The second guy keeps very little stock and usually has one of his twenty-something son's running the shop while he works his regular job. The problem with this, of course, is that his sons cannot sell anything without checking with daddy. I was also soured when I saw him buying a bunch of AU/BU pre 1900 coins for maybe 5% of their value from an old couple.
The third shop has just started and is another buy and wholesale shop, although he has quite a bit of stock, owned by the way by the just that thumbed my Morgan dollar. I don't do much business there.
Which brings me to the last dealer and my current reason to be POed. The fourth dealer has a shop not far from my house and has been open about 1½ years. From the beginning, I frequented the shop and although many times his prices on supplies are higher than I could get them for on the internet, buy them there. He buys coins, jewelry and antiques from people and along with wholesaling a lot of the coins and gold that he gets in (to the guy 60 miles away), does more real coin business than the other three dealers. I have tried to cultivate a decent relationship with the guy and at first, he seemed pretty customer oriented. He gave me some decent deals, and when he needed coins for his want lists, many times I would seel to him at a lot less than what I could get on Ebay or auction because I felt that he had to make some profit to stay open. I told him from the beginning that I did not like to dicker, so I'd buy if he could give me his best deal right away...this worked for a while. Lately, I don't know if he's doing better in his shop or what, but he's gotten greedy and all transactions seem to be tainted by it. I sold him a complete set of walkers for hundreds less than another offer that I received because I felt he understood that I expected some deals in the future. I watched him figure the price of each coin from his grey sheet, being careful to undergrade and then writing down a price about 20% less than bid. He then added them up and asked how much I had to have for the set. When I asked him what he came up with he told me a figure, which was less than all the values that he had written combined...then he said that he wanted to pay 10% less than that. Here's what I got in return...
I stop in his shop just about every day to gab with the regulars and he got two pocket watches in. He asked me if I wanted to buy them and when I asked the price he told me that he's have to look into it and let me know. Apparently he sold them to someone else during the time that he was holding them for me...LOL.
Lately he's been prone to tell regular customers about some deal he made that resulted in him paying pennies on the dollar to some poor sap, then selling the goods for a huge profit. The straw that broke the camels back happened yesterday morning. A couple came in with a plastic bag. The bag contained some neat stuff...a Fuechtwanger cent, Some neat tokens, some foreign (both common and better) and some better US stuff. He asked the guy how much he needed for the coins before he said anything else and the guy said that the shop owner should figure it out and make an offer. He proceeded to cull out the common foreign, which was about three quarters of the bag and told the guy that they weren't worth much and that he sells stuff like that by the pound (outright lie #1). He then went through the other stuff, marking on a paper what he came up with for each coin or token. He wrote down $30.00 for the XF Fuechtwanger cent...LOL. All the values that he wrote down were about 25% of retail, and then he threw some into the pile without marking down any price (one of which was an AU/BU 1884 Indian cent). When he was done, he took the sheet to his calculator and started adding them up. Now he wrote down the numbers in plain sight and it was easy to see what they were and add them in your head, which is what the customer was doing. When the dealer got part way through the list, he turned around like he was done and told the guy that it was just over $200.00, at which the customer asked how much exactly, which forced him to add again. He came back with an amount of $225.00...which was less than the total of what he wrote down. The customer asked him if he could sleep at night, after which he went through a story about how many of the coins were in poor condition and that he could only sell them for 20-25% more than he was paying. The best part was that he told the customer to ask me...I was supposed to verify that the dealer was a good guy and paying top dollar...I didn't say anything. They finally agreed on $235.00 and the customer left.
I looked through the stuff that he had bought...he paid the guy $4.00 for a nice 2¢ piece...LOL. Anyway, I seperated out the things that I was interested in...the bag of low value base metal foreign coins (you know, the stuff that he sells by the pound), a couple Canadian 5¢ silver coins that he paid $1.00 each for and 4 VF or so Civil War tokens...I didn't want any of the better stuff. I asked him what he wanted for the stuff that I pulled out, at which point he replied that he would have to go through it all and get back to me. Now he just looked the stuff up to buy it. He just couldn't look it over (all low value stuff) and shoot me a price...after all our dealing, I probably spend $5000-8000 yr. at his shop, he has to look up each coin to sell to me after asking me to verify that he only makes 25% profit? I told him that I wouldn't be able to come back for the stuff as I was having knee surgery on Tuesday, at which point he said that he was sure that I'd be shuffling around in no time and could come back to see what his total was.
That's it...what an A-hole. Not only is the guy taking advantage of others, but he has grown so important that he cannot take care of his regular customers. I walked out of his shop, wrote him an E-mail explaining why I wouldn't be back and have washed my hands of the whole affair. When a dealer becomes so confident and arrogant that he believes people will only buy from him, it's time to move on. I'm looking at getting a tax number when I recuperate and will look into buying estate coins, jewelry, militaria, etc. myself.
The best part of the whole affair is that the dealer in question always has his shop radio tuned to.....Christian radio.