|
In article ,
Paul McCahan wrote: Jeff Rife wrote: http://www.nolistingday.com/closing_stores.htm As of today, eBay has 129,000 different stores listed, and that page shows 29 as "leaving". That's 0.022% of the total...not very significant. yes, but that's an upstart website, alive for only a few days - the real numbers are he Posted by webnet ( 8990 ) on Jan-12-05 at 19:40:27 PST Auctions AMAZING. NOW since the last post at 19:26 stores 132,050 now its only 131,975 a loss of 75 stores closed in the last 20 minutes. I will check again in the morning to see how bad ebay has damaged themselves. AMAZING... sellers SPEAK OUT. I checked the number of stores earlier and found 5,180 pages of them (@ 25 stores per page), hence the current count at 'about' 129,500. To check the number do an advanced search, click on stores, search with 'no' keyword entries, then click on list alphabetically ...... on the results page scroll to the bottom and check the number of pages. Multiply by 25. Not to defend eBay, but I don't think your interpretation makes sense. The price increase doesn't take effect until February. Why would the stores shut down now? Why not continue selling until the change occurs? And if they currently have auctions running, it would be even more foolish to shut down - at least until the auctions finish. |
In article ,
Mike wrote: In article , TravelinMan wrote: No, the seller will just raise the price to $11. What part of this do you not understand? The part you apparently don't understand is that the price is set by the market - not by the seller alone. Right, and the cost of bringing the goods to the market just went up. Everyone else selling the same goods will also raise their prices. Their only other option is to absorb the loss. Do you *really* think many are going to do that? That makes sense - IF eBay is the only route to market. Hint: it isn't. And the other routes to market haven't had this amount of a price increase. The part that you don't seem to understand is that the seller will raise his price to cover his costs. I can't believe you don't understand this. When costs go up, sellers raise prices. It has always been thus. Of course, only eBay sellers have had this increase. Other routes to market have not. There is more to the "market price" than the cost of the goods alone. There are other expenses and factors to consider. This is a prime example. There are also competitive routes to market. eBay sellers have just been placed at a _relative_ disadvantage (compared to where they were before). |
In article ,
TravelinMan wrote: In article , Mike wrote: In article , TravelinMan wrote: No, the seller will just raise the price to $11. What part of this do you not understand? The part you apparently don't understand is that the price is set by the market - not by the seller alone. Right, and the cost of bringing the goods to the market just went up. Everyone else selling the same goods will also raise their prices. Their only other option is to absorb the loss. Do you *really* think many are going to do that? That makes sense - IF eBay is the only route to market. Hint: it isn't. And the other routes to market haven't had this amount of a price increase. The part that you don't seem to understand is that the seller will raise his price to cover his costs. I can't believe you don't understand this. When costs go up, sellers raise prices. It has always been thus. Of course, only eBay sellers have had this increase. Other routes to market have not. There is more to the "market price" than the cost of the goods alone. There are other expenses and factors to consider. This is a prime example. There are also competitive routes to market. eBay sellers have just been placed at a _relative_ disadvantage (compared to where they were before). What other online auction sites are there? I know of two. They're not nearly the size of eBay. I suppose someone could make the case that eBay is engaging in monopolistic practices. -- Timberwoof me at timberwoof dot com http://www.timberwoof.com http://www.sorryeverybody.com/gallery/200/ |
In article ,
Timberwoof wrote: In article , TravelinMan wrote: In article , Mike wrote: In article , TravelinMan wrote: No, the seller will just raise the price to $11. What part of this do you not understand? The part you apparently don't understand is that the price is set by the market - not by the seller alone. Right, and the cost of bringing the goods to the market just went up. Everyone else selling the same goods will also raise their prices. Their only other option is to absorb the loss. Do you *really* think many are going to do that? That makes sense - IF eBay is the only route to market. Hint: it isn't. And the other routes to market haven't had this amount of a price increase. The part that you don't seem to understand is that the seller will raise his price to cover his costs. I can't believe you don't understand this. When costs go up, sellers raise prices. It has always been thus. Of course, only eBay sellers have had this increase. Other routes to market have not. There is more to the "market price" than the cost of the goods alone. There are other expenses and factors to consider. This is a prime example. There are also competitive routes to market. eBay sellers have just been placed at a _relative_ disadvantage (compared to where they were before). What other online auction sites are there? I know of two. They're not nearly the size of eBay. I suppose someone could make the case that eBay is engaging in monopolistic practices. Possibly, but difficult. eBay sellers have to compete with Walmart, the Dollar Store, Amazon, and the entire rest of the economy. That's why a price increase hits them hard. As it is, I buy something on eBay if it's less expensive than other sources. Usually it is, but only by a little. If the seller tries to increase the price by enough to make up for eBay's increased fees, it will probably make their products more expensive than the alternatives - or at least not enough savings to make up for the hassle. |
