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#1
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Posted By: MikePugeda
As the 2 big auctions are upon us, threads have been started discussing group purchases for certain lots. For example, one thread was started about purchasing the PC796 (Sepia postcard) lot. My question is, how are these group purchases structured? Are certain cards weighted so that, for my example,the person that wants the Wagner postcard pays a certain percentage, while others pay a lesser percent? Or does each person state the max they are willing to pay for the card they desire? If that is the case, how do they decide how much each is going to pay if the lot sells for less than the accumulative max limits set by each member of the purchasing group? |
#2
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Posted By: Mark T
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#3
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Posted By: robert a
Everyone in the group should agree on the percentages for each card and pick the cards they would like. |
#4
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Posted By: Dave F
The guy doing all the legwork should also be the first guy with dibs on any of the cards. |
#5
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Posted By: barrysloate
The way the groups work is someone takes the lead and assigns percentage values on each card depending on the player and condition. He might, for example, assign 18% of the lot value for Wagner, 3% for each common in VG, 2% for each common in Good, etc. Then other members of the group will review those breakdowns and fine tune them a little. Once everyone is in agreement, they each pick out the cards they want. If two or more people want the same card, that have to be flexible and work that out themselves. |
#6
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Posted By: Matt
"These groups help keep the price of the lot down, which of course touches the question of whether it can be considered collusion. Most collectors feel these groups are okay, but there is some gray area." |
#7
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Posted By: Bob
Matt- You are absolutely right. I have spearheaded 3 winning "group" lots of caramel cards and one losing effort and I can tell you that with the exception of one lot, all included bidders who would not have chased the lot themselves, they only wanted a card or two or three. The auction houses benefited as did the consignor. Now on one lot we won, one of the bidders was planning on going after the whole lot regardless so we included him and everyone was happy from our end. Hypothetically the lot might have gone for more if the rest of us were bidding against him, but generally the "group" efforts (or Net54 cabalists as we call each other) were able to secure cards we wouldn't have otherwise been able to get and the consignor and auction house benefited from our efforts, I believe. |
#8
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Posted By: leon
There are always those groups of 1 that we all know and love....I have yet to team up with a group of 1 though.... |
#9
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Posted By: barrysloate
I think in general these groups are fine, since some advanced collectors may only need a couple of cards, and others on a budget may only be able to afford a couple. So if it's done in good faith I am okay with it. However, I have spoken to people who have consigned some of these groups and often they are not happy with the results. Likewise, I have seen groups come on the board after an auction closes and congratulate each other on the great deal they got. I'm not sure I would put that in print. |
#10
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Posted By: Dave F
Well Barry just said what I was about to, I can't understand why most of these sets and near sets are even auctioned off as such. A t206 set..you might get a bit of a premium on (maybe). If someone is auctioning off a set of D359's or the likes..I can't see any reason in the world to keep a group like that together. I really can't see a reason to even put them all in one auction individually, but thats another story. |
#11
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Posted By: Matt
"I have spoken to people who have consigned some of these groups and often they are not happy with the results. Likewise, I have seen groups come on the board after an auction closes and congratulate each other on the great deal they got. I'm not sure I would put that in print." |
#12
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Posted By: Rob
Could you imagine if Mastro put every card in their current auction into a separate lot? It'd take us a month just to scroll the 80,000+ (no, i didn't count, i just know its alot) lots! |
#13
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Posted By: barrysloate
Matt- I agree that it is possible for a group to actually create more interest in a big lot if they go in together. But you still need an agressive underbidder, who may not exist if he just happened to join that group. |
#14
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Posted By: Matt
Here's a relevant question in game theory: |
#15
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Posted By: Bob
As evidence of my point, I would profer a recent large lot of caramel cards which sold in a major auction and which had no "groups" bidding on it. The winning bidder got a steal and ended up making money by breaking it up and selling the cards individually. Had there been a "group" bidding against the winning bidder, the auction house and consignor would have greatly benefited. |
#16
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Posted By: shane leonard
These are some good points that Matt and Barry brought up. I think by forming a group like this actually helps the consignor and the auction house. The larger the group, the more cash is available to bid on that item. Which in turn pushes up the price of poker. The only way it is a bad thing like Barry said is when you know all the interested parties and you form a group with those people. |
#17
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Posted By: barrysloate
Matt- I would prefer the group bid to $6000, but again, they may not have to without an aggressive underbidder. |
#18
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Posted By: Matt
