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#1
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Posted By: Yankeefan51
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#2
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Posted By: leon
Thanks for the update. We appreciate it... |
#3
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Posted By: Josh Adams
Cool items. |
#4
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Posted By: barrysloate
Sotheby's is allowed to place book bids on behalf of consignors who request reserves. While I know collectors don't like it, it's not really shilling. It's in the rules. But it's true you don't know whether there's a real body you are bidding against. |
#5
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Posted By: Ryan Christoff
Barry, |
#6
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Posted By: leon
My belief is a shill is under the table and a "book" bid would be above table....Sothebys and Heritage both allow these above table bids. It's debatable but I am not sure I am opposed to being open about this stuff. Otherwise, how many friends of consignors are bidding on their friends stuff "underhandedly"? Again, not sure which I prefer but I do see the legitimate "it's ok" side...as well as the other side that says "no" it's unacceptable......regards |
#7
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Posted By: barrysloate
Exactly. When you go to Sotheby's you know that they are allowed to place a bid that may be a real bid or may be one that protects the consignor. I'm not saying it's anyone's favorite practice, but they are abiding by New York State auction law. |
#8
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Posted By: Jay
Seems to me that this is a matter of semantics. In either case someone is protecting their interests with undisclosed bids. It should always be legal or always illegal. As long as bidders only bid what they are willing to pay I do not see it as a problem. |
#9
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Posted By: barrysloate
Jay- I agree that on some level it's an odious practice, and it's pretty frustrating when you are sitting there and the auctioneer is crying bids and you don't see anyone's hand raised, but the law allows it. So what can you do? |
#10
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
..... |
#11
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Posted By: barrysloate
Sotheby's has gotten in enough hot water in the past that I would assume they are careful to play by the rules. |
#12
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Posted By: JimB
Do they make it clear when the house is bidding and when it is an actual customer? This seems quite important to me. |
#13
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Posted By: Jay
Jim--I believe that the answer is no. You see the house bidding but you don't know if it was the highest bid on the book being executed or a reserve bid. |
#14
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Posted By: leon
I have been to Heritage Live auctions and you don't know if it's the house or not. My guess is any auction house wouldn't disclose that info.....though I abslotulely would like to know..... |
#15
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Book bidding, bids by the auction house on behalf of the consignor to bring the bidding up to the secret reserve, is nothing less than legalized fraud. It's whole premise is to induce prospective bidders to believe that there is real interest at those bids, in the hope that human nature will take over and somebody will want something even more by believing others want it. Like so many things in our society, what is legal often depends on who has the most powerful lobby, not the merits of the position. |
#16
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Posted By: barrysloate
While Corey carried the negative aspects of the reserve book bidding to the next level, it's true that when you are sitting in the audience it all happens so fast that you can never be sure if anybody is bidding, but you still get some sense of whether the bids are real. Also, when the auctioneer bangs the hammer, he then declares "sold" or "pass." Of course, if you get caught up and overpay for the lot it doesn't matter at that point. |
#17
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Posted By: Richard Masson
Book bidding to a reserve is not "legalized fraud" if it is properly disclosed. Consigning anything significant to a live auction without a reasonable reserve would be just plain stupid. The auction house bids the reserve against the audience until it is met, then hopes there is more than one bidder. If the price is too high to the buyer, don't bid. If the price is not high enough for the seller, don't sell. How is that unfair? |
#18
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Posted By: barrysloate
But despite the low starting bids in our hobby, there are very few bargains and more often than not lots get incredible bidding. So it seems like a pretty good system. |
#19
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Posted By: bruce Dorskind
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#20
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
in our hobby, some auction houses allow bidding on house accounts, even though the auctions are not live. Don't know if thats on behalf of the consignors or what criteria is used. |
#21
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Posted By: Ryan Christoff
Sorry, but a "book bid" is absolute crap. Please explain to me how that could possibly be considered "above table" and different from the consignor having a friend bid on one of his items to drive the price up? The "reserve" price in the book bid system is simply the level at which the consignor tells his friend (in this case the auction house) to stopping artificially driving the price up. |
#22
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Exactly what does the auction house disclose that makes it fair? They don't tell you the reserve, only that by law that it cannot be higher than the low-end estimate. They don't announce when reciting a book bid on behalf of the consignor words to the effect -- "Hey everyone, this is not a bid from a real bidder, only a bid on behalf of the consignor". If they disclosed that, then I would agree that proper disclosure was made. |
#23
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Posted By: leon
Personally I don't care for house bids either but I do have one question for you. You seem upset about house bids. Did you read the rules? |
#24
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Posted By: DD
I have been to many live auctions over the past 30 years. I also used to work for an auction house. I believe I have seen shill bidders in the audience at some auctions, and also know auctioneers that have driven up the price themselves if they have a feeling that the 2 or more bidders will go higher; sometimes they end up buying the item if the audience drops out. |
#25
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Posted By: barrysloate
If you think our hobby is bad, you should see the hoops Sotheby's and Christie's have to jump through to get great art collections. |
#26
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Posted By: bruce Dorskind
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#27
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Posted By: Richard Masson
If Sotheby's auction procedures upset you, then you should see what goes on at thoroughbred racehorse auctions. The consignor can set a low reserve and then sit in the audience and bid, or set a higher reserve and have multiple parties make bids up to the reserve to give the appearance of a spirited auction. Everyone knows the game is played that way. The risk the consignor needs to be aware of is the risk of not selling if he gets stuck with the high bid. |
#28
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Posted By: barrysloate
What is a "blue box?" I've never heard that term before. |
#29
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Posted By: barrysloate
Richard- Sotheby's has a bank of telephones, and a large percentage of bids come in that way. More often than not it pays to watch the people answering the phone to see if real bids are coming in. |
