Stacks Bowers ups their buyers premium to 20%.

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by calcol, Jul 9, 2017.

  1. calcol

    calcol Supporter! Supporter

    See link below. It was 17.5%. New rate becomes effective after the ANA auction. They try to present it as though it's a good thing for buyers. Actually, it's consignor's who will pay. Buyer's generally have a fixed maximum they will pay that is hammer plus premium. If premium goes up, hammer goes down.

    I think live auctions and paper catalogs, which are major expenses, will fade away except for really expensive coins. So there will little reason to justify even the common 17.5% premium we see today. Some auction companies, like Legend and Great Collections, are charging only 10% buyer's premium for internet-only auctions. I predict a gradual shift of more expensive coins to auction this way. If you are a consignor and have a coin with $10K market value (i.e. what collectors are willing to pay in total), do you want to consign it to Stacks Bowers and get $8,333 (=10K/1.2) or to an internet-only auction by Legend or GC and get $9,091 (=10K/1.1)?

    eBay may benefit too from premium increases by traditional coin auction companies.

    Cal

    Link: http://www.stacksbowers.com/News/Pages/PressReleases.aspx?ArticleID=192
     
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  3. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Has been happening in ancient auctions for a while now. Just like eating out, service people think there is no upper limit to what they can charge. Maybe they are right, but I suspect that the growth of takeout firms is showing consumers are sick of overpaying wait staff, and I believe you are right that other avenues will probably increase in popularity. Too bad there isn't a good site like Ebay that screens through listings to prevent all of the fakes and garbage. I simply do not have time to wade throw the garbage on Ebay anymore.
     
  4. jwitten

    jwitten Well-Known Member

    I hate buyer premiums. It does not make me spend more, it just makes it take longer to calculate how much my bid should actually be.
     
    Joshua Lemons likes this.
  5. ToughCOINS

    ToughCOINS Dealer Member Moderator

    I'll be surprised if fees at this level don't backfire on the auction industry.
     
  6. Santinidollar

    Santinidollar Supporter! Supporter

    Wonder if Heritage and Great Collections will be far behind?
     
  7. ToughCOINS

    ToughCOINS Dealer Member Moderator


    I'm sure they're watching from the sidelines to see whether we tolerate the increase or not.
     
  8. calcol

    calcol Supporter! Supporter

    Heritage maybe, but I know that some of their execs opposed going from 15% to 17.5% a few years back. I don't think it will happen at Great Collections, at least not to 20%. Their thing is internet-only with a low buyers premium. I think if they do it right, they can start taking away higher-end coins from the big boys.

    Some auction houses, like Bonham's, charge 25%.

    Cal
     
  9. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    It seems like the big 2 auction houses are moving to a model where only high value consignments can be viable for the seller giving them leverage to get back part of the fee.

    Legend certainly has a huge opportunity here if they remain with their lower fees. They are the one place competition wise that has proven the ability to get the same class of high end buyers and get big bucks for items. eBay should also see more 3 figure coins coming back to them if they sit on their fees, it's just not practical to be giving up almost 40 percent on lower value submissions.
     
  10. calcol

    calcol Supporter! Supporter

    I think Legend has a winning formula of having internet-only auctions with 10% buyers fees and live auctions for more expensive coins with 17.5% buyers fees.

    Cal
     
  11. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    These auction fees are exorbitant and there should be legislation capping fees at a certain percentage.
     
  12. jwitten

    jwitten Well-Known Member

    Eh, not sure I would get the government involved in that. Just let the consumer make the call on how much is too much.
     
    medoraman, NSP and calcol like this.
  13. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    I agree. I fully expect their auction business to grow if that is something they are interested in growing.
     
  14. calcol

    calcol Supporter! Supporter

    I agree the government should stay out of setting coin auction premiums. I don't know that there is collusion (which would be a crime), so it's a free market. If a particular company raises its rates too high, they'll lose business to other companies. And collectibles are hardly necessities, so why should there be anything resembling price controls? A place where the government could take a useful role is being more active in suppressing counterfeits.

    Cal
     
    Santinidollar likes this.
  15. Joe2007

    Joe2007 Well-Known Member

    Auction houses in every day items have even higher premiums. The local auction houses in my area charge 40% to the consignor and have a 10% buyer's premium. It is highway robbery in my opinion but they still sell tons of stuff since heirs and non-interested sellers don't care as much about their returns.

    Everything But The House (EBTH), a nationwide online auction firm, charges 40% plus from what I've heard but they still have plenty of business.

    I'm concerned that fees are only going to get worse since consignors don't seem to have a lot of leverage.
     
  16. NorthKorea

    NorthKorea Dealer Member is a made up title...

    EBTH also has a horrible return policy. Basically, they won't accept returns on non-authentic items for jewelry (cite in house gemologist as an expert) and autographs (refuse to accept opinions of industry experts). I would imagine their policies are similar for problem coins.

    Also, I'd call them regional to the Ohio River Valley. They're expanding, yes, but that's their honey hole, so to speak.
     
  17. Alfredfredo

    Alfredfredo New Member

    I agree all very greedy with premiums and all other conditions,one of the most unscrupulous industries, unregulated ,not very transparent
    Amazing at gouging the public,only industry where you never know how much something will cost.
    Then some have the cheek to pay you after 45 days if you are selling.
    But when you are buying make sure you pay in full (with all the extra costs) with in 2-3 days or else extra charges.
    A real mugs game buying from Auctions.
    Think Salvator Mundi only $450.000.000.
     
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