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#51
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Jay's second point is well-taken (though it does refute his first point about it being a shell game, which it is not). |
#52
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Posted By: Bruce Babcock
Mandatory post-hammer testing of buyer, consigner and auctioneer may be around the corner . . . |
#53
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Posted By: JK
Corey, |
#54
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Posted By: Jay
Corey--Good point. I was using "shell game" loosely, not to say that the flows were exactly the same. It will be interesting to see what happens if the card market weakens with the economy. Then some auction houses, especially those with a lot of overhead, may really start feeling the pinch. Although obviously not purely a sports company, Sothebys stock price has really taken a beating in recent weeks. Could this be a reflection of what is ahead for collectable prices? |
#55
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Posted By: Matt
Corey - good post. My question is more simple - why are there two separate types of fees in the first place? Why not just have 1 percentage that the auctino house takes - whatever it may be. Is there something besides marketing behind it? |
#56
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
The $5 million in my example represents what the auction house grossed from the entire auction. If the BP is 20% (and the SP 0%), then the hammer prices totaled $5,000,000/1.2, which equals $4,166,667. Or, to put it another way, if the total hammer is $4,166,667, then adding the 20% BP ($833,333) results in the total gross of $5 million. The auction house would keep the entire BP, so its take from the sale would $833,333. |
#57
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Posted By: JimCrandell
First, I am all for disclosing fees and think its great when people come on and talk to deals they are getting from auction houses |
#58
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Good question. If I had to venture a guess I would say that when the system started the philosphy was -- "if they're willing to pay it, we're willing to take it." There were undoubtedly a lot fewer auction houses than there are today and therefore much fewer competitive pressures. They probably made a persuasive pitch to both buyer and seller how they were providing services to each and therefore should receive compensation from each. Flash forward to today. While the philosphy remains the same, the problem is they (the consignors) are not willing to pay it. There are just too many auction houses now vying for their consignments. So the system has readjusted toward higher BPs and lower SPs. |
#59
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Posted By: JK
Thanks. Im with you now. |
#60
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Posted By: barrysloate
Buyer's premiums have been around a long time, even before the baseball memorabilia hobby instituted them. The way business is conducted always changes, so we very well may see a new business model sometime in the future. |
#61
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Posted By: Matt
The question is why there are separate buyers and sellers premiums instead of one percentage that the auction company takes of the top. |
#62
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Posted By: barrysloate
Our industry borrowed the concept from older auction businesses. And the psychology is a seller feels better if he thinks he is only responsible for half the commission, and the buyer for the other half (or whatever the ratio is). It may make little sense but it has evolved and has been accepted. |
#63
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Posted By: Jerry Rucker
Consignors getting a portion of the BP |
#64
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Posted By: Rich Klein
And I'd love Barry to step in -- is there seems to me a chance of people getting different rates based on how much they know about the hobby; the companies; etc. If I were NOT in the hobby and I consigned an item to a company and later found out that instead of the stated rate; it was negotiable and I did not get the same lower rate; I'd be upset and let everyone know that I would not want to deal with that auction house again. |
#65
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Posted By: leon
I understand your concern but it doesn't seem to be much different than anything else. If you invested thousands of hours in the hobby, and got to know the ropes, I would say that that time spent is worth something...and it could be a better negotiating postition when consigning. I would argue that the time spent might not even be made up for in the dollars saved on rates with respect to the person who has no time in the hobby getting a slightly lesser deal. Knowledge is money.....Time is money. The more time you put in the more money you should reap....and this argument is for sake of being devil's advocate....just my 1/2 cent (make that a chain cent, btw) |
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