Quote:
Originally Posted by rand1com
What you see pictured here IS the contract in my opinion.
It is pretty clear that the consignor gets 60% of the hammer and additionally 60% of the buyer premium based on Steve's note.
So, if the hammer is $100K, he gets $72K minus his 60% of the authentication fees which could be substantial.
I doubt any other auction house would have done any better on the cut based on what is likely a very unorganized collection with little authentication and hundreds of hours of work involved.
Ebay takes 12.35% with the seller doing all of the work.
Sure, you give an auction house 5 items worth $100K they will be happy to give you the hammer and half of the BP as they make $10K for a few hours of work. Do that 100 times equals a million dollar take for probably less time than this collection will take to process and sell.
I know Steve Verkman well and he has always been very fair in my dealings with him.
You would have to know the actual volume and contents of the collection to make an intelligent evaluation of what is a fair deal to the consignor.
If you offered to sell outright a collection like this one that was worth $100K on the back end to any auction house, you would be very fortunate to get $50K for it. He will do much better in this scenario.
There truly are two sides to every story and we have almost no information on either of them but Steve has been in this hobby for 35 years or so and has a record to stand on that I trust based on 30+ years of experience dealing with him.
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The contract says no additional fees so if there are significant costs for grading or authentication, those apparently are being paid from the 40% that the auction house is getting which does make the fee seem more reasonable.