Agreed. The question is how likely is the case where "all the major players joined the group?" |
#19
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Posted By: barrysloate
As Matt pointed out the pool of bidders is generally large enough to cover any poor results, but it can occasionally happen. |
#20
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Posted By: Phil B
I could be wrong here- and maybe the good lawyers want to weigh in- but I think any discussion of bidding tactics between people who would otherwise be individual bidders would be considered under the law to be "conspiring to fix the bidding" in an auction. I think back several years to a group of bidders in New York real estate foreclosure auctions who were agreeing not to bid against each other in favor of "taking turns" being the successful bidder. To my recollection this practice was found to be illegal. |
#21
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Posted By: Matt
Phil - the example you cited does sound like collusion - the main difference being that the agreement was that one person remove his money from the bidding altogether. In the arrangements discussed above, no one is agreeing to duck out - in fact as we showed, it's just the opposite - more people are putting their money in. |
#22
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Posted By: SC
As with any form of collusion (price fixing, bid fixing, etc.) - rarely is it clear cut. If I'm at an auction, especially a live one, I might employ tactics to get what I want. I can't tell the guy next to me "I won't bid on this one if you don't bid on the next", but I might decide not to bid on the first item, figuring he'll buy it and then there will be one less bidder for subsequent lots. |
#23
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Posted By: timzcardz
I read here a lot, but seldom have anything to contribute because although I do find the vintage cards interesting I don’t collect them . . . yet, but here I can offer something that hasn’t been brought up. |
#24
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Posted By: Zinn
Everyone who opines that group bidding benefits the consignor and the auction house is correct and here's why: |
#25
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
I agree that in a nationwide auction like Mastro or REA the group bidding will benefit the auction house and consignor - you will always have dealers who will not join in a group situation because they want the entire lot so they can split it and make money or there is a guy who wants to put a set together fast and doesn't want to share with others...you will always have that situation in a Mastro/REA type auction. In a local auction group bidding is collusion and hurts the consignor and auction company. I must admit that a lot of collusion goes on at the local level - most of it is unspoken. Everyone knows I collect baseball memorabilia and will stay away from it to some degree - I extend the courtesy on items I know other people collect. When you go to 50 auctions a year you get to know the other bidders quite well - some of them become friends and you know what they collect. The auction companies know it goes on, but what are they going to do? We're some of their best customers. Plus I know it goes both ways - I know who the "Rabbits" are.... |
#26
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Posted By: leon
I think the groups will have as much competition on lots as anyone else. I think there is a legal definition of what is permitted and not permitted but as Soloman said, it's a very slippery slope. regards |
#27
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Posted By: Alan
I would imagine that if a lot went for $100,000 the auction house wouldn't care if it was one guy bidding (a loner) by himself or multiple guys working with one bidder (each putting in to total $100,000). Maybe I'm wrong. |
#28
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Posted By: barrysloate
There have been opinions on both sides and I'm not sure group bidding is always good for the consignor. |
#29
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Posted By: Matt
As long as everyone going in to the group would not have competitively bid on the lot otherwise I can't see any moral or ethical argument against it - would you agree? |
#30
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Posted By: Bob
When you have a number of fellow collectors going in together and having one of their number doing the actual bidding for all of them, with a pre-conceived agreement as to how high to bid and which cards (should they win) each gets, I think the auction house and consignor win. Case in point is a lot in the Mastro auction which I feel sure none of the "group" would bid on individually, yet banding together they make a strong bidding interest. The group may not win but with a strong bidding interest, the ultimate winning bid would likely be higher than if just individuals would be bidding. |
#31
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
I have never joined a bidding group, but if I did it would be because I needed only one or two cards in a lot and knew I couldn't bid on the whole lot otherwise because of the price. I think more often than not a group will help the consignor. |
#32
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Posted By: Steve Murray
I join a group when I know I cannot financially handle the entire lot or I don't need or want a majority of the items. |
#33
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Posted By: CoreyRS.hanus
As I see it: |
#34
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Posted By: barrysloate
Matt- I would have bid against the group, but the fact that some of the people were my friends and that I would have had to pay too much to outbid a group of collectors compelled me to join in. So by joining I took myself out of the competition. That couldn't be good for the consignor. That's the main reason why I stopped joining. I wouldn't want that to happen in my own auction, and it is one of the main reasons nearly every one of my lots is offered as individual cards. |
#35
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Posted By: barrysloate
And I want to add that Corey understands exactly how I feel. It's a matter of intent. In many cases collectors only need, or only can afford, a couple of cards. That's fine. |
#36
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Posted By: Rob D.
