Question about a buy it now with best offer.
Hi all. I am looking at buying a card off ebay. The seller has the card listed for $80 with a best offer. I looked up book value and the low is $20 and the high is $50. I am wondering what kind of offer would you put in on the card? I was thinking $40, but don't know if that is to low of an offer. Any help would help. Thanks in advance.
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BUT, that does not mean you can't offer less. You never know,
maybe the seller needs money.
I received a long nasty replay and a declined offer. The seller sighted that the card "BOOKS" for over $300.00 and why would I send in such a low ball offer. I replied that I actually offered more and showed him the closed auctions...and kindly said that "BOOK" value in Beckett is hardly the actual selling rate on 99% of cards.
mathew
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NHL hall of fame rookies
So you can never tell.
mathew
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I could care less about the seller's feelings or if my offer may be
insulting. What he paid for the item or what it books for is all irrelevant.
50% of the time, I've gotten items with my offers. 35% of the time, they send
me a counteroffer (I usually decline), and 15% they either decline, or never respond.
Raw: Tony Gonzalez (low #'d cards, and especially 1/1's) and Steve Young.
I imagine the smart thing is to throw a low offer first....you get three shots.
Edit to add: I also like it when you see a card you are willing to pay the BIN, but it has best offer so you get it cheaper...
Raw: Tony Gonzalez (low #'d cards, and especially 1/1's) and Steve Young.
<< <i>You never can tell. I offered someone $120 on a card that has sold regularly for $105 just because I wanted it at that moment and it was the only one up.
I received a long nasty replay and a declined offer. The seller sighted that the card "BOOKS" for over $300.00 and why would I send in such a low ball offer. I replied that I actually offered more and showed him the closed auctions...and kindly said that "BOOK" value in Beckett is hardly the actual selling rate on 99% of cards. >>
Heh, maybe it was the same guy I dealt with a few months ago.
I had a $100 BIN up of a card that had been recently selling for $100+. He offered $30, which was auto-rejected.
The guy emailed me and argued that the card only "booked" for $30.
I told him that the card was selling for much more than $30 lately.
He said that Book trumps all, and by rejecting a $30 offer, I was price gouging and trying to take advantage of the uninformed, and that by doing so, was showing that I had no morals, no character, and was a scammer.
I sent him links to ended listings where the card sold for $100+.
He responded by telling me to shove the card up my rear.
WTB: 2001 Leaf Rookies & Stars Longevity: Ryan Jensen #/25
Ive had someone offer me $40 for a $120 BIN and when I declined the guy wrote me a nasty email saying the card didnt sell at auction the last time it was listed with a min bid of $59.99. Then I had someone send me a note with "nice try" when I offered $120 for a lot of coins that sold for $140 when bought seperately. Both were losers IMO.
I ended up buying the card at auction from someone else for $36.
WTB: 2001 Leaf Rookies & Stars Longevity: Ryan Jensen #/25
<< <i>Honestly, anyone that responds with a message either to a low ball offer or to an offer declined is an idiot.
Ive had someone offer me $40 for a $120 BIN and when I declined the guy wrote me a nasty email saying the card didnt sell at auction the last time it was listed with a min bid of $59.99. Then I had someone send me a note with "nice try" when I offered $120 for a lot of coins that sold for $140 when bought seperately. Both were losers IMO. >>
If the card didn't sell for $59.99, why expect $120, unless it was a different card?
As a buyer, I don't take anything personal with best offers. However if a seller sends me a nasty gram, I will pass no matter what the price.
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<< <i>Honestly, anyone that responds with a message either to a low ball offer or to an offer declined is an idiot.
Ive had someone offer me $40 for a $120 BIN and when I declined the guy wrote me a nasty email saying the card didnt sell at auction the last time it was listed with a min bid of $59.99. Then I had someone send me a note with "nice try" when I offered $120 for a lot of coins that sold for $140 when bought seperately. Both were losers IMO. >>
If the card didn't sell for $59.99, why expect $120, unless it was a different card? >>
Where does it say anywhere that I expected $120?
<< <i>Heh, maybe it was the same guy I dealt with a few months ago.
I had a $100 BIN up of a card that had been recently selling for $100+. He offered $30, which was auto-rejected.
The guy emailed me and argued that the card only "booked" for $30.
I told him that the card was selling for much more than $30 lately.
He said that Book trumps all, and by rejecting a $30 offer, I was price gouging and trying to take advantage of the uninformed, and that by doing so, was showing that I had no morals, no character, and was a scammer.
I sent him links to ended listings where the card sold for $100+.
He responded by telling me to shove the card up my rear. >>
If I bothered to respond to such a dolt, I would've simply stated that if he was willing to pay full book, what was he expecting to sell it at? And if he was intending to sell it, then wouldn't he be guilty of the exact same thing he accused you of? Bungholes like him are just ticked that they can't get the current "hot" card at a price that will let them make a large enough profit and try to bully others into selling to them under market.
I recall many of these idiots back in the early days when there was limited Internet access, no eBay and a few of us were getting daily quotes while on Sportsnet (oh, that was so long ago and I hated dial-up connections!!!).
<< <i>He responded by telling me to shove the card up my rear. >>
Did he think that once you did that you would lower the price?
bobsbbcards SGC Registry Sets
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<< <i>Honestly, anyone that responds with a message either to a low ball offer or to an offer declined is an idiot.
Ive had someone offer me $40 for a $120 BIN and when I declined the guy wrote me a nasty email saying the card didnt sell at auction the last time it was listed with a min bid of $59.99. Then I had someone send me a note with "nice try" when I offered $120 for a lot of coins that sold for $140 when bought seperately. Both were losers IMO. >>
If the card didn't sell for $59.99, why expect $120, unless it was a different card? >>
Where does it say anywhere that I expected $120? >>
well, it said $120 BIN, so unless I'm reading it wrong? when you have a BIN, it's probably the price you are expecting, or somewhere close to it.
As a side story, two days after I sold the card for the $69.99. It was a 1999 SP Authentic buyback of Mark Brunell #7/21. The previous 2 had sold for $81 and $88 about 3 months before mine was put up.
<< <i>I see, my bad. It should have read $120 BV card and a $69.99 BIN. (I left out a few words)
As a side story, two days after I sold the card for the $69.99. It was a 1999 SP Authentic buyback of Mark Brunell #7/21. The previous 2 had sold for $81 and $88 about 3 months before mine was put up. >>
Thanks for the clarification. Sorry if I was somewhat rude, but your explanation does help clear up the situation quite a bit.