occasions and he will always lists/ends your items within a minute of each other. So, you can look at the completed listings immediately before the Hal Chase and immediately after and find the other items this particular person consigned. Then, you can find out if he shilled any of them (which his bid history indicates he might have). Once you know what cards he consigned and what cards he bought it may be fairly easy to find out the name of the person. Especially if they're all tobacco cards. Hopefully it isn't a forum member! |
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Now we're just categorizing degrees of crookery?:confused: |
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First off, very nice Chase. I saw that card last night and was going to bid until I saw it was Probstein. He had several really nice T206's but I just can't bear to bid on any of his auctions. For me, it's just the principle.
Mark |
I'm not trying to be an apologist for Probstein (although sometimes I am), but I try to look at it this way:
If I ran my own eBay consignment company that had 500-1000 auctions going off weekly and almost a million in sales quarterly how many of these questions would I honestly answer yes to? 1. I would myself or salary someone to check all completed auctions for suspicious bidding. 2. I would alert bidders/auction winners about suspicious bidding. 3. I would prevent cosigners I believe are shilling from consigning in the future. 4. I would prevent auction winners from immediately consigning their winnings with me. 5. I would not provide my top customers with additional information such as scans or opinions on which cards might be worth a crack and re-submit. Personally, 1. Probably not. It's a waste of time and resources to police a problem eBay poured gas on by instituting anonymous bidding. 2. Yes would be the ethical thing to say, but the can of worms opened in the process would probably be to much deal with. 3. The only question I could unequivocally agree I would do. 4. No, I'm in the business of selling cards and making money. 5. I would not go out of the way to do so, but if a customer who payed my mortgage the month before requested additional information I would make sure he/she received it. |
prob
I agree
how about...don't bid on his stuff..if your uncomfortable with it |
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6. Someone tells you what is happening with a specific auction and there is verifiable proof that a specific consignor has shill bid one or more auctions. Tom C |
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If he would do something about it, he would earn my respect and my business. Until then, I'll stay away from his auctions. |
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i get pissed off when i see a card i want is his.......i refuse to bid. This shilling , or "bumping along" is a violation of TOS and shenanigans like this are all too common place with old Proby. :mad:
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I feel for the OP who bought the card for more than 32% less than the last time Rick sold it....This criminal activity is so________, .
. Rightly or wrongly I like a bidding environment where a 32%+ lower price can be had in comparison to the previous sell through price. there were 4 other bidders who were higher than the consignors shill bid. Rick should let those who consign know that they should never bid on their own items. Seems obvious. Maybe I shouldn't have removed my name from the Legendary auction bidder and mailing list after all. It seems they were able to keep prices more stable:( |
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When on eBay, I bid the price I am willing to pay. Sometimes I win, a lot of times I don't. I pretty much assume every auction has shills - it is too easy to do, and difficult to police.
I have gotten some pretty sweet deals with Probstein. If the price is fair, the shipping safe and timely, and the goods as advertised, that is good enough for me. |
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Interesting issue, Larry |
When I worked at a local auction, some consigners would shill bid on items. For the auctioneer, who was a real honest guy, it was a helpless situation because the consigners were also buyers and to lose those customers on both ends in a small auction would have severely hurt. For bigger online auctions, I just don't understand why they don't have higher reserves, it would eliminate some of the more obvious shill bids
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Bidding Strangeness - More Probstein123
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This horse has been beat to death in previous threads, but you're missing the fact that shilling artificially increases "fair market value." Shilling frauds honest collectors both directly and indirectly. |
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I've purchased some cards from him and I have looked at who's bidding but seems I'm getting very reasonable prices and the shipping is super fast. Idk maybe I'm missing something here
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I don't doubt the evidence people have put forth regarding shill bidding in his auctions. I'm just saying that my experience was a good one. |
Call it whatever you want--safety bid, hidden reserve, shilling--it is all wrong, all criminal behavior. No different than what Mark Theotikos just pleaded guilty to doing. It hurts the winners of the inflated lots, it hurts the data compilers and commentators like me who rely on final values for market analysis, and it hurts the honest auctioneers who cannot compete with the results of shilled auctions when trying to lure consignments.
As far as I am concerned Probstein is no different than a fence. Just because he isn't doing the stealing himself--just providing a ready market for the crooks to operate in while he turns a blind eye to the thievery even when it is brought to his attention--doesn't relieve him of culpability. Or let me put it another way: as one of the biggest sellers on eBay, do you really believe that Probstein could not complain to eBay about these shenanigans and get some real action on this issue, get some bidders banned, perhaps even convince eBay that it needs to push the FBI to open a criminal investigation? But he won't as long as the bidders keep bidding and the money keeps churning. He'll just shrug and say he is powerless while all the while profiting from the illegality. And there is the key to it all: you want change, don't ask for it from the people who profit from the fraud, hit them where it hurts instead: stop doing business with people whose business ethics sicken you. We shouldn't be seeing any more of these "I bid with Probstein; look at the shilling" threads. And this is not a specific shot at the OP, so please don't take it that way, more a general observation that no one who cares about Probstein's auction issues has any business doing business with him. |
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