Professor Smooth wrote:Now, what if you're scalping for fairly altruistic reasons? For example, I used to offer to pick things up for members of another board at cost (plus shipping). However, after enough people complained about the high shipping estimates (and shipping from Japan anywhere using EMS is never cheap) I stopped that offer. However, I still had a bunch of stuff. Normally, I'd put a low BIN on it or just offer it to other collectors, but, as "luck" would have it, a friend of mine was having a hard time with some credit card bills. So I ebayed the lot of it without the usual low BINs. This particular set of Ebay items included a couple of Brave Maximi, a boxed G1 Fort Max, a boxed Star Saber, and a ton of other high-end collectables that the original buyers did not want to pay for. Total profit on all of that was around 1,500 USD. I gave every cent of that to my friend who now has one less credit card bill to deal with. You can't possibly make the argument that I didn't scalp these figures. On some of them, I made 10 times what I'd paid. But I really don't see what I did there as being wrong.
actually, in that situation those toys were either out of production or older then the 08 Bumblebee, so in that case, I don't consider that scalping so much as demand for a highly sought after item.. the 08 Bumbelbee is the example I'm using, because it exemplifies the difference, scalping a toy that was recently released in stores, which end up disappearing from those stores within the first couple of months.. now that is scalping...
what you did was to offer up figures that weren't currently on shelves, and even if you didn't offer them at a BIN rate, those auctions are acceptable, just as comic auctions for items that were released in the 60s, and 70s are...it's different when that item is on the shelves briefly, and you know stock has arrived but everytime you go, it's out because of local scalpers..