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Dealer lying to me!
I sold a coin to a very well known dealer in June. He paid over bid because it had a nice pedigree on it. I noticed it was still sitting in his inventory as of right now. I offered him a fair price to buy it from him, however, he does not know that I was the one who had sold it to him, knowing how much he paid for the coin. He replied back lying about the price to me. What do you think of this?
Nick
Nick
Nick
0
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<< <i>What do you think of this? >>
I'm shocked that a dealer would lie.
Russ, NCNE
Is he asking a fair markup? Or coinvault type huge markup?
pz
(Priest) BLASPHEMY he said it again, did you hear him?
<< <i>I sold a coin to a very well known dealer in June. He paid over bid because it had a nice pedigree on it. I noticed it was still sitting in his inventory as of right now. I offered him a fair price to buy it from him, however, he does not know that I was the one who had sold it to him, knowing how much he paid for the coin. He replied back lieing about the price to me. What do you think of this?
Nick >>
I don't know how this could be a lie, the way you tell it.
I sold him the coin for x amount of dollars.
I offered to buy it from him as a dealer-dealer transaction for x-y dollars, which was a fair price
He countered saying he purchased the coin for x+4y at Baltimore, which is untrue.
Understand?
<< <i>I sold a coin to a very well known dealer in June. He paid over bid because it had a nice pedigree on it. I noticed it was still sitting in his inventory as of right now. I offered him a fair price to buy it from him, however, he does not know that I was the one who had sold it to him, knowing how much he paid for the coin. He replied back lieing about the price to me. What do you think of this?
Nick >>
It's very offensive; however, sadly enough, it is not uncommon in the business.
Specializing in 1854 and 1855 large FE patterns
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jim
<< <i>however, he does not know that I was the one who had sold it to him, knowing how much he paid for the coin >>
You lied first, so you shouldn't be throwing stones. imo
Was your offer more or less than what you sold it to him for?
Russ, NCNE
<< <i>
<< <i>however, he does not know that I was the one who had sold it to him, knowing how much he paid for the coin >>
You lied first, so you shouldn't be throwing stones. imo >>
Does his hiding his identity absolve the dealer from his wrong?
Specializing in 1854 and 1855 large FE patterns
<
<< <i>I offered him a price that was fair so he would still get a reasonable price for the coin. Just surprising why he won't realize that he is buried in the coin. >>
So, you buried him in the coin and now you're trying to hose him again by buying it back cheap. I get it now.
Russ, NCNE
<< <i>
<< <i>however, he does not know that I was the one who had sold it to him, knowing how much he paid for the coin >>
You lied first, so you shouldn't be throwing stones. imo >>
how is his lack of knowledge considered lieing to him?
What next? Please do not tell me there is no Santa Claus.
About two months later he has the display in his case and I comment "nice 85-CC, those are hard to find in that grade" whereupon he says, "yeah, I got it while on a fishing trip in Canada".
<< <i>Does his hiding his identity absolve the dealer from his wrong? >>
If you expect truth from someone, you damn well better be truthful yourself...it's a no brainer.
<< <i>
<< <i>I offered him a price that was fair so he would still get a reasonable price for the coin. Just surprising why he won't realize that he is buried in the coin. >>
So, you buried him in the coin and now you're trying to hose him again by buying it back cheap. I get it now.
Russ, NCNE >>
While I feel the dealer was wrong, I agree with Russ that it is wrong to hide the fact that you were the seller to give him a loss.
Specializing in 1854 and 1855 large FE patterns
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<< <i>
<< <i>Does his hiding his identity absolve the dealer from his wrong? >>
If you expect truth from someone, you damn well better be truthful yourself...it's a no brainer. >>
So, if I tell the truth, as most people know I do, should I expect the next guy to tell me the truth? In other words, is it a quid pro quo?
Edited to add: and I don't think that, because someone lies to me, it necessarily means I have free reign to lie. Morals are morals, irrespective of the other guy's lack thereof.
Specializing in 1854 and 1855 large FE patterns
<
While you did not lie to him, you did deceive him. There is enough dishonesty to go around. If I were a dealer and some random, unknown buyer made an offer on a coin that I thought was too low, I could see that in the course of negotiating it would not be unreasonable to overstate what I have in the coin. Finally, the correct spelling is "lying".
<< <i>While I feel the dealer was wrong, I agree with Russ that it is wrong to hide the fact that you were the seller to give him a loss. >>
RKay...that was me and not Russ who said that.
<< <i>
<< <i>While I feel the dealer was wrong, I agree with Russ that it is wrong to hide the fact that you were the seller to give him a loss. >>
RKay...that was me and not Russ who said that. >>
Oops. Duly noted. I agree with that part of your sentiment.
