I have been an active appraiser, buyer
and knowledgeable philatelist for fifty years now. In that
time period I have come to know the pros and cons of the
stamp World. If you are a novice or inherited a valuable
stamp collection it can be very dangerous to sell or consign
a large collection for auction or even worse to one of the
large stamp clubs.
The auction “STING”: Scenario
#1 is when someone who inherits a collection will
usually call in the local dealer or dealers for an offer. As
you are not the collector you do not know if the offer from
the dealer is legitimate. Some people will go on their
instinct and sell the collection. The happy dealer walks
away with that famous grin knowing he has just ripped you
off.
Scenario #2 is your instinct says
no I think I’ll get another opinion not aware that dealer #
1 has called all the local dealers to describe your
collection and what he or she offered you, bingo after the
second or third dealer tells you about the same price you
finally sell. The successful dealer walks away and all three
dealers have the smile as they divide up your collection
between them usually for about ten percent of its cash
value!
Scenario # 3 you are still suspicious and tell one of
the dealers “I think I’ll contact an auction house. ”With a
very serious look on the dealers face he says” good idea and
let me tell you who to call.” Of course the dealer receives
a finders fee and the auction house comes to your door, suit
and tie of course looking very formal. The auction house has
been told of course what was offered and within a very short
time doubles that figure! How say you? It’s been going on
for decades. When I was twenty one I worked for a major
auction house and left them when they told me I was to
double all offers verbally and have the consignor sign a
five passage contract that stated in fine print “we can’t
guarantee the final results.” It was just that simple. The
auction house takes out their check book and gives you an
advance the size of the dealer offer. What you see is what
you get and no more. No more you ask, the final statement
sent to you will in some cases show the sales did not even
match the advance check and asks you to mail them back the
difference. Over the years I have had numerous complaints to
this result and conclude only a very few do not practice
this and to be very careful on the west coast especially.
THE AUCTION HOUSE
The
average auction house collects a commission of 30%, 15% from
the seller and 15% from the buyer. Most collections are
bought by dealers who have been known to collude prior to
the auction to set prices way below wholesale value. If you
are not familiar with the US and International auction
houses and some stamp clubs your collection if consigned may
not even end up the way it was given. Yes, missing stamps,
substituted stamps are common with some auction firms.
Unfortunately for legal reasons I can’t provide you with
names of the buyers or firms. One of those firms located on
the West Coast uses a team of highly trained snoopers (stamp
dealers) who at first will try and buy your collection at a
fraction of market value. If you turn them down they refer
you to a particular auction house that will split the
commission profit with them for the referral.
I have tried unsuccessfully to both educate the dealers to
be fair with the public and have in the past recommended
certain dealers over the years (geographically of course)
and all to no avail. I find for the most part the public is
just “ripped off.” After forty years our Board has decided
we will do these appraisals at our cost (time wise) and help
sell the collection if feasible and with your approval.
You can protect yourself! What we can do if you have a
serious collection is appraise it for you and if I feel you
have rare stamps recommend the firm best suited to maximize
your return. A few legitimate Auction houses in the US and
abroad are known to specialize and my knowledge of their
specialty is important for the seller. You can actually send
the collection or photo it to a disc. A donation of
$200 is appreciated. Just send your collection or digital
pictures to us by using UPS or FedEx or registered mail to
APF Appraisal Center 1337 Cordell Place L.A. CA 90069.
If you have any question please call my private office
310-275 3256.
Michael DuBasso
Director APF
STAMP CLUBS-TAMMANY
HALL
Yes, Tammany Hall or what I also call
"the good old boys." When I was eighteen I joined one of
these so called clubs. After acquiring about ten years of
knowledge as a buyer I requested my name to be used as one
of their recommended appraisers. It was not to be. Over the
years I had the pleasure of being called in from my own
yellow page ad to make an offer on estates where the
official club appraiser-buyer had already been. In every
case including one collection where $10,000 had been offered
(I bought it for $20,000) I was always 50% higher or more. A
very scary organization has the audacity to send out
preprinted labels that are placed in every album with the
name and address of the collector and instructions to
contact the "club" if the collector is deceased! A local
club is certainly OK if you want to smooze with other
collectors just beware of selling or consigning your
lifelong investment to one of its official buyers.
E-BAY
Many collections consigned to our
organization have been sold by APF on EBay until recently.
As a matter of fact for nearly eight years EBay has been a
good marketplace to sell. Not any more in the stamp
category. It is a great place to buy collections but
recently one of the larger stamp club organizations has
taken over the stamp division completely changing the
concept of auction to retail sale with only warrantees for
the buyer and no protection for the seller. The organization
has done away with buyer beware and selling as is. If you
are trying to sell a Worldwide collection on EBay better
carefully identify any dubious item and according to EBay
rules mark each dubious item as a forgery right on the
stamp. Miss one item out of thousands and as a buyer you can
return the collection and EBay will force the seller to
refund the full price. As 99% of us do not have the kind of
knowledge to identify good forgeries including myself my
recommendation is to not sell general collections if you are
a stamp dealer on EBay. If you are an active collector and
not aware of this take notice. I foresee in the near future
other categories falling into the same place. As many
bidders suffer "buyers regret" by paying or bidding too much
just imagine if you bought a $75,000 Lamborghini on EBay
only to have your spouse declare it was divorce time (over
the purchase) an unethical party could sabotage the car or
any item, claim it arrived "not as described" and EBay would
force the seller to take back the item.