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#1
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Do any of you have experience with scooping up "deals" in some of these mammoth-sized auctions by bidding on the items that have very few bids on them... |
#2
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Posted By: Leon
I try my best to scoop up bargains but there aren't really that many anymore....Also, "bargain" is a relative term. As a very passionate collector I have paid world record prices on many things. My guess is that when I sell them I could lose a little....which I am ok with as I also try to make a little on good buys when I sell them....I doubt I answered your question but maybe gave you some relevent feedback... |
#3
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Posted By: peter chao
that the Lots that get the fewest bids are the multi-item lot. Let me put it this way. If there is only one item, then it's obvious that the person bidding on it wants that one item. However, as the no. of items increase in a lot, it becomes unlikely that someone would want all of the items, so the individual bidding probably wants only a couple of the items. |
#4
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Posted By: Leon
Another way to look at it is that group lots will attract a different clientele and possibly more bidders. I doubt many dealers/flippers go for single cards too often but I know several that buy group lots..myself included sometimes...whereas if you broke up that group I wouldn't be bidding..... |
#5
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Just an example (and I have NO CLUE who the consignor is): |
#6
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Posted By: Kevin Saucier
Yes Hal, although not with sportscards. I've built a part-time (more fun than anything) business and an online museum around some tremendous (almost unbelievable) bargains. It was at a time when Mastro just started the Americana section. Nobody was interested...just in sportscards. |
#7
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
And look! |
#8
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Does anything ever end in these big auctions with only ONE bid??? |
#9
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Posted By: Mike
With time running out in the last Robert Edward Auction, I was surprised that when I did a search of the items that had no bids, this Framed Mantle piece from the Barry Halper Collection (Lot 1067)was not bid on. I placed my $200 bid and never sweated thru the extended period as I was the only one. If scan doesnt appear can someone give me a hand with link below. Thanks |
#10
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Posted By: Ed McCollum
before sites like this, or internet auctions were around, but I picked up five T206s in a group – one Lenox back, one Uzit back, one Tolstoi back, one Broadleaf (350) back and one blank back – as the only bidder in a Ron Oser auction. Think it was 1996. Total cost, with shipping and fees was less than $250. Really wish I had kept the blank back, as it didn't have a name on it, only printers registration marks on the front. He was a Cincinatti Red, and I traded it for three cards at an Omaha card show. Wish I hadn't. |
#11
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Posted By: davidcycleback
If you cast a wide enough net, you used to be able to get good deals in a Mastro Auction-- meaning buying stuff that you could resell for more. If your focus was narrow, you would be lest likely to find deals ("I'm looking only for a T206 Ty Cobb grad Very Good" would be narrow focus). I suspect it's harder to get these deals today. |
#12
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Posted By: barrysloate
As someone who spends a lot of time pricing out large vintage card lots in the major auctions, there aren't too many bargains. |
#13
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
Hal, could you please edit your post with the mastronet URL and change it to the following tinyurl? Thanks. |
#14
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Posted By: Marc S.
You could place an extremely aggressive bid to start in Mastro and not be topped... |
#15
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Posted By: peter chao
Actually that makes a lot of sense. You could put your highest bid in right away. It saves time and protects your budget. |
#16
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Marc S. |
#17
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Posted By: Glenn
I bought a lot of War Gum cards from one of Seth Nagdeman's auctions a couple of years ago for the opening bid of $100. I got about $200 for them as an eBay lot. Not really an incredible deal or a big auction, but it worked out alright for me. |
#18
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Posted By: James Feagin
Despite some disagreement, I think the T213-3 Cobb PSA 9 was an absolute "deal" or "bargain" in the Goodwin auction. I've also had some good luck in Hunt's monthly auctions. They tend not to do so well in describing a lot or mentioning some of the better pieces in a lot. |
#19
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Posted By: peter chao
James, |
#20
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Posted By: John H.
I won 20 Hartland statues for $294 plus the 15% premium, for a total of $338.10, in the Clean Sweep Auction a couple of weeks ago. The lot includes the complete 1988 25th anniversary set plus Whitey Ford and Casey Stengel(?). There was never a Stengel figure made but there was a very rare piece (possibly only 20 manufactured) called The Confrontation featuring a manager and an umpire going at it nose to nose. I'm hoping and guessing that the "Stengel" is the manager half of that duo. |
#21
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
I think the days of getting great deals in auctions are done, Hal. Because of the 10% incremental bids, however, oftentimes you can get a card for a price say, 5% or so less than its true value, simply because the card's value falls in the middle of the current and next bid increment. |
#22
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Posted By: Rob Dewolf
Some of you might remember a short-lived Mastro endeavor when the company posted items for sale on its Web site. I'm guessing this was around 1999 or 2000 (?). Many of the items were large lots. One that I bought was a group of about 150-200 baseball pocket schedules that ranged in age from the late 1950s to the early '70s. The Web site description included only one photo and listed (maybe) 7-8 specific schedules. I don't remember the exact price and am too lazy to dig through my files, but I think I'm accurate in saying it came out to a little over $1.50 a schedule. |
#23
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Posted By: joe
Hello John H. actually the 2nd half of the confrontation was based on Sparky Anderson. Not sure what the Stengel looked like, can you post a picture.? |
#24
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Posted By: John H.
I don't have the figures yet. I'm having them delivered to an address in North Dakota rather than risking them going through Canada Customs. I'm not sure when I'll be able to pick them up. |
#25
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Posted By: davidcycleback
Way back in the old days when we were young and carefree (circa 2000) I won a lot of 25 identical Chicago Cubs Phantom World Series Tickets in a Mastro Auction. The first one I put on eBay sold for more than I paid for the entire lot. |
#26
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Posted By: Alan
I always wondered (if I had lots of money of course) would I be able to make a living buying high end stuff from the big auction houses & then re-consigning those same items a few years later to the same or other auction houses ??????? |
#27
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Posted By: Marc S.
<<I always wondered (if I had lots of money of course) would I be able to make a living buying high end stuff from the big auction houses & then re-consigning those same items a few years later to the same or other auction houses ???????>> |
#28
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
I bought a LOT of stuff out of those old Mastro & Steinbach or whatever online auctions. I bought a lot of Muhammad Ali Closed Circuit TV tickets that was about 60 of them from a couple different fights for like $40 or something. They all sold for $10 or more. Also a LOT of 1933 Goudey's--probably close to 100 or more in lots of like 6-10 of different teams. They were all very nice in about EX condition. But back then you could still buy stuff like that and do well by re-selling. Also, the baseball auction business, at that time, was still largely call-in type activity. The net was just catching on. Same thing as the Amazon/Sotheby's Halper section. Lots of items from that sale too........ |
#29
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Posted By: Sean Coe
In a couple of Hunt Auctions I've run across some good deals particularly with cards from the early 1920's. |
#30
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Posted By: Greg Theberge
I got a pretty good "deal" on a 1903 Royal Rooters pin and Tessie songcard in the last REA that sold for about 50% less than what the pin sold for alone in a recent Leland's auction. |
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