I want to try to avoid the fodder of other dealer threads and keep this on topic. I apologize upfront for being long winded :)
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We are in the age of the entitled buyer... and it's frequently annoying.
Yes. I guess I am an entitled buyer.
Dealers should be celebrating my bids and offers with triumphant joy! Line up around me! I have a stocked Paypal account and stamp want list!!!
I want the best product, at... the best price in a hobby that is experiencing hard times. I see all the threads is stamp collecting dead? APS numbers in decline. The collecting club I am in losing members YoY.
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You obviously have the choice of hundreds if not thousands of dealers to buy merchandise from
So what people are saying (without saying it) is - it's a buyers market. Terrific!
a buyers market : an economic situation in which goods or shares are plentiful and buyers can keep prices down.
a sellers market: an economic situation in which goods or shares are scarce and sellers can keep prices high.
If we were in a sellers market, with philatelist levels growing, and supplies were dwindling on
ebay, auctions and bourses at the current rate, then I have to pay the extra $30 because otherwise I would lose the opportunity in buying it. Just like housing. But alas... the item is still available. Don't think for a second, that a dealer won't feel _entitled_ to charge you premiums in equal and opposite scenarios. They'll then spin it - to - highly desired, in demand, act fast.
This is a capitalistic situation, and not about making friends, hobbies, or relationships. I'm not visiting the local dealer shoppe, or seeing his offline stash of prized inverts. I'm making a deal on
ebay. Clearly the dealers in question see their transactions as atomic, without concern for acquiring new customers and buyers. It's not an isolated incident either, so I'm not going to name the dealers.
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I'll bet if he had the item at $2000 and you talked him down to $1750, you would have paid it happily accepting the perceived discount. It all sounds like sour grapes
Its not a perceived discount thing. If a stamp was a $2000 cat, and it was a gem in question, a ~12% savings at $1750 might be a discount/sale and a great deal. If it is a $4000 cat stamp and it's a hinged mess with a tear, originally at $2000, and now reduced to $1750, doesn't mean it's not a ripoff at anything over $1000. Now if it's fairly valued at say $1000, but you let it go for $900, then it's a 10% off sale (from where it fairly valued), NOT A 78% off cat sale.
I'd pay 100% or over cat on a few items if they ever (please!?) come up for sale/auction. Noone has them for sale as they may be gone from philately.
Quote: $1585 in cash". Between
ebay and PayPal fees, they are only getting $1443
This is not my problem as a buyer. For me, the buyer it's $1585. How you deal with the fees is on you. If you can't acquire items below a cost, whereby the overhead involved doesn't impair your ability to be competitive and facilitate transactions, I'd argue your business is unsound. If it's that slim a margin, the business is doomed.
Dealers may be experts in stamps. They may have lots of knowledge. They may have lots of connections. But... This does not make them good at business. I know a few great chefs, even from strong culinary backgrounds that ran restaurants into the ground. Having yummy food is important, but only 1 part of restaurant management. Running the front and back of the house, is just as important to success as the food in the pan. Watch bar rescue, or kitchen nightmares and this is what I'm talking about. MANY dealers simply do not know how to conduct business but can tell me about the nuances of intaglio printing.
My point in all of this, was simply that the shortsightedness I see in a lot of folks sticking to their guns in prices is definitively leading the hobby to further demise, rather than allowing markets to flow. Collectors will continue to opt out, when they can't make deals.
The story beyond this - The dealer sits on his inventory further... it's 2020 now. Scott publishes a new cat value $50 less than next year, and the $30 he tried to get out of me, has vaporized. Then he'll complain next year, his margins are further squeezed, and if he doesn't adjust his pricing, he'll further be trying to rip off the next guy. Yes rip off. That's what overcharging is.
I'm sorry the dealer can't recoup his cost in the stamp. But don't blame that on the potential buyer. Blame it on the last buyer and move on.