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#1
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Posted By: leon
I have done it myself, when I could, since most people now feel compelled to try to close down auctions....but has anyone noticed the greatly increased amount of ebay auctions getting shut down to sell before auction end, recently? There are really some stupid sellers out there !! My guess is only 1 in 10 got more by closing early to someone that really wanted something. I used to hate it. Now I just join in..... |
#2
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Posted By: Judge Dred (Fred)
Leon, |
#3
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Posted By: leon
PrewarSports, Rhett or Rhys, just posted two Holmes to Homes cards on the BST pages that I was tracking last week.....with fairly large bids in the cover.....and they got shut down. Not blaming anyone but there was also a Red Cross box recently, the Victorian KBats deal, etc etc.....just more than normal, so it seems.... |
#4
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Posted By: Jim Manos
God forbid... We should crucify someone else for it, like everyone does me. It is a dog eat dog world out there. I agree with Leon. Only in my words, "Your not suppose to go over the speed limit, but everyone does." Different strokes for different folk's. Good luck. |
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Posted By: Joann
I agree though that it seems like a LOT lately. It won't change until ebay decides it's losing too many fees and finds a way to limit it. Maybe allow each id one or two freebies for legit mistakes and after that hammer sellers with high fees for closing early. But really that's the only way it will change. |
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Posted By: rhys
Before this gets out of hand I want to say one thing. |
#7
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
I noted one the other day from the vintage memorabilia board on a Mickey Mantle glove with the original box. I don't know why the seller ended it early because this beauty was up to $1200 after just one day on ebay. Probably see it in a Mastro auction soon....right along with that Harry Wright Cabinet that disappeared a few months back. |
#8
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Posted By: Joe D.
if there are no bids on an item... it seems fair enough. |
#9
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Posted By: Chris Bland
If someone listed a legit Baltimore News Babe Ruth in an obscure section of ebay, 99% of us would try to get it ended if we saw it. When we miss out it is irritating, but when it works, we all love that it did!!! |
#10
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
Over the course of a couple of months last year, there were a couple of '38 Goudeys that I needed on ebay that mysteriously ended early. Ever since then, whenever there's a '38 Goudey on ebay that would be an upgrade for me, unless the auction description specifically states "I will not end auctions early", I contact the seller and ask if he/she would end it early for the right offer. |
#11
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Posted By: leon
You are one of the good guys....I should have asked first but they really weren't that important to me..No big deal..I used to feel the same way as you, about not asking, then we had the thread a long time ago about it, and I changed my mind. If you are going to fight you might as well throw the first punch. I don't think shutting auctions down should be allowed at all...but they can be and are...so might as well join in..........btw, there are at least 1-2 known without back damage or trimming.. |
#12
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Posted By: T E
As an eBay merchant (hoofaway) I never end an auction early. When I get a request to end an auction early, it makes me smile, because I KNOW the ending price will be higher than the offer. |
#13
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Posted By: Cat
I too was tracking the Holmes to Home cards. After contacting the seller with the following question" "Will you be relisting the card?" This is the reponse that I received (shown below). Did someone on the board buy this card? Was it someone on the board that was selling the card? |
#14
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Posted By: Cat
After checking the B/S/T things are far more clear now. f-----g b---s--t |
#15
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Posted By: Richard
Just to clarify the Red Cross Box that Leon is referring to as well, I settled on a price with the seller prior to any bids being placed. In addition, the sale was completed with a Buy it Now. |
#16
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Posted By: paulstratton
I still think sellers are stupid for doing this but can't say I blame them if they don't know what they have. Doesn't it seem like this kind of thing is limited to pre-war baseball items? I do find some of the offers rather humorous though. Especially the one's that say "Will you end this auction early for $100?" Um...NO. |
#17
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
I guess the moral of the story here is to get a second ebay ID that nobody on the board knows and throw in a bid early so you guys won't try to get the seller to end early? |
#18
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Posted By: Russ Bright
it CAN backfire in some instances, but rarely. I had a card selling for 300 buy it now OR best offer. I had an offer for 225. then 200. than an offer for 150. I let time run out and it didn't sell, and i'm out 60 dollars in Ebay selling fees. I'll just have to wait for basketball season to start to sell my Bird/Magic rookie... |
#19
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Posted By: barrysloate
It's interesting that no one would even dare ask an auction house to sell a lot outright from their catalog, but on ebay it is the thing to do. I think that if a seller lists something he is making a commitment to see the auction through. But ebay doesn't care and as Leon said at the outset sellers almost always give things away when they shut down. |
#20
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Like they say "all is fair in love and war" |
#21
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Posted By: Steve M.
