Talk:Auction

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Revision as of 03:53, 11 May 2012 by imported>Peter Jackson (→‎Initial comments)
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 Definition A method of buying and selling in which the selling price is determined by competition among the buyers. [d] [e]
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Initial comments

Nice work so far. Of course Christie's and Southeby's should go in at some point. Also some discussion of the situation where, several similar items are for sale, winning bidder takes as many as he wants at the winning price, and the rest are auctioned again later.

What about auction scams? e.g. I think Wikitravel's warnings about art auctions on cruise ships [1] sound believable and the one time I went to a heavily-advertised carpet auction in a local hotel, it struck me as utterly crooked.

Are you going to cover tactics? What about risks like the time I bid higher than I'd intended to get my wife a nice bicycle at a police auction and discovered later that, including replacing a tire and a check-up at the bike shop, I'd spent more than that model sold for new? Sandy Harris 07:20, 11 May 2012 (UTC)

And rigging? For example, in the UK antiques trade the traders agree not to compete against each other. Illegal but well known to be common practice.
There's also (or rather was) auction bridge, which was often referred to just as "auction", but that probably doesn't belong in this article. Peter Jackson 08:53, 11 May 2012 (UTC)