Quote:
Originally Posted by bnorth
I believe you are confused because the real winning bid through the AH isn't $4000. It is the total of the actual price the winner pays including the BP.
I see it this way if the consignor isn't also hit with a sellers fee from AH.
Card sells for $5K on eBay so after fees(5%) seller gets $4750. 5% of $5K is $250.
Card sells for $5K at AH. Seller gets $4065 after the AH takes the BP(23%) from the real sale price($5K) the buyer paid. The $4065 is the "winning"(LOL) bid before the 23% buyers premium is added to the real selling price the buyer paid.
If I am wrong someone please post the math. To be clear I do not care how the AH tries to add confusing fees to get more cash from the consignor or trick buyers into bidding more than they thought. As long as I know the numbers up front I am good.
|
The buyer's premium isn't SUBTRACTED from the winning bid, it's ADDED.
So, if the bid total is $5,000.00 at auction end, the buyer's premium of 23% is ADDED to this total, not SUBTRACTED as in your example. So the buyer would pay a total of $6,150.00 as I previously mentioned.
The consignor - if paying no fees as was the original example given - receives $5000.00, which was the total of bidding at auction end.
Think about it logically, if the winning bid at the end of the auction is $5,000.00, and the consignor pays 0% commission, how could he possible end up with $4,000.00, as in the example of the original poster. 0 is 0 no?? not 20% ??
So again, the buyer's premium is ADDED to the final hammer price, it is not taken from it.