View Single Post
  #52 (permalink)  
Old 01-26-2014, 12:10 PM
OnyxRider OnyxRider is offline
Banned
Visit my Photo Gallery

 
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 589
Not Ranked     
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Nedsel View Post
If you read the fine print in most auction companies' policy papers, you will find that they reserve the right to bid on items they are selling "up to, but not beyond" their reserve prices. In other words, the auctioneer has the right to - and will - raise the called price on things without an actual bid being placed by anyone in the audience. Once they get within spitting distance of the reserve price, this practice stops, as it doesn't pay to have a shill bid win the auction. Which is also how one can often determine if the bidding is real or fake: when the auction company pleads with the seller to drop his reserve, the bid is usually genuine. If there is no such activity, chances are there was no real bidding anywhere close to the reserve price.
Unfortunate but I have seen this many times when watching a B-J auction. They create something artificial and try to get a feeding frenzy of bids going. Just wondering how often it is practiced.
Reply With Quote