dblplay1212
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- May 23, 2016
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I'd be very surprised if they aren't also cooking the books in some way. Generally those actions would go hand in hand.Na they taxed me off the $700. I think the accounting is correct, just some sales are being inflated and therefore inflating the market bc the next guy thinks a Maha sold for $1000.
I'd be very surprised if they aren't also cooking the books in some way. Generally those actions would go hand in hand.
It's clearly a pattern of behavior at this point rather than a unique error, albeit a seemingly random pattern.
The way I see it, there's 2 explanations here and neither of them sound legal.
The first is that the shoes did sell for $700 but they're falsifying the public sales price to articifially inflate the value for future sales.
The second is that the shoes actually did sell for $1034 but you were only paid out for a $700 sale.
The first option seems odd, because you mentioned that particular sale was very rare, to the point that a different sale couldn't explain the $1034.
Either way, someone is getting defrauded by a false representation of a transaction.
On the one hand, inflating the market on somewhat rare sales like this would presumably have a low yield, but it would also be less likely to get flagged as potential fraud due to the low sales volume.
On the other hand, straight up cooking the books and paying out significantly lower false sales prices would have a much higher yield but also much higher risk.
Ok so the $700 is undisputably the actual sales price then. So the remaining questions in my mind are where does this artificial $1034 come from, why some people (in different regions?) see the correct $700, and how this affects laws regarding market manipulation and fraudulent accounting.You choose the listing price on these platforms... so theres no way he could list them for $700 and then stockx charge someone $1,034.
I do think GOAT makes up BS claims about the condition of shoes and then gives you the option to take a further loss that they dont always pass on to the customer... but I have no way of proving this.
Honestly no, the few times I have for other things I've gotten canned responses. Might be worth a shot next time I have some time to burn.Have you tried contacting stockx and asking them?
That's what you took from this thread?This is the weirdest humble brag I’ve seen on here
That's what you took from this thread?
That's what you took from this thread?
$701 on the east coast (maryland). I know when I looked into it a few years ago (2020ish), they said that stuff about how different markets have different amounts etc, so the sale price isn't always what you think it is. I'm not really up in arms about them cooking the books, because I expect all of these companies cook the books, though that is beside the point in a way.At this point at least a dozen people have checked the price they see on the Maha am90 and about half see $700 and half see $1043. Thought it might be a regional thing but someone in my city saw $700 while I see $1043. Guy in Canada saw $1043, buddy in Chicago saw $700. Make it make sense.