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#1
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Posted By: Scott Forrest
I don't get it. This auction ended June 24 and it's been on ebay since July 1? I sent a money order to Leland's the day I received the email invoice, and haven't received my item, much less had time to get it, mail it to Scott Gaynor, and have him put it on ebay. Weird. |
#2
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Posted By: Jay Miller
A major dealer once told me that Lelands uses Scott to dispose of items that don't sell in their auctions. Perhaps that is the explanation. |
#3
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Posted By: Jim Clarke
I think I bid on this and was close to the underbidder??? I wish you could still log into Lelands website and see all the items you bid on and won... It disapears after a week or so and the "keyword" search does not pull from the old catalog. I enjoyed the Lelands Catalog and it might appear they will be getting more into the pre-war items!!! Competition is good for us collectors... JC |
#4
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Posted By: Scott Forrest
Very nice photo at a decent price. The winner and under-bidder must have both pulled out? |
#5
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Posted By: Anonymous
Anybody get their Mastro invoices yet? |
#6
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Yes, came last week. |
#7
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Hal--Please keep discussions of your sex life off the board! |
#8
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Posted By: andy becker
is this an example of an auction house using a "hidden reserve"?? |
#9
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Jay: |
#10
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Posted By: scgaynor
Hey Scott, I got the stuff so quick because I went down and picked it up a few days after the auction. Saved a ton on shipping. I always do that when I win a bunch of stuff from an east coast auction house. |
#11
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Posted By: Scott Forrest
Scott, I had forgotten that you purchase stuff as well as sell stuff for others. |
#12
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Posted By: Thomas Walcott Sr
Josh has always given Gaynor items that do not sell or do not meet the reserve Lelands is famous for having hidden reserves and Scott then disposes of them. |
#13
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Posted By: scgaynor
Thomas, I wish it was that simple, I would make more money! |
#14
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Posted By: andy becker
i understand how an auction house can discount a consignor for volume or significant items....but, if i understand the response.....then i guess certain BIDDERS have advantages in large public auctions. |
#15
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Your items may be delayed while the shipper works up a No. 6 on them*. I got my Exhibit uncut sheet from Clean Sweep yesterday. They packed it in first rate fashion and it arrived undamaged, which is a good thing because I have NEVER seen a box destroyed like that one was by the USPS; they really kicked the hell out of it. I took pictures before I opened it because I was certain that I would be making a claim. I'll post one shortly for ****s and giggles. |
#16
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Scott--I'm confused by your response. Are you implying that there are two classes of buyers in some auctions? What advantage do you have over the ordinary bidder? I'm not sure that I would want to bid in an auction that doesn't operate with a level playing field. |
#17
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Posted By: andy becker
i'm with you jay! |
#18
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Posted By: scgaynor
I am not going to go into too much detail, but i don't pay any less than you would if you won the same piece. |
#19
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Posted By: Jay Miller
So Scott, are you saying that the auction houses let you have the pieces before you pay with the understanding that you pay after you sell them? |
#20
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Posted By: scgaynor
Like I was saying, I don't want to get into too much detail, but everybody gets paid in full within a short period of time. |
#21
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Posted By: Scott M
Different payment terms as are being hinted at is hardly a level playing field. It would lead one to ask if the commission being paid is the same? Are rebates being applied? Basically if your bidding on these lots, you're in essence bidding against not just the participants in that auction but against hypothetical participants in a future auction. By changing the payment terms and possibly consignment terms, the auction house is lowering the risk for the entity that takes the item into the future auction. |
#22
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Posted By: davidcycleback
It widely known and even advertised by the auction houses that consignors can pay different consignment percentages-- for example, a lower fee if a consignor is offering a $500,000 collection or that one of a kind Babe Ruth jersey. Anyone posting here who happily accepted, and even insisted upon in negotation, a discount consignment rate from an auction house should be the last to complain about some other person's deal, like someone being able to pay with credit cards for massive and regular purchases. |
#23
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Posted By: scgaynor
You guys are making way too big a deal out of this. |
#24
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Posted By: davidcycleback
My opinion, and I'm sure the opinion of the majority who have dealt with him, is that Scott is a top notch dealer and a credit to the hobby. Whether or not he got some special payment deal from an auction house makes no difference to me, because if he gets one he probably derserves it. I'll save my complaining for when Ken Goldin and Roy Huff get their perks. |
#25
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Posted By: warshawlaw
yeah, ditto on what he said. |
#26
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Posted By: leon
I have no issue if any auction house wants to do anything they want to do as long as if I am the high bidder I win. If they extend terms to customers that's their business. If they cut their rates that's their business too. Capitalism at it's best my friends. I doubt there is anyone on the board who doesn't haggle at one time or another. I also am quite sure that arrangements are made up front and set before the auction closes. As long as the auction itself isn't rigged what they do financially is up to them. As a matter fact some of the large auction houses WANT folks to pay stuff out for a while. That way they can spend beyond their budget. |
#27
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Posted By: Scott Forrest
Didn't mean to put you on the hot seat - I thought it was a fishy consignor issue. More troubling was a call I got from UPS last night - Leland's shipped...but to an invalid address. |
#28
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Posted By: Jay Miller
I think you guys are missing the point on this issue, which I think is not a trivial one. Consignment fees that are negotiated do not affect any bidders. They simply affect the distribution of profits between the auction house and the consignor. If seller A pays a 10% consignment fee and seller B pays no consignment fee that does not impact the bidding process at all. On the other hand, if one buyer has to pay for items before he or she gets them and another buyer can postpone paying until he or she sells the item them the bidding process has been tainted. The bidder who has to pay right away is bidding for the item. The bidder who can postpone payment is essentially bidding for the item plus a loan to finance inventory. The inclusion of the second type of bidder eliminates the possiblity of items selling below retail, ie no bargains here. |
