| | Ebay Query Tim David
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| | Can anyone tell me how people manage to bid 1 cent more than me to win auctions. e.g made_of_stone (2) £10.01 15-Apr-02 19:46:48 BST talltim@hotmail.com (8) £10.00 15-Apr-02 00:10:09 BST talltim@hotmail.com (8) £7.00 09-Apr-02 18:58:58 BST I can't (...) (23 years ago, 15-Apr-02, to lugnet.market.auction)
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| | | | Re: Ebay Query Achim von Wiedner
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| | | | (...) I believe it has something to do with where the last successful bid sits. e.g. If your max bid is $10.00 and the bid increment is $1.00 and the last successful bid was at $9.01, then a subsequent successful bid would be $10.01 which would (...) (23 years ago, 15-Apr-02, to lugnet.market.auction)
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| | | | Re: Ebay Query John Henry Kruer
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| | | | (...) Maybe its the maximum bid thing? Ebay only raises you're bid the lowest it has to be- if 10.00 was your highest, and somebody had a maximum bid of, say, 11.00, it would only raise it 1 cent over yours. John Kruer (23 years ago, 15-Apr-02, to lugnet.market.auction)
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| | | | | | Re: Ebay Query Frank Filz
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| | | | | (...) It's sort of a problem with proxy bids. The way eBay enforces a minimum bid increment is that the minimum bid must be the bid increment above the current bid. Unfortunately there really isn't a better way to do it with proxies. Why? Let's say (...) (23 years ago, 15-Apr-02, to lugnet.market.auction)
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| | | | Re: Ebay Query Kyle Keppler
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| | | | Say the current price is $7. You bid $10 and are winning. Then while the price is still $7 or so, someone else bids $10.01 and happens to be 1 cent above you, but since the price is currently $7, the min bid is $7.50, and he can bid anything above (...) (23 years ago, 15-Apr-02, to lugnet.market.auction)
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