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Originally Posted by raulus
Sorry to hear about those issues, Howard.
I was going to add a snarky note that I hoped you were bidding on the same stuff that I was bidding on, so that I could get it for a better price.
But I suspect in this auction we were probably in on different stuff. If for no reason other than the bid increments on the stuff I was bidding on were still in the $25 or $50 range.
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Thanks Nicolo. Appreciate the refrain from snarky note as I'm quite bothered about what happened. Definitely sounds like in on different stuff! Hope you got some of what you were after.
Quote:
Originally Posted by samosa4u
I've had this happen to me maybe once or twice - it sucks. Last night I had no issues though. I bid with like 3 seconds remaining on one item - I couldn't make up my mind - and it went through just fine.
I wouldn't stress over it. Whatever you wanted will likely show up in their next auction (and the auction after that ...) People are dumping like crazy.
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Thank you for the encouragement. Sadly what I was bidding on will almost assuredly not only not show up in their next auction, but perhaps not show up again in my lifetime. That said, I expect within a day or so I will no longer be stressing about it. Things not working the way they are "supposed to" are a pet peeve. Wouldn't bother me 1 bit if I had simply been outbid and unwilling to bid higher.
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Originally Posted by parkplace33
Howard, sorry to hear this. Your note about your consignment is the third such statement I have seen about this REA auction (other two were on other social media sites). Maybe the larger lots got all the attention?
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I have commented numerous times how I am amazed at how many romanticize auctions and consigning to them. For every lot that achieves a record price, I suspect there are 50-100+ that sell at or below "market". How a company positions and describes the lot is such a critical part of the process. I have consigned items probably about 2 dozen times to different houses - the only times I have been impressed with the results were when the items were positioned and described well. The big houses today imo are like the equivalent of baseball card puppy mills - just pushing as much product through as possible with little regard for all but the "Morehouse Ruth's", Wagners, Planks, etc.
Part of the market softness in the places where it is soft is due in part to the fact that during Covid all the larger auction houses (and many of the smaller ones) increased dramatically the number of auctions they were running.