#29
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Posted By: Scott M
In essence the auction house is placing a secret reserve by the inclusion of these special bidders. |
#30
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Posted By: scgaynor
Jay, it does not effect the final sale price at all. We both bid in US dollars. |
#31
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Posted By: JimB
I think Jay makes a good point. But I have assumed for a long time that in the big auction houses's auctions that at a minimum, I am bidding against other dealers who will try to flip things. Rarely do things sell for less than wholesale. If you think you are going to get a better deal than wholesale in the big auctions, I think you will leave frustrated. And my guess is this will be the case regardless of wether or not there are special payment arrangements for certain dealers. |
#32
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Posted By: scgaynor
I don't understand your comment at all. |
#33
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Posted By: DJ
Let's say you want to eat at Alain Ducasse's Restaurant in New York City. Top French Chef with a dinner for two costing more than a Sliding Monte Ward OJ in a PSA3 holder. You call up (ring, ring) and attempt to make reservations and they say in a snooty french way 'Ohh, I'm sorry, I can fit you in in October (it's February)'. |
#34
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Posted By: Scott M
Scott, |
#35
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Scott--If you say your special arrangement with Lelands does not affect final prices at all then I have one question for you: Would you bid as high and on as many items if this special arrangement did not exist? If the answer is no then your special deal does affect realizations. Since Lelands is not a charitable institution I would guess that they would not provide this arrangement (since it ties up capital) unless they thought it would increase profits, eg realizations. |
#36
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Posted By: scgaynor
Jay, the answer is "No", I would not bid higher. |
#37
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Posted By: Paul
For what it's worth, I'm with Scott on this one. Many businesses give special treatment of one kind or another to customers with a proven track record of buying in quantity and paying for it. I see Jay's point, that a bidder with special credit terms can theoretically bid a little higher than a competitor who must pay promptly. But I just don't see that as a major problem, especially if the credit is for just a couple of weeks (until the ebay auction closes). Payment terms are generally set for the lowest common denominator (non-paying scum) and it just doesn't offend me that a seller would offer better terms when he knows there is little or no risk. |
#38
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Posted By: andy becker
first of all, we probably all have bought an item from scott.....and probably all happy and thankful a seller like him could provide such items. i know i have- thanks scott. |
#39
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Posted By: Elliot
Your spelling sux, too |
#40
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Posted By: andy becker
elliot, you are soooo right. that's why i was a bidness major |
#41
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Posted By: Scott Forrest
I'm sure you know what a "loss leader" is, and also that Scott had no way of predicting in advance that a seemingly decent $700+ item would sell for only $500. Scott's strategy is of course very sound, which is why he does so good with his auctions, as you and others have noted. |
#42
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Posted By: andy becker
$500 was the reserve. the item sold for $816.55. |
#43
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Posted By: DJ
You have to admire the 'gamble' in Scott as Scott is comfortable enough to take risks and purchase items from National glossed catalogs with the idea that his pied piper following will bid on them. |
#44
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Posted By: Daniel Bretta
I think this thread is a little insane as well. Who cares if he gets to buy on credit with Lelands? I would be willing to bet that there are more than a few members of this forum who get special treatment from dealers and auction houses that most of us don't get. Scott carries stuff that no one else on ebay has. And even though he has a huge following you can still get a bargain. I won this auction from him tonight for a very good price. |
#45
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Posted By: scgaynor
I really appreciate the positive comments and I hope that you know that I appreciate your business. I am lucky to get to do this for a living and I am happy that people follow my auctions. |
#46
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Posted By: Anonymous
I agree that there is nothing wrong with any bidder receiving special credit terms as long as consignors get paid. The auction house should be allowed to lend money to anyone they want to. The problem is not what Scott bids on in auctions and wins for resale but it would be a problem if items are consigned to Scott Gaynor directly by the auction house that have been reported to have sold in the auction and really haven’t. That would really open up a hornet’s nest (not for Scott but for the other auction). Scott, does this ever happen? Can you tell us this? There are always lots of Lelands items in your auctions after every Lelands auction. Do you bid on and own them all? Or does Lelands ever consign these items directly to your auction? To me that is the important question. Whatever the answer (if you can) , you do a great job keep it up. |
#47
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Posted By: scgaynor
Re: Husky Hans. I have a few more, but not an endless supply. There was a find of these a few year ago and I ended up with several. |
#48
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
I am extremely happy with my T202 Cobb/Cobb/Jennings that arrived from him last week! I see nothing wrong with Leland's letting Scott pay for items after he sells them. Afterall, they are the ones taking the risk (actually no risk involved with someone as honest as Scott Gaynor anyway). I am sure we all show "favoritism" towards regular customers (if not, you should). Most of the time, with board members I have dealt with a number of times, I always ship their card(s) before the money arrives. |
#49
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Posted By: Anonymous
I found these Lelands items from their last auction sold recently sold within a week or so of auction close on ebay – links to Lelands and eBay in pairs below. I’m sure there are lots more. I count 3 small winners and 20 losers some not so small. I have no doubt there is a perfectly reasonable explanation and bigger picture reasoning but can’t help but look at this list and ask why and how can anyone afford to do this? You run the best auctions on ebay. You don't need the loss leaders. If you give up them up you will do even better on the bottom line. You don’t need them. Everyone follows your auctions already and they’re costing you a lot of money. |
#50
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Posted By: davidcycleback
I think it's strictly Scott's business. By 'strictly' I mean not ours. If someone asked me where or how I got many of my photos or what I paid, I'd say "That's a secret." |
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