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Before you dive into buying or selling, you need to understand there
are several different kinds of auctions, each with different rules and
complicating factors. Here we've Dutch Auction: This is an auction in which the seller lists multiple quantities of an identical item. With multiple items up for sale, multiple bidders can win. Also, one bidder can try to buy more than one quantity. All winning bidders pay only the lowest successful winning bid amount. This is different from a Yankee auction, in which each winning bidder pays his or her exact high bid. Complicating Factors: So how do you become one of the winning
bidders in a Dutch auction if there are more bidders than items for sale?
Well, it depends on the number of items each bidder wants. If every bidder
wants just one item, then it's a more straightforward process. The highest
bids for each item wins 1 item. For example, if there are 10 cellular
phones up for auction, the 10 bidders with the 10 highest bids win 1 phone
each. But how do you determine the final price if the high bidders all
made How do you win multiple items in a Dutch auction? Here's an example: A single seller puts five identical items up for sale in a Dutch auction. At the close of the auction, there are multiple bids from four different bidders. Bidder one has bid $10 on each of the three items; bidder two has bid $7 on one quantity; bidder three has bid $5 each on three items; and bidder four has bid $4 on one item. In this scenario, bidder one would receive all three for $5 each, and bidder two and three would receive one for $5, while bidder four's bid would be unsuccessful. In essence, high bids secure a "right to buy" among the winning bidders. Reserve Auction: This is an auction in which the item for sale has a reserve price. The reserve price is the lowest price at which a seller is willing to sell an item. Although the reserve price is not listed per se (the auction posting will be marked as "reserve met"), it can be extrapolated when a bidder bids at or above the reserve price. The high bid will automatically be elevated to the reserve price, providing the current high bidder with what the seller would agree to sell at. Complicating Factors: If the reserve price is never met, the seller is not obligated to sell the item to the highest bidder. (However, a fee is typically charged to the seller if the reserve price is not reached.) Likewise, high bidders are not obligated to pay if the reserve price is not met. Sellers can't state, "OK, you were close enough. Send me your high bid. If you don't, you're a deadbeat and I'll zap you with a neg." Also, sellers cannot set a reserve price for items in a Dutch auction. Finally, be aware that some users avoid reserve auctions, preferring the openness of a standard straight auction.
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