I see an item on an upcoming auction. Let's say it's the T212 Obak Weaver on Huggins. Would I not dare email the auction house and ask it to ask the consiginor if he/she might be willing to withdraw the item and sell it to me outright for $3,000. Doesn't the auction house have an obligation to the consignor to pass along the offer? Keep in mind that the auction has not opened and no bids have been placed. |
#22
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Posted By: Jeff O
The one thing that is often conveniently ignored in these discussions is eBay. They don't get the fees they are rightfully entitled to when the seller pulls his auction and sells offline. I've heard all the excuses before - their fees are too high, they have the only game in town, they're a big company, etc. It's all crap. I'm always amazed at how many people are willing to commit "soft fraud" againt major corporations. The seller enters into a contract with eBay when he lists his item, and if he takes it down to sell offline to someone and doesn't pay eBay their fees, he's breaking the contract. |
#23
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Posted By: runscott
Leon, it sucks - I can't tell you how many times I've had items on my watch list that someone talked the seller into ending the auction early. I'm just getting back into cards and it's not easy - most of you haven't taken a break, so you probably haven't noticed how absurd things have gotten over the last five years. |
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Posted By: Jeff Lowe
Finally see an item of interest and again the greed machine strikes . I wont end an auction early for any amount of money . Shame people never learn . |
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#26
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Posted By: Brad
I was going to bid nice money on this one! |
#27
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Posted By: Josh K.
Jeff O - um, not exactly. if a seller lists a card on ebay he pays an insertion fee - that fee is non-refundable and is payment for ebay's agreement to list the card. If, and only if, the card sells, ebay receives a second fee - the final value fee. This fee is contingent upon the item selling. There is absolutely nothing that legally prohibits the seller from taking down an auction (i.e. deciding he no longer wishes to sell his card on ebay). Its irrelevant that the seller later sells the card off line. |
#28
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Posted By: sagard
Sellers don't always get the same money when they leave items to run their course on Ebay. There are legit buyers who will make a very strong offer on a card, but refuse to get in a bidding war for that same card. When that occurs the seller actually may lose by not taking the offer. |
#29
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Posted By: barrysloate
Josh- ebay does get a listing fee either way but it is next to nothing. I can list a card worth say $1000 and often my listing fee is like $1.70. But if I sell it, then I think they get something like $20. These are just estimates but clearly they make their money from the selling end. The listing is nominal. |
#30
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Posted By: T E
If you list an item for $1,000, you pay about $5, assuming you are using the usual-gallery, etc. If you list an item for $100 with a reserve of $1,000, you pay about $15. |
#31
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Posted By: barrysloate
But you wouldn't dare call Mastro or REA or Leland's in the middle of one of their auctions and ask them if they would sell you a lot outright. Nobody would even have the nerve to do that. So why then is it perfectly acceptable on ebay? |
#32
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Posted By: T E
Of course what Barry is saying is true if you are savy as a seller and know that an item is goin g to hit $1,000. Then you can list the item for .99 cents starting bid. Then your fee is under a dollar. But when I have a $1K item, I spend the extra $20 and feature it, anyway. |
#33
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Posted By: T E
Why do you think auction houses pull items that are in their catalog? I assume it is because they are on consignment, and the consignor has perhaps received an offer they can't refuse... |
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Posted By: T E
Let me put this in a different light. |
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Posted By: Tony Andrea
With all do respect Barry, Ebay is far from what Mastro, REA, & Lelands represent in the hobby. |
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Posted By: barrysloate
But TE- in your example that is an entirely private transaction, and it is strictly up to the buyer and seller to work out a mutually acceptable deal. When you list on ebay there is a third party involved. The reason so many auctions end early is that ebay allows you to press a button and end it at any time. That button could be removed, so that once you list something it has to stay up until the last second. There could be extenuating circumstances where one might end early; say you are listing a T205 and inadvertently call it a T206. Then you should have the option to terminate. But once you put something up for auction, I think there is an implied agreement that the lot will go to the highest bidder. Apparently, ebay disagrees, but it is clearly costing them money. |
#37
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Barry wrote: "But you wouldn't dare call Mastro or REA or Leland's in the middle of one of their auctions and ask them if they would sell you a lot outright. Nobody would even have the nerve to do that. So why then is it perfectly acceptable on ebay?" I'd do it except that I know that an auction house won't do it. However, I also know that auction houses do from time to time broker sales between "consignors" and well heeled buyers. It is all about money. If I had something really exceptional that I did not want to auction off publicly, I would consider approaching an auctioneer to broker it if I did not know where to sell it. |
