Does anyone think TELETRADE auctions are less than bonafide ?
ABC123
Posts: 2,627
Last time I checked this is the 21st Century, computers don't need 15 minutes after an auction to post winners----seems like enough time for the "phantom bidder " to strike ! Still cynical after all these years !
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Comments
1) Why does it take so damn long for the prices to be finalized?
2) Why do I often get a coin at my exact high bid?
Makes you go “Hmmmmmm........”
But I still have a hard time believing there are shenanigans going on. That would/could be one nasty lawsuit....
Dave
If you didn't like the price, why bid the price? Bid what you are comfortable paying.
That's not to say games aren't being played, as TT puts their own (Spectrum) coins in the auctions. Many of the high end stuff is just that. After the auction is over...about 30-45 mintues later, coins that have been bought back appear as pending. Coins sold will have a price realized. Those are the games, but they can and are played with consignors as well.
Overall a decent marketplace for coins, but not what is was a few years ago before E-Bay.
Ike Specialist
Finest Toned Ike I've Ever Seen, been looking since 1986
I suspect most people's max bid is often around fair market value, compensating for fees et al. It stands to reason that your max bid will be hit more often than not. Just coincidental.
They send me my winning lots way faster than Heritage does, let me tell you!
Semper ubi sub ubi
3) Why do most (and more than most, damn near all) items sell for the EXACT amount all the time? On any given item, I can see 4-5 past auctions for the same date/MM, and the prices are all the EXACT same...more times than not, the same price is realized whether its in a PCGS holder or NGC holder...DEFINITELY makes you go 'HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM'
Wondercoin
Excellent question.
I was looking at a Walker Liberty half the other night, and I noticed that the previous 5 examples had all sold for $588 (including fees)?
Different examples of the same date, spanning around 6 months in time.
Is the TT marketplace really that efficient?
Hmmmm……
Dave
1018 1c 1941 RD ANACS 64 Proof
1023 1c 1951 RD PCGS 65 Proof
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1095 5c 1941 PCGS 65 Proof
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1117 5c 1951 PCGS 66 Proof
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1248 25c 1941 ANACS 65 Proof
1432 50c 1953 PCGS 65 Proof
1441 50c 1955 PCGS 65 Proof
1459 50c 1962 PCGS 65 Proof
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Semper ubi sub ubi
It closed, with me as the winner, at $320.00
Certainly if Teletrade is up to hijinks or shananigans it would have shown up on this lot.
There's tomfoolery with consigners, I'm sure, but strictly with Teletrade? Highly doubtful.
peacockcoins
<< <i>Overall a decent marketplace for coins, but not what is was a few years ago before E-Bay. >>
Agreed. But there have also been quite a few improvements over the years that go unnoticed by most.
For example, consignors are no longer permitted to bid on their own coins during an auction. So if any consignor does want to bid up their coins, they must have set the reserve (max bid) before the auction begins. At least this prevents the schilling that used to go on there.
Many more behind the scenes improvements have taken place over the years to protect TT's own butt.
For example, it used to be that if you wanted to be a troublemaker, you could send a bag of circulated wheaties to PCGS to be graded under the TT program, and then bail out on them, leaving TT holding the bag for $55,000 (the grading fees).
and they're cold.
I don't want nobody to shoot me in the foxhole."
Mary
Best Franklin Website
Not necessary, Tom.
Well written software to “bump up“ bids would likely be designed to have some general randomness to it. Clearly if you bumped all or most bids up to the max, people would catch on pretty quickly that something was amiss. Make things random and its much harder to prove as well.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not implying Teletrade is up to something. I just have a “feeling” something odd is occurring. But that doesn’t make it so.
Dave
I have noticed some of the same results as other posters - win exactly at my max bid (even if it is an odd amount), very high reserves, coins all sold at the same price, etc. I tried to sell one coin last year with a reserve of $700 - I watched as the bids rose stedily throught the auction - and stop at exactly $700. I do not think anyone was bidding on the coin - but the computer made it appear so. When I asked TT about it, they would not explain.
I do not like the fact that I can't see who I am bidding against nor whether a reserve was in effect. That just adds to the potential mistrust.
