Quote:
Originally Posted by jayshum
For a live auction to be like eBay, there would have to be a list of times that every item ended at. As others have pointed out, that's not how they work. Yes, there's a time that a lot actually ends, but it's not predetermined because someone can always place another bid before the auctioneer declares a lot sold. Until then, you don't truly know when the lot will close.
Earlier you complained about shill bidders. That's a big reason why people don't want to place a maximum bid early then hope it holds up because they suspect someone else may just bid them up with no real intention of winning the auction. Having extended bidding gives a bidder the chance to keep bidding if they want to without having to place their maximum bid a lot sooner than necessary. While every auction house has their own rules, it usually doesn't take much effort to figure out when a lot is closing. Every auction I bid in shows the amount of time left for each individual lot, and it gets updated accordingly based on the rules of the auction if/when someone places another bid either on the lot or on another lot if the entire auction closes at the same time.
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You know exactly when a lot is sold, and it is predetermined, not by a specific time, but a specific procedure for all, the same way, lot after lot. The high bidder wins by the exact same procedure.
A live auction can be over at the same time for every lot. You put your best bid in on 30 items and pray. Extending time won't help that if you get out bid anyway. If bidder A has a max bid of 10k will it change if the hammer drops at a set time vs adding time if bidder B puts in a bid for 11K? The winning bid will always be the highest bid.
May as well just start the auction and let people bid until no one bids again in a 30 minute period. Don't set a end time then extend it. Wouldn't that be the same result? To me you set a deadline then break it without clear cut understanding of how things work. That's what the main discussion is.
In my scenario it was a reserve auction that started at a buck and the shill bidder got the cards to the reserve they wanted. To me just start the bids at your reserve. They didn't try to out bid anyone passed the reserve. The people that hit the reserve won as long as no other bidder bid. The shill bidder knew what to push.
Ebay is kind of a unicorn anyway. They have multiple ways to the same end for both seller and buyer. You can even negotiate a price not listed. It's an auction and garage sale all in one. If you like the BIN price you can end it or you can take a risk and put in an opening bid and hope you win at the end and everything in-between.
The worst type of auction I've been involved in are silent auctions.