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#51
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#52
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#53
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With an auction house, the buyer's premium has to be factored in after the hammer price. A card that sells for $5,000.00 will net the consignor $5,000.00 if there is no consignment fee as you stated. The buyer pays the $5,000.00 plus 23% for a total cost of $6,150.00 to the buyer. If the card sells for $4,000.00 before the buyer's fee, like in your auction house example, it's not a $5,000.00 card - it's a $4,000.00 card, in which the consignor with no fee gets $4,000.00. The problem is that you compared a $4,000.00 winning bid (auction house) to a $4,920 winning bid (on eBay through Probstein, 4 Corners, etc). |
#54
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I'm watching inflation going on all around me with virtually everything I buy. I just constantly keep adjusting what I'm willing to pay, realizing the numbers across the board trend upwards. This is just another example.
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#55
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#56
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Obviously you're talking about the power guys like Probstein, but Ebay is constantly abusing their smaller sellers, much to our benefit.
__________________
Check out https://www.thecollectorconnection.com Always looking for consignments 717.327.8915 We sell your less expensive pre-war cards individually instead of in bulk lots to make YOU the most money possible! and Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thecollectorconnectionauctions |
#57
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I see it this way if the consignor isn't also hit with a sellers fee from AH. Card sells for $5K on eBay so after fees(5%) seller gets $4750. 5% of $5K is $250. Card sells for $5K at AH. Seller gets $4065 after the AH takes the BP(23%) from the real sale price($5K) the buyer paid. The $4065 is the "winning"(LOL) bid before the 23% buyers premium is added to the real selling price the buyer paid. If I am wrong someone please post the math. To be clear I do not care how the AH tries to add confusing fees to get more cash from the consignor or trick buyers into bidding more than they thought. As long as I know the numbers up front I am good. Last edited by bnorth; Yesterday at 11:09 AM. |
#58
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The buyer's premium isn't SUBTRACTED from the winning bid, it's ADDED. So, if the bid total is $5,000.00 at auction end, the buyer's premium of 23% is ADDED to this total, not SUBTRACTED as in your example. So the buyer would pay a total of $6,150.00 as I previously mentioned. The consignor - if paying no fees as was the original example given - receives $5000.00, which was the total of bidding at auction end. Think about it logically, if the winning bid at the end of the auction is $5,000.00, and the consignor pays 0% commission, how could he possible end up with $4,000.00, as in the example of the original poster. 0 is 0 no?? not 20% ?? So again, the buyer's premium is ADDED to the final hammer price, it is not taken from it. |
#59
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#60
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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. |
#61
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Seriously please show me the math when the real total selling price the buyer pays is $5K. |
#62
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Ebay is unlikely to bring as much as top AHs on most items. There is no OT bidding on Ebay so an under bidder who is willing to pay more has no opportunity unless they put in a ceiling bid in advance of the close. The option of jumping back in after the initial bidding is closed often is the big difference in AHs. I see plenty of completed auctions on EBay that fall well under market even with the big guys previously mentioned. It is more of a crap shoot IMO.
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#63
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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. |
#64
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Seriously Ben, you're combining the winning bid with the buyer's fee as opposed to basing what the consignor gets which is based on the winning bid amount. The winning bid amount determines what the consignor gets, the buyer's fees are ADDITIONAL to that. Last edited by Huysmans; Yesterday at 12:08 PM. |
#65
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If the selling prices are different (which is what happens if the actual high bids are the same), then yes, the consigner will do better with the auction house, but since many people say they include the BP when deciding what their high bid will be, it's more likely that the high bid will be lower if there's a BP added on top of it. |
#66
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#67
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![]() A prominent guy on a FB group posted that he will not buy from REA anymore with this news. I am sure he won't.... until a huge card appears at the next REA auction. Then all bets are off ![]() |
#68
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The complaining will end soon enough and they will be back to buying from REA. The real winner is REA they will still get tons of bidders and consigners.
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#69
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Scott, besides the fact that the antecedents for having a BP are totally irrelevant to today's business, I do not buy any explanation for the commission-BP structure other than it makes the auctioneer more money. If I 'win' a card at REA now, I pay REA the hammer price plus 23%. 123% of the hammer price is the true price of the card. On a $1,000 bid the auction house receives $1,230 from the winning bidder. How the proceeds are chopped up does not change that math. When a middleman (and auctioneers are middlemen between buyer and seller) has two choices of how to do things, a simple one and a more complex one, there is no reason to use the complicated one, other than in the belief that it makes more money for the middleman to do it that way. I've had many negotiations with auctioneers big and small, and they all use the bifurcated structure because they all 'sell' a low or zero commission knowing that the buyer's premium is still going to them.
I am not begrudging an auctioneer the right to make a living, I am expressing a preference for simply admitting that the commission and buyer's premium are one and the same, and dropping the pretense.
__________________
Read my blog; it will make all your dreams come true. https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.com/ Or not... Last edited by Exhibitman; Yesterday at 02:51 PM. |
#70
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Everything is negotiable! I have done auctions for years going back to my Teletrade days when I had numerous employees, and currently with
www.AllSportsAuctions.com where I am the only employee and have NO overhead! When you run the company, you can do anything you want! In my auctions consignors get the best of both worlds---I get very retail prices and I limit the consignor fees to something that makes sense for all parties. Call me and see what I can do! Thanks, Andy Sandler (914) 388-2940 |
#71
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Lol.
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#72
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While you are correct that "how the proceeds are chopped up doesn't change the math" of a buyer's total cost being the hammer price, plus the BP. Your argument seems to ignore the fact that without the BP, the hammer price would be 123% of what it is when there is a 23% BP. In your scenario, the buyer wants to spend $1230 on the card. It makes no difference if there is zero BP and he bids $1230, or there is a 23% BP and he bids $1000. It's incorrect to suggest the bids would be the same with or without the BP. The buyer who doesn't factor the BP into his bids is a small minority. Last edited by OhioLawyerF5; Today at 06:16 AM. |
#73
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For the sake of conversation, let's assume extremes to help understand what happens in normal ranges.
If the buyers premium was zero, I believe the buyer would spend the same bottom line. And the consignor would get more because the hammer would be higher. If the buyers premium were 50%, I believe the buyer would still spend the same bottom line. And the consignor would get less because the hammer would be lower. So, as the buyers premium increases, there is probably going to be no affect on what the buyer spends. However, the consignor would get less as BP increases. In a roundabout way, the BP is actually a consignors fee. |
#74
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I absolutely agree with this logic |
#75
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