The words moral and ethical have been tossed around here, and that's fine when you're speaking in a hypothetical sense. But consider this: |
#37
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Posted By: Matt
Barry - then I think we are in agreement - your earlier comments made it seem like you felt "teaming up" in all cases is ethically questionable. Your latest comments seem to be in line with what we are suggesting that if the intent was never to tackle the lot by oneself, then "teaming up" is fine. |
#38
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Posted By: JK
"Illegal - A group of individuals, any one of which has the means and willingness to on his/her own bid seriously on a lot. Here, while the individual group members could benefit because they would avoid going head-to-head with their competition, the auction house and consigner would lose because formation of the group would lessen the competitive bidding for the lot." |
#39
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Posted By: JK
Barry, |
#40
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Posted By: Matt
This thread has discussed crossing two different lines - legal and ethical. I'm very interested to know, from a legal standpoint, what scenarios would be considered illegal collusion with regards to forming a group to bid on an auction lot. |
#41
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Posted By: boxingcardman
Every time I've joined a group it has been because I really did not want to get stuck with the cards in the lot and the group as a whole has bid more than the individual members would have bid because each of us could put more in the pot knowing that we weren't going to get stuck with all the cards. I know that I would have either bid very low or not at all on the lot had there not been a group. |
#42
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Posted By: JK
Matt, |
#43
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Posted By: leon
So are you saying they are legal or illegal? |
#44
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Posted By: barrysloate
Josh- you make valid points and I again think it is a matter of intent. There may not be empirical evidence to prove a group may keep the price of a lot down, and I agree it may in fact have no effect. However, let's say a group of caramel cards sells for 10K and everyone feels that is a fair price. But what if you knew that one of the members of the group would have gladly topped it and gone to 11K, but since he joined the group never had to execute the next bid. It would be an imperceptible difference if you were just checking the prices realized after the auction. |
#45
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Posted By: Steve Murray
Several here are concerned that groups may have a negative effect on consignors and/or auctioneers. |
#46
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Posted By: barrysloate
Steve- one thing you are missing is some consigners may not be fully aware how their consignments will be grouped. I have heard stories of collectors being very disappointed when they discover that half their collection has become a single lot. Of course, that is the consignor's fault for not communicating his wishes, but my point is not every group lot is by mutual agreement. |
#47
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Posted By: Matt
Steve - let's not go too far - there are laws against collusion; they may not apply here, but simply because a seller choses an open format to sell something doesn't give potential bidders carte blanche to act in any way they want just because we're in a free market society. |
#48
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
Barry, I know of one local collector who consigned his entire collection of vintage Husker football memorabilia to Mastro and they lotted up all of the programs into one lot...he was mad and tried to get them to withdraw the lot and they wouldn't. There were some very high dollar programs that should have been sold separately. I'm not sure that the guy should have consigned to Mastro anyway - he would have made a killing having a local auction. I doubt more than 50 people in the entire state of Nebraska have ever even heard of Mastro auctions. |
#49
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Posted By: CoreyRS.hanus
I don't think anything I said is in disagreement with what you said. |
#50
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Posted By: JK
Leon - Legal. |
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