I bid on the phone and I had no problems. Bidding
on the phone is always the best option, because then
you know what you did, what they did etc. A good auction, I thought.
Kirby McDaniel
www.movieart.net
On Dec 5, 2005, at 11:59 PM, David Kusumoto wrote:
Hello all --
Just one thing bothered me. If you were there, maybe you can explain.
** For some posters, bidding JUMPED immediately (w/no declared bidding
increments in between) -- to the HIGHEST level established by an
absentee
bidder. Not all the time, but it happened.
** For example, I was a phone bidder for the "Brief Encounter" British
one-sheet. Bidding opened at $500. Then out-of-the-blue -- I heard a
Bonham's employee declare, "we have an absentee bid of $2500!" The
bidding
then JUMPED from $500 immediately to $2500 -- with NO bidding
increments
accepted "in between" -- from either the floor or from the phones.
** The poster hammered for $3,000 (or about $3,800 if you include
the 17.5%
buyer's premium -- and another 8.25% sales tax for in-state buyers
-- a
whopping 25.75% gouge).
** I don't understand the criteria for what seems an unfair
practice -- NOT
to me as a phone bidder -- but to the absentee bidder! If bidding
OPENS at
YOUR "faxed-in-advance" bid -- haven't you just lost your shot to
get a
poster for "possibly" less? I planned to "drop out" at $1500. I
didn't get
the chance, nor did the absentee bidder get the opportunity, to see
bidding
advance in increments well past $1500 until it finally ended at
$3,000.
** If I had faxed in a $6,000 absentee bid -- and a Bonham's employee
declared, "we have an absentee bid of $6,000!" -- I would've been
pi**ed to
learn my shot to get "Brief Encounter" for $3,000 or $4,000 or even
$5,000 -
went out the window. The auctioneer, in some cases, established
opening
bids well ABOVE $500, accepting the absentee bidder's high bid,
DECLINING
lower bids from the floor and the phones.
** Until I learn the "criteria" for this practice -- I'll NEVER submit
absentee bids by fax to Bonham's (or to any auction house) in the
future.
If I want something and can't be present, I'll phone bid like I did
today.
Again, perhaps there's a simple answer. It didn't happen to all lots.
"Suez" opened at $500 before Sue Heim got it for $5500 (hooray
Sue!). But
before it hammered, she and others were bidding against an absentee
bidder.
** There was ONE consignor for this sale. (Louis Leithold's
estate.) All
the more reason I don't understand the "opening bid" inconsistency
from
lot-to-lot. On the surface, this has "anti-consumer" written all
over it.
And if takes more than 5-min. to explain, I probably still wouldn't
get it.
** Look, if I'm a consignor, it's in my best interest to promote this
practice, but you know, consignors are buyers too. And I demand
consistency
from licensed auctioneers.
-koose.
Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
___________________________________________________________________
How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List
Send a message addressed to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L
The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.
Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
___________________________________________________________________
How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List
Send a message addressed to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L
The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.