#30
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Posted By: MVSNYC
"Blue Box" is a reference to Tiffany's and their brilliant packaging scheme. |
#31
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Posted By: barrysloate
Got it. I'm more a "five-and-ten" kind of guy. |
#32
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Posted By: Bob
I'm with Ryan, shill bidding is shill bidding. Period. Just because it goes on all the time doesn't make it right whether it's an auction house or ebay or Moe's card shop. I also agree that you should only bid what you are prepared to pay but it still steams me when the co-signor's "buddies" are screwing around with the bids. I have consigned to numerous auction houses from Mastro on down and never, ever contacted anyone about bidding items up for me. It's just not right. I don't like auctions where the house bids on items for people who may be legit or maybe phantoms but I guess I'll just grumble and bitch because I don't know anyway around it... |
#33
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Posted By: Richard Masson
I find a distinction between shill bidding and the house bidding up to the consignor's reserve. I am primarily a buyer and know that it is not in my best interest; I just don't have a quarrel with the format and the practice if everyone knows how the game works. |
#34
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
You say: "I just don't have a quarrel with the format and the practice if everyone knows how the game works." |
#35
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Posted By: barrysloate
Corey- all your points are well taken but what you are omitting is the consignment perspective. Without all of these built in guarantees, consignors would walk. I know you will respond that if none of the auction houses placed book bids, then every one would be on an even playing field. But if one offers ironclad protection and the other doesn't, then the "honest" auction house will go out of business, and all the great consignments will go elsewhere. |
#36
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
The issue is not about offering ironclad protection. That can be done simply by announcing the reserve and starting the bidding at that level. The issue is about a profit-maximizing auction house's perception that book bidding to protect the reserve maximizes profits, both by inducing consignors to consign with them and knowing that however distasteful bidders feel about the practice, they'll still bid. So, yes, you're quite correct that unless and until the practice is outlawed, no auction house will discontinue the practice. But there's your answer, the law should be changed. But I'm not naive enough to believe that is going to happen anytime soon. |
#37
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Posted By: bruce Dorskind
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#38
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Posted By: mr. moses
the greatest prices realized are those inflated by a ghost bidder for the betterment of man. A great gesture on their part that speaks to the nature of the beast. They can't protect your consignor with a reserve that is not designed to get a SINGLE bidder to the level of expectation without using a subtle disclaimer that exists in the fine print but often gets lost on someone actively bidding on an item? Two interested parties will presumably bring it to the level necessary. Granted if there is a single bidder willing to surpass the inferred (but actual) limit; the consignor and auction house would benefit from a house bid which is the reason for the contract in the first place. I just think that the auction house should have to disclose it every time they bid for the house. Today's buyer's are tomorrow's sellers. We are as a group becoming more astute and asking more questions. Probably won't make a difference anywhere for now but who knows how people and business begins to respond to anything. Money. Fear of losing it. |
#39
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Posted By: Anonymous
I'm not sure what else can be said. Don't bid more than what you are willing to pay and if you have a need to make sure the underbid is real, don't bid on anything at auction and only buy items later that don't meet their reserves (a perfectly viable alternative). |
#40
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Posted By: David Smith
To all concerned, |
#41
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Posted By: MVSNYC
any word on the gehrig jersey? sale price? |
#42
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
So what you're saying is that if book bidding to protect the reserve is outlawed, Mr. and Mrs. Hedge Fund will feel the auction process, being now more transparent and less manipulative, will not generate an exceedingly fair enough price for their magnificent works of art, and they therefore will choose not to sell. They will then become very unhappy and, through use of their financial power, take their wrath out on New York City, financial capital of America as well as home to the world's largest auction houses, thus resulting in a nation-wide recession/depression. |
#43
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Posted By: Sean C
Thanks for the update! Live auctions are always a lot of fun. Who did you go with to it? |
#44
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Posted By: Cobby33
If these people don't want to "scare people away," they need to come to grips with the downside of consigning to an auction house with no minimum bid/reserve and take what they can get, even if it's $.99. There's a reason certain items don't go over $.99. People who participate in these major auctions are sophisticated enough to not be "scared away" by a reasonable minimum bid/reserve. |
#45
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Posted By: barrysloate
This is a very interesting discussion, and I agree with Richard that if every bidder set a maximum and stopped there, the shilling would disappear. But the auction world doesn't work that way. |
#46
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Posted By: Alan
Well said Barry !!! |
#47
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
Corey is obviously right -- however, as in any other business, auction houses are concerned with one thing: money. And until the laws change which permit this sort of activity, they will do all that they can to maximize their takes no matter the collateral damage to bidders, society, etc. |
#48
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Posted By: Richard Masson
No, Corey is not obviously right, and of course an AUCTION (where the only thing at issue is price)is only about money. Full disclosure of reserves in advance and no book bidding is better for buyers and worse for consignors. Book bidding with no disclosure is worse for buyers and better for consignors. Who is to say one should be preferred over the other? Auction houses work for consignors, therefore there is book bidding. |
#49
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Posted By: Cobby33
"There is no "right" answer here, unless it is simply that the rules need to be disclosed and understood in advance. " |
#50
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Posted By: leon
Unfortunately we always come back to some things. "Cards" trump almost everything. If xyz Auction House has them it doesn't really matter what xyz has done, to most people. Collectors will bid. Some will have high principles and not do business with a certain company but our addiction overrides most other things....This is certainly debatable but, from experience, this is the way it is....I know there will be a handful that disagree and say "OH, but I would NEVER buy from them for this or that reason". And no doubt there are a few that won't but everyone else will.....How many folks (myself included) bid in the MemoryLane Auctions after all the crap came out about the owners history? As I have said I don't like the house bids but they are what they are. Set a number to go to and don't go farther.... regards |
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