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Old Yesterday, 11:59 AM
Huysmans Huysmans is offline
Br.ent So.bie
 
Join Date: Aug 2014
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jayshum View Post
The 0% commission referred to is saying that the seller is not paying any commission to the auction house so they keep whatever the high bid is. However, the argument that was made is that when an auction house has a 23% BP, if the high bid is $4000 then the final selling price is really $4920, but the seller only gets $4000 and the auction house keeps $920.

On eBay, if a consignment company charges 5% of the high bid, if the high bid is $4920 (same as the selling price with the auction house including the BP), then the seller gets $4674 (95% of $4920) and the consignment company gets $246 (5% of $4920).

In the 2 cases above, the card is selling for $4920. One is a high bid plus BP (auction house) while the other is just a high bid (consignment house on eBay). When comparing the above outcomes, the seller is getting $4674 from the consignment company selling the card on eBay versus $4000 from the auction house.
These are not equal comparisons. Both you and Ben are comparing a closing bid of $4,000.00 with the auction house, to a closing bid of $4,920 on Ebay. Honestly, can you not see the difference??

IF the closing bid for both the auction house and eBay is $4,920.00, which is all that matters in making a fair comparison, the seller with the auction house and a 0% commission fee gets $4,920. The eBay seller pays 5% commission which is $246.00, for a net total of $4,674.00 to the seller.

You're comparing two DIFFERENT high bid totals. You don't add the buyer's premium INTO the high bid, it's added ON TOP of the high bid. Of course the buyer will get more for a card that sells for a HIGH BID of $4,920 on eBay, compared to a card that sells for a HIGH BID of $4,000.00 at an auction house. I don't know how to better spell it out.
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