Paul McCahan wrote:
Jack Zwick wrote: How do eBay's new prices compare to Yahoo Auctions? Yahoo won't matter, it's probably cheaper, and soon MUCH cheaper, problem is, if you don't have a market ----- your stuff won't sell. eBay has you LOCKED in. When you add PayPal into the mix, they make it near impossible to sell on the other Auction sites. That's the PROBLEM. Join the PROTEST: http://www.nolistingday.com Sign the Petition! http://www.petitiononline.com/mod_pe...ed.cgi?ebayfee You're an idiot, take your petition somwhere else, jason -- ((¯`'·.¸(¯`'·.((¯`'·.¸ * jason bean* ¸.·'´¯))¸.·'´¯)¸.·'´¯)) For me , said Sherlock Holmes, "there still remains the cocaine bottle," and he reached his hand up for it. http://home.cogeco.ca/~jabean http://musicpage.kicks-ass.org/ |
RS wrote:
Meh, I find Ebay rather pointless for most stuff anyway. People bid stuff up to at least discount retail and then pay double the shipping costs. Unless its last years stuff, there are few deals to be found on ebay. For sure. However, I have gotten some pretty good deals at times as well. -- Rob Munach, PE Excel Engineering PO Box 1264 Carrboro, NC 27510 |
In article ,
Paul McCahan wrote: If you haven't heard, eBay is increasing prices from 40% to 400% It no longer makes sense to use eBay to buy or sell items... This is SAD since it's a system many people enjoy using... This SCAM by Meg and the EVIL management MUST BE STOPPED. Here's the problem (Story broke on Jan 12th) http://www.nolistingday.com/ Sign he http://www.petitiononline.com/mod_pe....cgi?ebayfee&1 Thanks, and do not list, buy or sell on Feb 18th. Vote with your dollars. If the prices get too high, don't buy stuff from them. -- "Things should be made as simple as possible -- but no simpler." -- Albert Einstein |
In article ,
Chris Phillipo wrote: In article teadams$2$0$0$3-D17A7F.20230415012005 @news1.east.earthlink.net, says... Right, and the cost of bringing the goods to the market just went up. Everyone else selling the same goods will also raise their prices. Their only other option is to absorb the loss. Do you *really* think many are going to do that? You apparently think ebay is the only place people can buy stuff. The part that you don't seem to understand is that the seller will raise his price to cover his costs. But if his prices are already as close to what somebody can buy the item for elsewhere, and he raises it - he looses the sales. No, that's not how it works. When someone has something used to sell what's the first thing they do. Check how much it goes for on ebay and set the price accordingly. NO kidding? So Walmart sets their prices by going to eBay to see what items are selling for? Wow. YOu learn something new every day. |
In article ,
Chris Phillipo wrote: In article , says... Not to defend eBay, but I don't think your interpretation makes sense. The price increase doesn't take effect until February. Why would the stores shut down now? Why not continue selling until the change occurs? And if they currently have auctions running, it would be even more foolish to shut down - at least until the auctions finish. Maybe that's why there are only 29 so far? Could be. I was thinking of setting up an eBay store for a business I know of, but might reconsider with the higher fees. |
In article , Paul McCahan wrote:
Mike wrote: But it's not a PROBLEM! Again, sellers will just raise their prices to cover these small increases. No one cares. Mike Wrong Mike. Sounds as if you know little about economics. An item that sells at auction for $10, like a set of 4 Lithium Batteries. Will still sell after February 18th for $10. PROBLEM is, the cost to sell those SAME Batteries has been raised by about .62¢!!! Not a nickel or a dime, but a LOT OF FREAKING Money. The buyer doesn't pay this fee, the SELLER DOES... you can't just raise your price... since PRICE is determined by the Market in and OUT of eBay. In other words, it will make it less viable to sell your stuff on eBay, thus less choice for buyers... This is a SERIOUS issues for the main reason that eBay is just a website... they don't have any real cost outside of maintaining a very complex server. They are spending money on expensive TV commercials, buying up Rent.com, Craig's List, without our approval, thus driving up OUR fees. If you sold on eBay you'd be raging mad, if you buy on ebay, it won't become clear that the show is going to get very quiet after Feb 18th. Lot's of people are leaving. http://www.nolistingday.com/closing_stores.htm ebay needs to solve this problem before it's too late. The seller will just jack up his shipping price a buck. Do you honestly think half the stuff that sells on Egay costs $15-$20 to ship yet most auctions charge that much fro medium sized auction. Problem solved. |
| All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:24 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
HomeCinemaBanter.com