Specializing in 1854 and 1855 large FE patterns
<
<< <i>i feel as if the forum members are accusing me of being a dirt bag when I have done nothing wrong in my own view. >>
I'm not accusing you of being a dirtbag, I just don't have a lot of sympathy for one dealer whining about the practices of another dealer. You're either very new or very naive.
Russ, NCNE
Really? How so?? PLEASE explain!!
<< <i>Dealer lieing to me!
What next? Please do not tell me there is no Santa Claus. >>
Robert - I've been meaning to tell you that, and also that there is no Easter Bunny!
As for the thread itself, it would not be uncommon for a dealer to factor in his show overhead costs to his acquisition price on what ever he purchased a t a show: Example Table $1000, Airfare $400, Meals $200, Cabs $75, Hotel $$350 - Show overhead $2,025 - Bought 20 coins at for $5000 - total cost for those 20 coins is $7000+ or put another way - there being no Santa Clause and no Easter Bunny to pay for those expenses, they have to be factored in some where as part of the cost of ther acquired inventory bought at show (Particularly true if not much got sold at that show). I'm somewhat amazed that collectors think that a dealer has no expenses involved in acquiring his inventory.
From the sound of the thread, it looks like the offer was less than the dealer's cost - maybe he should make it up in volumn?
“It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for sure that just ain't so.” Mark Twain
Newmismatist
Good point. This forum is for collectors to whine about dealers, not for dealers to whine about dealers.
Robert - I've been meaning to tell you that, and also that there is no Easter Bunny!
Ron, you have just about ruined my night. It's a good thing I still believe in the Coin Fairy™.
<< <i>What next? Please do not tell me there is no Santa Claus. >>
Robert - I've been meaning to tell you that, and also that there is no Easter Bunny!
Ron, you have just about ruined my night. It's a good thing I still believe in the Coin Fairy™.
Could you send him my way please - I'm in need of a Coin "Fix"
“It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for sure that just ain't so.” Mark Twain
Newmismatist
<< <i>While you did not lie to him, you did deceive him. >>
How is making an offer on a coin being deceitful?
Depending on the coin, 4 months might not be that long. My local dealer has had some stuff in inventory a lot longer than that. They wait for just the right person to come along and offer the right amount of money. If he has other inventory that can be turned over and keep the lights on, then he can sit on it for the right buyer. Why should he take a loss? It would be nice for you if he did, and it was a good try to get the coin back while making a few bucks, but don't come to the forum expecting a lot of excitement when that doesn't happen. I don't know too many dealers taking losses on coins.
<< <i>
<< <i>While you did not lie to him, you did deceive him. >>
How is making an offer on a coin being deceitful? >>
thanks.
<< <i>By not being forthright about one's identity. Sin of omission, not comission. >>
<< <i>Nick, although you didn't lie, you weren't upfront with the dealer. That really shouldn't make a difference in this whole conversation. But this is the art of negotiations. You come in low, he comes in high. Isn't your offer of x-y the same sense of a lie? You know what the market value is but you are offering something less?
Depending on the coin, 4 months might not be that long. My local dealer has had some stuff in inventory a lot longer than that. They wait for just the right person to come along and offer the right amount of money. If he has other inventory that can be turned over and keep the lights on, then he can sit on it for the right buyer. Why should he take a loss? It would be nice for you if he did, and it was a good try to get the coin back while making a few bucks, but don't come to the forum expecting a lot of excitement when that doesn't happen. I don't know too many dealers taking losses on coins. >>
i see what you are saying. however, i feel what i offered him was above fmv for the coin. in general though, should a dealer discount a coin that they know they are burried in and accept the sunk cost?
<< <i>maybe you will understand in mathematic terms
I sold him the coin for x amount of dollars.
I offered to buy it from him as a dealer-dealer transaction for x-y dollars, which was a fair price
He countered saying he purchased the coin for x+4y at Baltimore, which is untrue.
Understand? >>
I'm gonna ask again. Based on your original post, and the thread title, how is it that he lied to you?
<< <i>boy this thread got going quickly >>
We all like controversy.
<< <i>
<< <i>boy this thread got going quickly >>
We all like controversy.
It probably depends a lot on the coin, the clientele, the experience, and the cash/debt position of the dealer. There is probably no right/wrong answer. You don't make money by taking losses, that's for sure.
If the dealer volunteered that he/she bought the coin for a number that you know is false (which is way it sounds to me), he/she showed what type of charachter he/she has.
It may happen all the time - but that does not make it right.
it just sort of made me a little angry that a featured PCGS dealer lies about little costs, by roughly $300 on a fairly common coin.