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Getting harder to find inventory.

Like many of us, I go to yard sales, estate sales, estate auctions, flea markets, and occasionally second hand stores to source my inventory.

 

I am in my mid twenties and have been "flipping" since I was 13, taking after my father, who is "old school" and doesn't really do eBay, he sets up at flea markets.

 

When I first started going to auctions with my father, when I was about 8 or 9, he used to come home with an entire truckfull of stuff, not just junk, good quality stuff he could often double if not triple what he paid for it.

 

Fast forward a few years later and these TV shows like American Pickers, Pawnstars, Storage wars, etc put a huge wrench into the works.

 

You had people going out trying to earn a living and had little idea what they were doing. They followed TV, but let's be honest..TV is far from reality.

 

A lot of people who had been going to auctions beforehand could be narrowed into two groups: antique dealers and part-time eBay sellers. Part-time sellers had regular jobs, so they didn't buy as much stuff, they didn't have as much time to list things. Antique dealers bought well...antiques...so this left a huge list of things to make money on. Computers, electronics, trading cards, etc.

 

When the economy crashed in 2008, it become worse, because you had people literally trying to earn a living selling on eBay. Now granted, their were "full timers" beforehand, but not nearly as many.

Getting back to a "wrench in the works"...these people were desperate to earn a buck, and soon it became harder to make any money. To them, it was either buy a $100 item for 85 bucks and make $15, or go home broke, so profit margins soon started to evaporate.

 

That is when I received a huge upper-hand...a smartphone.  I was one of the first people to have one that went to auctions and other events. It was 2010 and I became old enough to start selling on my own. The "low-hanging fruit" things like old toys, antiques, etc always went for more than it was worth messing with. I started looking at the odd and unusual. Stuff I had never seen before. Often, it was as easy as typing model numbers in. I remember buying some kind of computer for a John Deere combine. I got it for $5, I sold it in 3 days for $950. Then a week later, got a $500 widget for $20.

 

For the next 3 years, I quit working. I could turn more in a week than I could working a crummy dead-end minimum-wage job. I was hooked.

But that ended pretty soon. About 2 years ago. While the smartphone giveth, the smartphone although taketh away. I used to do quite well at estate sales with unusual stuff. If they couldn't find in in 5 minutes on eBay, they used to give up. But now they could just whip out their smartphone and can find it.

 

Estate sales became an utter joke. They idiotically never realized selling something in front of 100 people is a lot harder than when you have 100 million buyers. People aren't going to stand in line an hour, and give eBay prices or more. Of course...the next day when everything was half off, all the "good stuff" magically  sold. Imagine that. The truth was.. the estate sale companies had their own eBay.

 

Auctions have become worse too. I live in the Midwest and you have retired farmers, ranch hands, etc with money coming out of their ears. Supposedly  63% of Americans can't come up with $500 in cash if their life depended on it, buy boy..you sure as heck would think otherwise at an auction.

As a matter of fact...of the past 12 auctions I've been too...I could buy stuff on eBay and sell it at an auction and make money, if they didn't charge 35-40% in fees.

 

The weird thing is....if you ask one of these people who didn't win the bid on something at a local auction if they would like to buy one you have, they won't. You would not believe how many times I've seen two old people run each other up to $100 on something, and I ask the non-winning bidder "Hey, I have one for $50, wanna buy it?" I have had this happen countless times, never had someone take me up on it.

 

Anyway..times are a changin'. Good quality estate auctions and estate sales that aren't insanely price are getting harder to find. People my age don't really collect stuff, and while I'm sure it's a generational thing, people my age range don't really have the money to collect things, and beyond that, so many people have collected stuff in the 70's and 80's, it will be a long time before that stuff becomes super-valueable. Try getting money out of a 1987 box of baseball cards. 30 years old and worth didly squat.

 

So in the next 20 years....a lot of people who collect will be dead. Just look at the market on a lot of stuff between the past 20 years. Stuff that was worth $500 in the 90's MIGHT sell for $50 today. Porcelain, glass and china took a huge hit along with other categories.

 

It will be interesting to see what the future of flipping holds.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Message 1 of 247
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246 REPLIES 246

Getting harder to find inventory.


