So, Paddy, if you stop an auction to sell to a regular client, for, say, £100, how do you know that the auction, had it continued,
wouldn't have raised £200?
I've been in the position where I've left a bid of £1000 on some old electronics, and the auction has been stopped at a couple of hundred.
Very frustrating. It turned out I knew the buyer and he had offered £500 and the seller took it.
I also knew the seller and was going to tell him he lost £500....but did he?.........?
Second bidder may only have bidder £110....
The only problem here isn't monetary- it's moral.
My view is that if you can't find a buyer for something, then auction it on ebay.
If you take it down because a buyer contacts you, you've used ebay as an advertising site,
which it isn't.
In the vintage pro-audio business, people who mess people about on ebay generally have to pay more for stuff from other collectors
since everyone knows what they are like. People in the business don't rush to recommend them either.
They are only successful when dealing with people who don't know anything. This costs them in the long run.
After all, they have no idea whom they have really annoyed every time they stopped an auction.....
If ebay ran like an auction house, so when you put up an item it stayed up until the end, things would be better.