JamesWilson
Yoda

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tony barnhill said:If the reserve is the price you really want for the item, I agree with Mickey about the buy it now price...
A minimum bid is rather different for the buy-it-now option. The BIN ends any chance of getting more. The reserve sets a floor on what's acceptable.
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:]...however, if its just the lowest you want, then why not set the beginning bid there...[/QUOTE]
I've seen auctions where the first bid is absurdly low and think its nonsensical. I've also seen them placed absurdly high.
The point of the starting bid is to attract some fair attention and interest when the reserve price may not. If I bid on an item and see that my valuation doesn't reach the reserve, fine, I'll walk. And I can do all that without any to-ing and fro-ing with the seller trying to get them to tell me whatever they think its worth. I've seen bidders that throw in bid after bid looking to beat another buyer, or break the reserve. Seems a silly process to me when you can do that with a single, sensible bid from the start.
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:]By telling me the reserve when I ask, you automatically know you'll get that if I think its the right price because that'll be my 1st bid...[/QUOTE]
On the other hand I wouldn't know, unless you tell me you'll bid, and it seems you don't provide that to the seller in exchnage for their information.
Why should I tell someone my reserve and thereby let them sit out until the last minute, and then throw in a just enough to make the reserve bid? Alternatively, I can take my chances as anyone might in such an auction and tell you to bid what you think its worth. As you say, if you think its worth more than the reserve you might bid that much, or a little more.
If you don't, you don't bid.
AND its the effect of having few bids that I, as a seller would not want to see.
In effect by telling anyone my reserve I'm giving them information that allows them to walk away and not put a bid in, indicating a lack of interest in whatever I'm trying to sell.
Suppose I refuse to tell you the reserve. You put in a lower than reserve bid. That then becomes the new floor for later bids, and signals more interest in the item.
As a seller I'd reckon I get more from that (more bids and an increasing valuation/price signal) than I would from someone that just walks away.
More bids would seem inherently more likely to increase the price that is finally reached. AN auction is a competition, as a seller I want to see MORE buyers competing, and people that don't bother bidding because they know the reserve would not be in my interest.