I just got a message from a guy who bought a coin from me..
.....on ebay last nite, he is offering to pay by echeck if I agree to send him $20 when I ship the coin....I am not going to do this, I do not even want to deal with this guy now,
I think he could be trouble, Is there anyway I can cancel the sale without the risk of getting negged ?
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I see a negative feedback in your future.....
<< <i>.....on ebay last nite, he is offering to pay by echeck if I agree to send him $20 when I ship the coin....I am not going to do this, I do not even want to deal with this guy now,
I think he could be trouble, Is there anyway I can cancel the sale without the risk of getting negged ? >>
A tricky one. Can we see the listing?
Sounds like he is doing something illegal. I assume he was sending you an echeck for the price of the coin plus $20, which gets him cash, then he avoids honoring the echeck - not sure how that would work, but I put nothing past todays digital scammers. Cheers, RickO
He wants to pay the winning bid amount by echeck and pocket the $20 out of what I would save on paypal fees, so basically he wants the $$$ that paypal would get if he just paid thru paypal....
edited to add: here's a copy & paste job from an echeck payment, to me, last night. The $4.75 fee... is this for all $ amounts?
Total Amount:
$153.49 USD
Fee amount:
-$4.75 USD
Net amount:
$148.74 USD
Issue a refund
You have up to 60 days to refund the payment and get the fees back.
Date:
Feb 28, 2010
Time:
01:16:45 PST
Status:
Uncleared (Expected Clearing Date: 3/3/2010-3/5/2010)
Note: eChecks work like paper checks and take your bank several business days to process.
L
Successful BST transactions with: SilverEagles92; Ahrensdad; Smitty; GregHansen; Lablade; Mercury10c; copperflopper; whatsup; KISHU1; scrapman1077, crispy, canadanz, smallchange, robkool, Mission16, ranshdow, ibzman350, Fallguy, Collectorcoins, SurfinxHI, jwitten, Walkerguy21D, dsessom.
the buyer made no contact prior to close?
tough to negotiate after the sale closed
yes..
<< <i>what is the value of the coin sold? is it over $1K?
yes.. >>
this one?
<< <i>I actully see no problem if you net more money from the sale and are willing to wait three to five days to complete the deal. >>
https://www.pcgs.com/setregistry/gold/liberty-head-2-1-gold-major-sets/liberty-head-2-1-gold-basic-set-circulation-strikes-1840-1907-cac/alltimeset/268163
March of Time - 27 Centuries in Gold
https://coins.www.collectors-society.com/WCM/CoinCustomSetView.aspx?s=36590
get your positive feedback block him forever!
bob
EAC 6024
<< <i>Conflicting posts concerning e checks have got me wondering , is it a $5 charge to the seller to take an echeck or not ? This is a flat rate right ? Doesnt matter if its a $1 or $100 its still $5 fee ? >>
Doesn't really matter. The coin was over $1,000. Completed listings for this seller show's only one coin that sold over $1,000 last night & it was $1,500. The seller would have been charged well more than $20 by Paypal in fees going the non-echeck route.
And what would you of done if he had just paid by echeck you would of saved twice as much.
As memtioned you just found a savey buyer that might be a repeat customer if you share the wealth.
<< <i>Conflicting posts concerning e checks have got me wondering , is it a $5 charge to the seller to take an echeck or not ? This is a flat rate right ? Doesnt matter if its a $1 or $100 its still $5 fee ? >>
Doesn't really matter. The coin was over $1,000. Completed listings for this seller show's only one coin that sold over $1,000 last night & it was $1,500. The seller would have been charged well more than $20 by Paypal in fees going the non-echeck route. >>
Yes , but it matters to me , i was paid by echeck recently and didnt think anything of it , i had no idea it costs me 5 bucks , i just need to verify that before spending the day amending my auctions to paypal only.
fyi: e-check is $5 MAX not $5 for every/any item amount - e.g. it wouldn't cost $5 for a $1 item.
<< <i>q]
<< <i>Conflicting posts concerning e checks have got me wondering , is it a $5 charge to the seller to take an echeck or not ? This is a flat rate right ? Doesnt matter if its a $1 or $100 its still $5 fee ? >>
Doesn't really matter. The coin was over $1,000. Completed listings for this seller show's only one coin that sold over $1,000 last night & it was $1,500. The seller would have been charged well more than $20 by Paypal in fees going the non-echeck route. >>
Yes , but it matters to me , i was paid by echeck recently and didnt think anything of it , i had no idea it costs me 5 bucks , i just need to verify that before spending the day amending my auctions to paypal only. >>
I hear ya!
