Hmmm dealers are at it too
On the heals of our wonderful experience with the 09-S on eBay, before I could change our Slabbed listings to no-returns it happened again. This time it was a large national dealer playing the approval service game. TNFC on eBay, AKA Numismatic Financial Corporation, purchased an 1882-S Morgan Dollar in an ANACS MS66 holder for $275. I was shocked by the high bid but soon after the item was shipped I received this message "Hi- We received the subject coin, thank you for the prompt shipping. Unfortunatley, it is not of the quality we had hoped so we'll have to return the item for a refund. Thank you- NFC". I guess they were willing to risk to risk $8 in shipping to hit a $600 homerun if it were really a 67. It used to be buyer beware.... I guess it is now seller beware.
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<< <i>On the heals of our wonderful experience with the 09-S on eBay, before I could change our Slabbed listings to no-returns it happened again. This time it was a large national dealer playing the approval service game. TNFC on eBay, AKA Numismatic Financial Corporation, purchased an 1882-S Morgan Dollar in an ANACS MS66 holder for $275. I was shocked by the high bid but soon after the item was shipped I received this message "Hi- We received the subject coin, thank you for the prompt shipping. Unfortunatley, it is not of the quality we had hoped so we'll have to return the item for a refund. Thank you- NFC". I guess they were willing to risk to risk $8 in shipping to hit a $600 homerun if it were really a 67. It used to be buyer beware.... I guess it is now seller beware. >>
So you think they bought an ANACS MS66, and returned it because they didn't think it was a 67? I guess I don't quite follow.
-Paul
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
<< <i>
<< <i>On the heals of our wonderful experience with the 09-S on eBay, before I could change our Slabbed listings to no-returns it happened again. This time it was a large national dealer playing the approval service game. TNFC on eBay, AKA Numismatic Financial Corporation, purchased an 1882-S Morgan Dollar in an ANACS MS66 holder for $275. I was shocked by the high bid but soon after the item was shipped I received this message "Hi- We received the subject coin, thank you for the prompt shipping. Unfortunatley, it is not of the quality we had hoped so we'll have to return the item for a refund. Thank you- NFC". I guess they were willing to risk to risk $8 in shipping to hit a $600 homerun if it were really a 67. It used to be buyer beware.... I guess it is now seller beware. >>
So you think they bought an ANACS MS66, and returned it because they didn't think it was a 67? I guess I don't quite follow.
-Paul >>
Well I bet they were hoping it would at least cross at 66
Instead of "an auction is an auction is an auction" and "what you see is what you get", the buyer says "...we had hoped...".
An auction is not about hope.
In addition, insistence on a return policy exacerbates this issue. If you don't like what you see, don't bid on it.
<< <i>I'm torn on this. I completely understand the frustration on the seller's end but at the same time I'm thrilled to see buyers giving more merit to the coin itself rather than it's plastic and label. >>
I agree with you completely as to people wanting the coin to be all there but when you are dealing with a .01 start price auction. Of you are not confident in the coin, dont bid
As David says, the guy must have been hoping for a crossover. Gee, if you want to end up with an (XYZ grading company) MS-66, why not BID on an (XYZ grading company) MS-66 in the first place???
TD
<< <i>I have seen the coin. It is nice. There was no reason to return it.
As David says, the guy must have been hoping for a crossover. Gee, if you want to end up with an (XYZ grading company) MS-66, why not BID on an (XYZ grading company) MS-66 in the first place???
TD >>
Because you can't make quick money that way!
Joe.
Great business model. Thanks for the heads up.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
<< <i>That's the best thing about eBay. No seller is immune from the whims of a buyer, while eBay always gets paid.
Great business model. Thanks for the heads up. >>
No, eBay will not make money on this transaction if the seller follows through with the "paperwork". The only way for eBay to make money off of it is if the seller doesn't do the paperwork or if the seller listed the auction during a promo event and relists on a regular fee schedule.
I've had a buyer on eBay just send stuff back with no communication whatsoever, only a note with two words..."issue refund". Nice, thanks for the heads up and oh, what's that, it was a forum member here who sells quite a bit on eBay?
I agree about the looking to make a quick buck part too.
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<< <i>I have seen the coin. It is nice. There was no reason to return it.
As David says, the guy must have been hoping for a crossover. Gee, if you want to end up with an (XYZ grading company) MS-66, why not BID on an (XYZ grading company) MS-66 in the first place???