#38
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Posted By: barrysloate
Tony- I agree that ebay and auction houses are different animals, but I feel the early end to ebay auctions is becoming a bit of an epidemic. As soon as something good is listed everyone pounces on it like vultures. That it is permitted is one thing; but I think it happens too often and is compromising the integrity of ebay (I'm going under the assumption that ebay has integrity, I know I will have some detractors). |
#39
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Posted By: Tony Andrea
Barry, |
#40
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Posted By: barrysloate
Adam- the private transactions between auction houses and well heeled buyers are perfectly fine if the lot never appeared in an auction in the first place. That's acceptable, because the consignor might request it. And I know what you are saying about closing an ebay auction to get a sure thing; but then why auction it in the first place? Auctions close early because ebay allows it. If there was no button to push to terminate every auction would run its course. Everyone knows when you list something you are incurring an element of risk. |
#41
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Posted By: T E
Barry, I don't know why major auction houses pull items that are in their catalogues, but they do. |
#42
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Posted By: jeff drum
Has anyone ever simply e-mailed the seller to alert them that they would probably have "several" offers to end the auction early and if they did they would most likely leave money on the table? |
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Posted By: Josh K.
Barry, |
#44
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Posted By: Dan Kravitz
It seems that most of the people upset about Sellers ending an auction early want the card or feel that someone else got a good deal on it. SO WHAT? WHO CARES? Unless you wanted it, then you get pissed off. Really, if the card is owned by someone and another person wants it and the two agree on a price, what is the big deal? The truth is no one here cares about the Seller getting the most out of the card, you are just pissed it wasn't you who made the offer. Get over it! I have and will continue to ask Sellers if they would end the auction early for 2 reasons. The 1st is that I want the card and don't want to fight over it; the 2nd is that I want to make sure the auction is going to continue to the end. If I get the card by asking then good for me, if I don't then at least I know the auction will continue. BTW - I have not had much success in asking a Seller to end an auction early, but the ones that have ended early for me, are part of my greatest deals. Happy bidding! |
#45
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Posted By: Josh K.
I should add - despite my position above (that its ok to remove items that have been listed) I dont like it either. But then again, Im sure sellers dont like snipe bids that serve to keep final prices as low as possible. If ebay just instituted a 15 minute rule like the major aution houses with respect to individual auctions, I would bet that most listings would run their full course. |
#46
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Posted By: Cobby33
If I REALLY REALLY have to have a card, I will email the seller as a preemptive strike. I'm not big into ending auctions being ended early, but obviously, it's a reality. So- "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em," or at least, try to fire the first shot, as it were. |
#47
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Posted By: barrysloate
Josh- as far as the Rose balls being pulled from REA, that doesn't count because that auction isn't scheduled to begin until Spring of next year. They don't even have a catalog yet. And I do know lots are sometimes withdrawn, but it is unclear exactly why this is being done. It could be an authenticity question, a consignor complaining about something in the description, or whatever. It doesn't in any way suggest a private sale is being conducted by the auction house. There are many reasons why lots are withdrawn. And getting back to ebay, I understand they feel pulling the plug on an auction is an acceptable practice, so apparently it will keep happening. I actually emailed an ebay seller recently and told her not close her auction early, that despite the fact her lot was doing poorly it would certainly do well in the end. She replied she was bombarded by offers to close early, but said she had no plans to do so. Her final realized price was more than 50% higher than the best offer she received. Obviously, she was a smart seller. |
#48
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Posted By: T E
Caveat vendor. So the word vendor comes directly from Latin. |
#49
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Posted By: Larry
Josh- You have the same message posted I feel would solve the problem.. |
#50
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Posted By: warshawlaw
it is called a "reserve". They can also elect not to start $10,000 cards at $9.99. When I list cards on ebay I list them at a level that will protect me if they sell. I know people have different philosophies on that; some believe that "action" on an underpriced card will inspire bidders into an auction fever that will drive up the card. That may be a realistic phenomenon in live auctions but I don't believe it for ebay. |
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