Since all this happens under a veil of secrecy, I have almost totally stopped bidding in Teletrade auctions. And I have stopped submitting coins for sale. I prefer the more open venues like Ebay, Heritage, etc (and I know they have quirks of their own).
“In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock." - Thomas Jefferson
My digital cameo album 1950-64 Cameos - take a look!
<< <i>I have noticed some of the same results as other posters - win exactly at my max bid (even if it is an odd amount.... >>
What do you mean by odd amount?
Teletrade bids are always at published, predetermined increments. Your statement doesn't seem to be watertight.
and they're cold.
I don't want nobody to shoot me in the foxhole."
Mary
Best Franklin Website
why can i bid @ 7:01 and lose to a sniper @ 7:02 ?
I always assumed Teletrade was also bidding on lots for them to sell. It would almost be silly of them to sit there and let a Peace Dollar sell for $6.00
Hard to catch a break there anymore when starting bids are so high.
Wondercoin
<< <i>I watch Jeopardy every night and it starts @ 7 PM sharp why can i bid @ 7:01 and lose to a sniper @ 7:02 ? >>
The last bid entering the system will always be a bidder's high(er) bid by one level.
For example in your case someone may have bid at 6:55 a dollar amount that was higher than your 7:01 bid. Teletrade's system would then, after your bid (when the bidding is closed) place the next level bid for the bidder at 6:55.
If your 7:01 bid (really probably 7:00 as your clock may be off...) was higher than the max the 6:55 bidder placed you would have been the subsequent winner.
Always keep in mind: when the time runs out for all bidders Teletrade sweeps the high bids for bidders who placed a bid higher than the highest recorded at closing and will then bump that lot.
peacockcoins
Text
2 sold .
https://www.pcgs.com/SetRegistry/collectors-showcase/world-coins/one-coin-per-year-1600-2017/2422
<< <i>I'd like to add a third thing I dont understand about Teletrade in regard to Dave99B's 'things I dont understand about Teletrade'....
3) Why do most (and more than most, damn near all) items sell for the EXACT amount all the time? On any given item, I can see 4-5 past auctions for the same date/MM, and the prices are all the EXACT same...more times than not, the same price is realized whether its in a PCGS holder or NGC holder...DEFINITELY makes you go 'HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM' >>
My guess is that some of these lots are teletrade's coins, and they have a consistent reserve on the same date/mm/grade. The ones you are seeing with similar end prices sat at the reserve until someone bid that last increment. At least, that's what I've always thought.
Apropos of the coin posse/aka caca: "The longer he spoke of his honor, the tighter I held to my purse."
<< <i>What do you mean by odd amount? >>
Sorry, I should have been more clear. Here are a few examples - I bid $280 instead of $300 or $1150 instead of $1100 or $1200. I win at my max bid.
I realize that there are only so many bids increments (I started bidding at TT at its inception in the phone-in days), but I don't usually bid an even number like $500 or $1000.
I will say that I have won a few lots at less than my max bid but they are always below $100.
“In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock." - Thomas Jefferson
My digital cameo album 1950-64 Cameos - take a look!
"I've bought coins below my max, so there can't be a program that takes everything to your max.
Those are the ones that consignors own & not the house.
I have serious doubts.
Makes you go “Hmmmmmm........”
But I still have a hard time believing there are shenanigans going on. That would/could be one nasty lawsuit....
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I have won a number of auctions that never approached anywhere near my high bid. Maybe yer just unlucky .
I stopped bidding on them over a year ago just because they are not!
<< <i>Does anyone think TELETRADE auctions are less than bonafide ?
I stopped bidding on them over a year ago just because they are not! >>
So you have proof of this?
I see no problem buying coins because you set your price and see what happens.
The problem I have is selling coins. The reason is, I suspect they have a few tiers of seller’s commissions and of course there’re the house’s coins. A very high number of these are bought back; therefore, knowledgeable buyers aren’t giving much creditability to their auctions.
That makes it dang hard for the seller paying full buyback commissions in this atmosphere to play the game.
roadrunner