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Bidding above the BIN
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Thought this was fun.
There was a card for auction with a BIN that I was willing to pay. But I was also feeling cheap and thought I'd try to win it in the auction and save a few bucks. Auction ended late at night, so I went to set a snipe rather than stay up late. But I realized that once you've decided that you're not going to hit the BIN, that it has a BIN is irrelevant to your decision. The rational thing to do is to just bid whatever you're willing to pay for the card. So I put in my snipe above the BIN price. I figured that I would win it for less than that, but if I'm not going to use the buy-it-now option, it doesn't make sense to bid less than what it's worth to me. Anyways, I woke up the next morning to find that I'd won the card for a nickel above the BIN price. I suspect that the underbidder and seller woke up the next morning and were confused. And being cheap cost me a nickel. |
At least it only cost you a nickel. I have done that also and ended up paying WAY more than my cheap ass would have paid by hitting the BIN.
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There are some auctions I spot with way-under-market BINs right as they're listed, that I would feel guilty if I bought and actually purchased at that price. So I bid the minimum on the item to get rid of the BIN and then let the seller be pleasantly surprised when it sells for a price 10x what they set the bid for.
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I’ve bid over BIN price several times,
each time eBay will remind me I’ve bid more than BIN, am I sure I don’t just want to BIN. No, I don’t and all three times I’ve won the card for less than the BIN because no one else bid it up.
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An item I was watching on eBay sat with a $180 BIN for over a month. The seller then just listed it as an auction starting at $9.99. It ended last night at $225. That's the power of auctions on some folks!
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How about this one?
Yesterday I saw a card offered on eBay with a BIN of $99.99. That was a good, but not jaw-dropping, price. I would have paid it, but as a Chicago resident, as of Jan. 1 I'm paying 10.25% tax on every. single. card. I buy, thanks to our politicians. So I offered $90 to offset that. Figured it would either get accepted or a counter at $95, and done deal. Or, of course, someone could pull the trigger on the BIN. What I did not expect was to see an email that the card had sold at $87. I contacted the seller to ask if he got my (higher) offer. Yeah, he said - but the other guy offered first, and they were close enough, so I just sold it to him. Fair enough, I responded, but I hope you can understand how that's frustrating from a buyer's perspective. He said he understood that it wasn't logical, but essentially that's what I get for not taking the BIN. "You left it in the judge's hands." OK, but so did the other guy, and you rewarded him for making the lower offer?? |
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I've had the complete opposite happen. It's happened twice but the first time it was only like a $10 difference. So there was a modern card I wanted for a front color run. The seller listed the card as an auction with a best offer. He started the auction I think at 99 cents. I made an offer of $200 that lasted for 48 hours. I got no response from the seller and the 48 hours ran out and the card still had no bids. So a day passed and still no bids. So I made a second offer for $200 again for 48 hours. Still no response but then 40 hours into my second offer, someone placed a bid, so it canceled my offer. So it's already 5 days into a 7 day auction. I placed a last second bid of $150 on the card and won it for $90. I'm sure the seller was not feeling too happy while packaging up the card to send to me. I didn't feel bad about the situation because I made 2 very fair offers that I felt the card was worth, based on similar card sales.
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