Quote:
Originally Posted by Wmcmanus 
The $10k asking price has nothing whatsoever to do with what his actual selling price might have been. I think some people use Audiogon as a way of fishing for the highest bidder, especially when they have a rare and expensive (even under normal cirmumstances) item that is out of production.
He may have received more than one offer at this asking price (which would seem crazy to me) and instead of selling them to the first person to agree to pay his asking price, he decided to go fishing. This would be comparable to an IC (interest check) thread on Head-Fi. You get a "feel" for the market, and then decide what to do.
Thus, in my view, all of the comments in this thread about how ridiculous and criminal (or whatever) his "price" was were missing the point, in my opinion. I strongly suspect that he was fully aware that they would never attract anywhere close to $10,000 and simply didn't want to commit to a pre-determined price as is required when placing an Audiogon ad.
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The only problem with this scenario, and it's something I mentioned in the original post, is that his auction started at a price of $3990. It ran as a 10 day auction and had no bids on it after the first four days. On the fifth day I checked it in the morning to see if anyone had bid yet, and the price was suddenly listed as $9990. Initially I believed that the seller was a mental case, however I came up with another conclusion.
I believe what happened is that the seller was already in the process of lining up a backdoor sale, and that he didn't want anyone bidding on the item that may have been considering it(myself included) potentially locking him in to a committed sale through Audiogon. I have since discovered that you can end an auction early through Audiogon, even if the item has bids, but I believe the seller was ignorant to that option.
There ain't no way in hell this guy received one, let alone multiple, $10,000 offer(s) for a pair of Qualias.