Is it bad business to?
JY93
Posts: 66 ✭
If a sellers coin on EBAY does not sell and the auction ends is it bad business to email the seller and make an offer to buy the coin for a lower price? There have been many occasions where the opening bid is just too high for me to bid and if the price was a little lower I would bid. Has anyone out there had success doing this?
Thanks, John
Thanks, John
0
Comments
I don't know if it's bad business or not, but I've done that several times, especially if it's a high end coin and the price is a little out of reach. Sometimes if I see a particular coin that I'm interested in, I'll keep an eye on it and if it doesn't sell after the first or second time, I've emailed the owner with an offer, and at least 2 or 3 times I've been able to get the coin for several hundreds off the original sales price. I don't think this is bad business really, all you're doing is tendering an alternate offer that can be accepted or rejected with no feelings hurt.
Regards,
Frank
Joe
K S
LSCC#1864
Ebay Stuff
As a seller, I welcome such offers. I'm in business to sell coins. The fact that it has just ended without a bid or without meeting a reserve may make me a little more willing to discount too. I accept many of the offers and politely decline many more. Overall, I'd much rather have them than not.
WH
is it really against eBay rules? i know it's against some eBay rules for the seller to contact underbidders in such a manner. but once an auction has run it's course i see know way that eBay can have any say in a two party transaction. what i always suggest to people is that they make contact off the eBay system just to make sure. it wouldn't surprise me that they try tostop things like that, though, since it takes money outa their coffer!!
al h.
I decline all such offers both buying and selling. I like conducting business within the confines of the eBay system. For me, it is the right thing to do and I sleep very well at night.
However, I am also not in this for the money. So I don't need to buy or sell anything as a necessity. It makes my life and decision making easier.
Joe.
UncleJoe, Just a friendly suggestion: Rather than turning down the offers, you can always start a new auction (or, if you're the buyer, ask the seller to start a new auction) with a Buy It Now price set at the agreed upon amount. That way, you still have the security of going through eBay, and the seller won't have to pay for new Listing Fees (if it's a re-list.) Since most eBay listings don't show up in catagories for the first few hours, it gives you plenty of time to complete the transaction without someone else jumping in on it.
I was bidding on a low grade coin I didn't really need but it was so dang cheap, lower than the
slabbing fee I put in a low bid, then it went for maybe a buck higher than my high bid. A few
days after the close I got an email from eBay (not the seller) asking if I wanted to buy it for what I had bid.
The email said there was some undisclosed problem the seller had with the buyer so I was given
a chance to get it at my highest bid. I did. But that had never happened to me before. Didn't
know it was an option with eBay.
Kris
"I think I have finally lived long enough to realize that the big man in the sky aint talking" Ogden Nash
"When all you got is a hammer, everything looks like a nail"
Registry 1909-1958 Proof Lincolns
I think it`s wrong to make an offer before the auction closes,and the only thing more wrong,to me,is when the seller accepts it!(and ends auction early.)
I see many here do not agree with me.
If someone offers me a price before an auction is over, if there are bids present, I tend to politely say no and thank them very much for being interested in something I sell. I don't want them to go away, I just want to play by the rules while the ball is in play.
I almost never use a reserve (some base price, 7 days, let the auction take its course to market price...), so I don't tend to have non-met reserves.