Ever heard the term "loss leader"?
I don't consider his offer sleazy, I consider it savvy. As Longacre would say, take the opportunity to put it to The Man
And as mentioned earlier it only takes the buyers back up credit card out of play.
<< <i>Sounds like it saves you half of the PayPal fees if it is the auction linked above.
And what would you of done if he had just paid by echeck you would of saved twice as much.
As memtioned you just found a savey buyer that might be a repeat customer if you share the wealth. >>
I wouldn't let the buyer change the rules after the sale.
The scheme sounds fishy.
One buyer wanted to send me a personal check because "he couldn't use Paypal because his back was sore".
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Your advantages of accepting his echeck and returning 20.00 when you ship the coin:
You remove his use of a credit card that could lead to a chargeback.
You save much more than 20.00 on paypal fees. Have you calculated youe paypal fees both ways?
fee calculator
You should wait for echeck to clear from his bank into your paypal account before you ship coin. Paypal details page will tell you when its OK to ship.
Buyer is not being dishonest, he's trying to save a few bucks and is also offering you some of the paypal fees savings. To those that complain about high paypal fees, this is your legitimate way around some of them.
Echeck should be every sellers preferred method paypal payment. Just a matter of time before paypal does away with it. It costs them a fortune if fees.
Velocity, Not Valuation Defines A Bubble.
<< <i>Don't do it. It's in violation of something, and you might wind up being the fall guy. >>
How so?
eCheck is the sellers friend for sales over about $160.00.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
<< <i>
<< <i>Don't do it. It's in violation of something, and you might wind up being the fall guy. >>
How so? >>
It violates PayPal's ability to extract as much money as possible from each transaction.
<< <i>Don't do it. It's in violation of something, and you might wind up being the fall guy. >>
It only violates paying high paypal fees. I pay with echecks and accept them regularly. Like I said, it is a smart seller's preferred method of paypal payment.
Velocity, Not Valuation Defines A Bubble.
Jeff
Box of 20
<< <i>Good Luck. If there was a way on ebay to post in auctions that I would give a discount on a final price if the buyer uses echeck I would most definitely do it, especially when you have items in the 4-5K range. $5 for the echeck fee plus a discount of 1-2% is a lot better than paying $200-300 on ebay fees. >>
Offer an upgrade in shipping (first classs to priority or registered to express) for those that pay by echeck. Keep in mind that for a buyer to pay by echeck he must have a zero balance in his paypal account and he must not have a credit card tied to his paypal account. A yes to either of these two will take away his echeck option when he goes to "other funding options" during payment. As a buyer this can be accomplished by having another paypal account without a credit card that is used to make echeck purchases. It will require a bank account with money in it to cover the echeck. When you use an echeck paypal transfers funds from the bank account.
Velocity, Not Valuation Defines A Bubble.
For everybody flipping out (which makes no sense if you know how PayPal works), the seller always has the option of declining.
<< <i>This may not be exactly the same, but as a buyer I've PM'd sellers after a purchase and offered to pay by check to save them fees. They've accepted and transactions went OK. I didn't ask for any compensation but just am sympathetic to sellers on ebay.
Jeff >>
You're my kind of buyer!
Russ, NCNE
I have done similar things before. For example, I get offers on coins with the extra condition "Paid by echeck" So I know I'll save 2.2% and I factor that into the offer. I'm sure paypal isn't happy.
In this case, if fees are $40 or so and so he's offering to split the difference I'd jump on it. --Jerry
<< <i>Sounds like he is doing something illegal. I assume he was sending you an echeck for the price of the coin plus $20, which gets him cash, then he avoids honoring the echeck - not sure how that would work, but I put nothing past todays digital scammers. Cheers, RickO
He wants to pay the winning bid amount by echeck and pocket the $20 out of what I would save on paypal fees, so basically he wants the $$$ that paypal would get if he just paid thru paypal.... >>
Sounds OK to me. I often suggest the very same thing when people buy items from me on eBay over say 500. I offer to give them money back, usually half of the paypal fee that I save. So, they get the benefit and so do I. It's not illegal at all from what I'm reading... Just a way to reduce out of pocket money for everyone. If the buyer said he was only paying by eCheck and he demanded $20 back, that's a different story. I imagine he's trying to save you both money.
Hoard the keys.