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Old 11-15-2023, 08:00 AM
hcv123 hcv123 is offline
Howard Chasser
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Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: NY
Posts: 3,562
Default Tough question

1) I know for a fact that when a reserve is set, it does not automatically mean the consignor pays if the item doesn't sell - just another potential point of negotiation.

2) As a bidder I am generally dissuaded by reserves and have "moved past" some items with them. I believe when reserves are set too high (like in the case of the Young you mentioned) it hurts the item and potential sale. It almost becomes a "make me sell it" price, rather than a "what the market will bear" auction.

3) As a consignor (I admittedly consign very little), I understand the temptation in some cases to ask for a reserve and have done it a couple of times. While the items did sell, I was not really happy with the outcomes. More times I have sold without reserve and outside of a single instance of gross mishandling of an item by an auction house, have not been disappointed. I think the largest risk of no reserve is with cards with low demand - auctions depend on a fight.

4) I am still perplexed at collectors seeming infatuation with auction houses for a large majority of the items that get sold there. For cards with a good supply and an easily established "market price", an educated collector could get more $$ consigning privately (shameless plug), or the same $$ selling outright to a reputable dealer wanting said card(s) for their inventory.
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I have been a Net 54 member since 2009 and have an Ebay store since 1998 https://www.ebay.com/usr/favorite_things

Cards for sale: https://www.flickr.com/photos/185900663@N07/albums

I am actively buying and selling vintage sports cards graded and raw. Feedback as a buyer: https://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=297262

I am accepting select private consignments of quality vintage cards (raw or graded) and collecting "want" lists for higher end ($1K+) vintage cards.
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