Posted May 28, 201213 yr I bid on a record @ $300 and take it to $500 but get out bid for $700. If I didnt bid in the first place would the record still reach that end price?.
May 28, 201213 yr Check to see the increment bid should be around $20 at that price so the under biddder will be a round $680
May 28, 201213 yr On 28/05/2012 at 14:04, Prophonics 2029 said: I bid on a record @ $300 and take it to $500 but get out bid for $700. If I didnt bid in the first place would the record still reach that end price?. Yes I'd say. Someone took it from $520 to $680 or there abouts and they didn't win it. All other things being equal its only a matter of the second highest bidder being the one that determines what the winner will need to pay. Edited May 28, 201213 yr by ged parker
May 28, 201213 yr On 28/05/2012 at 14:13, ged parker said: Yes I'd say. Someone took it from $520 to $680 or there abouts and they didn't win it. All other things being equal its only a matter of the second highest bidder being the one that determines what the winner will need to pay. And i am second highest bidder far too many times
May 29, 201213 yr I buy and sell on eBay all the time the knack to buying is you never never bid until the last 10 seconds. You need to watch the item carefully, I can never understand why people bid with each other while say there are 5 days left falsely pushing up the price far too early.
May 30, 201213 yr On 29/05/2012 at 19:24, swaggy said: I buy and sell on eBay all the time the knack to buying is you never never bid until the last 10 seconds. You need to watch the item carefully, I can never understand why people bid with each other while say there are 5 days left falsely pushing up the price far too early. Agree there's a good tool called Esnipe..................
May 30, 201213 yr On 29/05/2012 at 19:24, swaggy said: I buy and sell on eBay all the time the knack to buying is you never never bid until the last 10 seconds. You need to watch the item carefully, I can never understand why people bid with each other while say there are 5 days left falsely pushing up the price far too early. I bid early low sometimes to remember the item
May 30, 201213 yr Bidding early is just bringing interest to the record, put it on your watch list and ebay will remind you when its coming to the end of the auction, nothing worse than watching a record and 2 bidders (or more) are making multiple bids, none of which have any chance of winning, with days to go, thus bringing attention to it from casual browsers, Put your max bid in a sniper, walk away from it and may the highest bid win, Different outlook altogether for sellers of course
May 30, 201213 yr I don't use sniper and lose at least 50% of the records i bid on with 2-3 secs left therefoe no chance to raise bid Not that i normally would as i know the limit that i'm willing to pay and usually put that on with about 30 secs or less left. Edited May 30, 201213 yr by Gogs
May 31, 201213 yr On 28/05/2012 at 14:13, ged parker said: Yes I'd say. Someone took it from $520 to $680 or there abouts and they didn't win it. All other things being equal its only a matter of the second highest bidder being the one that determines what the winner will need to pay. this is assuming people act rationally and know what they want to pay, and removes the psychological element of the auction and getting outbid
May 31, 201213 yr On 29/05/2012 at 19:24, swaggy said: I buy and sell on eBay all the time the knack to buying is you never never bid until the last 10 seconds. You need to watch the item carefully, I can never understand why people bid with each other while say there are 5 days left falsely pushing up the price far too early. Exactly... Also I think if the things are not bid on until the last minute they slip under the radar and again stop a stupid bidding war with silly bids that are not going to win the item. :yes:
May 31, 201213 yr On 30/05/2012 at 11:14, Pete60 said: Bidding early is just bringing interest to the record, put it on your watch list and ebay will remind you when its coming to the end of the auction, nothing worse than watching a record and 2 bidders (or more) are making multiple bids, none of which have any chance of winning, with days to go, thus bringing attention to it from casual browsers, Put your max bid in a sniper, walk away from it and may the highest bid win, Different outlook altogether for sellers of course Just noticed your post Pete.... Ditto.... very true...
June 4, 201213 yr Exactly if someone puts an item on at £5 and.we know it's worth £500 we all know what we would top bid we are looking for a bargain not paying top price if nobody bidded till the last minute we would not pay anywhere near £500 all we are doing is falsely inflate prices I agree to put a low 1st bid in in case no one else bids bargain time but if some numpty goes above you in quick time leave it do not bid again work out your max bid and put it in with 10 or less secs depending on your speed you will win more than you lose I promise so get on your mouse ready waggy
June 4, 201213 yr On 04/06/2012 at 18:06, swaggy said: Exactly if someone puts an item on at £5 and.we know it's worth £500 we all know what we would top bid we are looking for a bargain not paying top price if nobody bidded till the last minute we would not pay anywhere near £500 all we are doing is falsely inflate prices I agree to put a low 1st bid in in case no one else bids bargain time but if some numpty goes above you in quick time leave it do not bid again work out your max bid and put it in with 10 or less secs depending on your speed you will win more than you lose I promise so get on your mouse ready waggy Thats exactly what I do
I bid on a record @ $300 and take it to $500 but get out bid for $700. If I didnt bid in the first place would the record still reach that end price?.