TD >>
TNFC wants to make a ridiculous profit. Try to cross it over and hope it crosses and then stick it in their BIN inventory
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<< <i>On the heals of our wonderful experience with the 09-S on eBay, before I could change our Slabbed listings to no-returns it happened again. This time it was a large national dealer playing the approval service game. TNFC on eBay, AKA Numismatic Financial Corporation, purchased an 1882-S Morgan Dollar in an ANACS MS66 holder for $275. I was shocked by the high bid but soon after the item was shipped I received this message "Hi- We received the subject coin, thank you for the prompt shipping. Unfortunatley, it is not of the quality we had hoped so we'll have to return the item for a refund. Thank you- NFC". I guess they were willing to risk to risk $8 in shipping to hit a $600 homerun if it were really a 67. It used to be buyer beware.... I guess it is now seller beware. >>
I'd block them from any future bidding. I have done business with them as a buyer and had no issues, but that kind of crap is a waste of your time and money.
Dwayne F. Sessom
Ebay ID: V-Nickel-Coins
My V Nickel Registry Set - https://pcgs.com/setregistry/alltimeset/71874
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"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
<< <i>If you allow returns there's nothing to complain about when someone exercises the right YOU granted. >>
It doesn't matter.....paypal is paid and the buyer in ANY circumstance can recieve a refund even if you DON'T offer one in your listing. Like TomB said, all they have to do is file a claim.
Tom
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Jim
When a man who is honestly mistaken hears the truth, he will either quit being mistaken or cease to be honest....Abraham Lincoln
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I realized long ago that there's about zero chance of me beating TNFC at their own game...not to mention I got tired of sellers posting their entire inventories. There may be fair deals in there but they are too sharp to leave money on the ebay table. I've often bid high on ebay material with the hope of an upgrade but I've never returned such a coin unless it was overhyped/not decent for grade.
An auction is not about hope.
When a seller mispresents a coin due to a lack of knowledge or intending to deceive then "hope" breaks down. In those cases I feel that auction sales should be approval sales....even if the seller states "no returns." Hey, if they're crooks, a little verbage shouldn't stand in the way of ethics. It cost me a few negs along the way but letting bad sellers continue to pad their feedback is not right. Just my 2 cents. Hope should have nothing to do with an auction that is properly described and represented. And a seller stating "I have no clue as to what this is worth or what condition it is in" is hardly an excuse. 95% of them know exactly what they have and what it's worth. If you really don't know what you have then find out what it is you have before you go to sell it.
At $275 + shipping TNFC was paying well over sheet "ask" for the coin. So either they were hoping for an upgrade or possibly a PL designation. Even if crossed over they couldn't make money on that coin considering it bids around $225....and common Morgans are still very weak. Now if the coin were in an old mini-ANACS slab with the gold foil reverse (circa 1990) then I can understand why bidders would push the price up and have a fair expectation of getting an upgrade or at least a PQ+ coin.
roadrunner
<< <i>You be the judge, was this coin misrepresented Linky >>
IMO, no.
<< <i>You be the judge, was this coin misrepresented Linky >>
no.
i can't understand how this could be done with a slabbed coin.
<< <i>
i can't understand how this could be done with a slabbed coin. >>
I returned a slabbed coin I bought from eBay because when I got it in hand there was a signficant spot that wasn't visible in the seller's photos because of the angle of lighting they used (not sure whether it was intentional).
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<< <i>You be the judge, was this coin misrepresented Linky >>
The photos could have been bigger, but unless the coin does not look like these photos (which I doubt), the coin was not misrepresented in any way.
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<< <i>You be the judge, was this coin misrepresented Linky >>
No, that's a nice coin. NFC gambled on a upgrade and lost -- they should just keep it. If the listing was "no returns", this is a case where the seller might win a SNAD claim. Unfortunately, if you offer a return policy, you will get a buttmunch tire kicker now and then. Some jerk returned a Saint to me after gold dropped $100 in 2 days. Just refund, block and move on.
<< <i>You be the judge, was this coin misrepresented Linky >>
No I don't believe that any of your auctions are misrepresented but your pictures have much to be desired. Try taking better upclose photos and you will probably make more $$$
Tom
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However, I don't believe ebay should be treated as an approval service and am with the OP here. The return feature is for a coin that doesn't match what you think the description says. If the coin is as described, the buyer should keep it.
Of course if anyone want's to ask for approval service on a coin I'm likely to grant it but I probably won't want to give ebay and paypal 10% of that deal.
--Jerry