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are they trying to snowball me?? advice greatly appreciated
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<p>[QUOTE="funkee, post: 1932418, member: 37925"]This thread has become a circus. Stop throwing my name around. </p><p><br /></p><p>The valuation I provided is my opinion and mine only. I've seen remarkably good deals sit around for days at a time because they get buried in the 70,000+ currency listings on eBay. Just because a note doesnt sell at $299 doesn't mean a thing. Most buyers on eBay are opportunity buyers and few are specifically searching for mismatched stars, the way we are. Just because you found a specific note under priced doesn't mean it won't sell for more at auction. I've seen it numerous times. </p><p><br /></p><p>The note in question might sell for $100 or even $1000. If the listing ended on a Sunday afternoon, it may close at a higher price than if it ended at 3AM. That doesn't establish the note's value. It is rarely determined by one or two sales. The market is an ever changing place and auction prices are subject to many factors including marketing, timing, demand, supply and exposure. A moving average is a better way todetermine value. </p><p><br /></p><p>Ultimately this is all speculation. The OP is eager to sell and I don't blame him.</p><p><br /></p><p>Everyone please shut up about this nonsense and just watch the auction.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="funkee, post: 1932418, member: 37925"]This thread has become a circus. Stop throwing my name around. The valuation I provided is my opinion and mine only. I've seen remarkably good deals sit around for days at a time because they get buried in the 70,000+ currency listings on eBay. Just because a note doesnt sell at $299 doesn't mean a thing. Most buyers on eBay are opportunity buyers and few are specifically searching for mismatched stars, the way we are. Just because you found a specific note under priced doesn't mean it won't sell for more at auction. I've seen it numerous times. The note in question might sell for $100 or even $1000. If the listing ended on a Sunday afternoon, it may close at a higher price than if it ended at 3AM. That doesn't establish the note's value. It is rarely determined by one or two sales. The market is an ever changing place and auction prices are subject to many factors including marketing, timing, demand, supply and exposure. A moving average is a better way todetermine value. Ultimately this is all speculation. The OP is eager to sell and I don't blame him. Everyone please shut up about this nonsense and just watch the auction.[/QUOTE]
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are they trying to snowball me?? advice greatly appreciated
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