@emerald40 wrote:

here we are again...

well...

if re-sellers wouldn't be able to find merchandise cheap enough to re-sell where would sites like;

Amazon, Etsy, Ebay, Ruby Lane... BE...???

 

________________________________________________

 

Big differene between resellers getting their merchandise from yard sales and flea markets then from the donated merchandise to a thrfit that is supposed to be used to support the poor.


Maybe the resellers ARE poor and they are flipping items to make some money to get out of being poor. Did you ever consider that?

 

Also, it's  really sad my Thrift has tons of high-end antiques and jewelry donated every year that sit on the shelf and gather dust for years. Why?Because those with money don't shop there and those without can't afford them.

Message 241 of 247
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Getting harder to find inventory.

Great eBay merchandise can be found at govliquidation

 

The best bang for the buck is: Triwall or Triwalls

 

You get the odd & unusual and almost everything is made in the USA!

 

PS: Be sure to thank me when you get your 1st load. . .

Message 242 of 247
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Getting harder to find inventory.

Not everyone is set up to sell the kind of stuff you get there OR to be able to handle the amount of the delivery.

"If a product doesn't sell, raise the price" - Reese Palley
"If it sold FAST, it was priced too low" - also Reese Palley
Message 243 of 247
latest reply

Getting harder to find inventory.


@z50com wrote:

Great eBay merchandise can be found at govliquidation

 

The best bang for the buck is: Triwall or Triwalls

 

You get the odd & unusual and almost everything is made in the USA!

 

PS: Be sure to thank me when you get your 1st load. . .


Smiley Very Happy I can buy myself the missile launcher I've always wanted!

Message 244 of 247
latest reply

Getting harder to find inventory.


@rustictrollop wrote:

As an add on to my previous statement, to make sure that the poor and "needy" folks get what they need, I donate really great stuff to local charities that provide these items at no cost to the needy, as it should be...NO COST.  We have lots of charities like that in our area.  Because of this, I do not feel guilty about scrounging for inventory in thrift stores.  The poor in our area get treated well and people donate generously to help them.  And the Mission Thrift stores love eBayer's who empty their shelves and fill their carts because they make a lot of money off of us, so they can keep doing what they do.  (The needy folks aren't shopping for tchotchkes and collectibles anyway)


It always irks me that when disaster strikes, the aid companies like Goodwill and Salvation Army ask for money for the relief efforts instead of donated items around the house - so they can buy the disaster victims new stuff and not ship them overage from their stores.

 

So my buying stuff from their thrifts means that they have money to buy stuff for people in need and I am not taking anything out of the needy's mouths.

(*Bleep*)
Message 245 of 247
latest reply

Getting harder to find inventory.


@antijunt_0 wrote:

@emerald40 wrote:

here we are again...

well...

if re-sellers wouldn't be able to find merchandise cheap enough to re-sell where would sites like;

Amazon, Etsy, Ebay, Ruby Lane... BE...???

 

________________________________________________

 

Big differene between resellers getting their merchandise from yard sales and flea markets then from the donated merchandise to a thrfit that is supposed to be used to support the poor.


Maybe the resellers ARE poor and they are flipping items to make some money to get out of being poor. Did you ever consider that?

 

Also, it's  really sad my Thrift has tons of high-end antiques and jewelry donated every year that sit on the shelf and gather dust for years. Why?Because those with money don't shop there and those without can't afford them.


<sarcasm> Actually, the poor are supposed to be "kept in their place" by being grateful to buy shoes for $5 to wear. The poor aren't allowed to better themselves by buying the shoes for $5 and flip them for $25 online or through CL or whatever so they can help pay their power bill, or rent, or grocery bill.  Gotta keep those poor in line and on the government dole.  </sarcasm>

The easier you are to offend the easier you are to control.


We seem to be getting closer and closer to a situation where nobody is responsible for what they did but we are all responsible for what somebody else did. - Thomas Sowell
Message 246 of 247
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Getting harder to find inventory.

Sadly it doesn't seem to be the upper one percent that really cares about keeping the poor down.
It seems to me it's solid middle-class to upper middle class that are the snobs.
Message 247 of 247
latest reply