TekNoir said:In accounting class we learned that you cannot ever count profit until an item is actually sold. (Which this item never was. It was just craftily stolen.)
dknguyen said:I've never seen anyone try to claim what the item was sold for. I've always seen people try and claim what it actually cost them.
HiTech said:All that because some "boy bought a $21 gift, using counterfeit money.
BOTTOM LINE: Don't sell gifts to boys!
eblc1388 said:My very old color TV cost me $1000 when I bought it and I sold it for $100 on eBay. How much should I claim?
TekNoir said:What kept you from selling it for your original $1000? The only correct answer is that you never asked that amount for it or didn't have the patience to wait until it sold for that amount. I have a used-car salesman friend who might have even been able to sell the same television for $2000.
Auctions nearly always net you less money than if you had sold the item outright at a higher asking. The trade off is in time. You get to spend less time selling an item at auction and in return you make less money. If you choose to set a price (an artificial "worth") for the item, then you'll need to wait until you find someone who will pay that price. Any item is only ever worth what it will sell for. Everything else is just an artificial "line". Age (or the artificial "line" under the guise of deprecation) has no impact on what people will pay for an item. (Ah. The motto of the used-car salesman.)
Actually, a similar situation just happened to me recently. I just recently sold a nine year old movie projector, originally purchased for $2300, to a person for $2100. That is what I asked for the item. It was more than worth to me the net loss of $200 for the time that I (and my family and friends) got to enjoy the projector. The projector is hard to find and no longer in production. The "market value" (another wonderful misnomer) of the projector at the time of sale was just under $400. It would sound silly (to me) for me to claim that I made a 525% profit on the item based on the artificial "market value". Market value is only really ever a guess at how much an average person might give for a specific item at that particular moment in time. In actuality, it has little real meaning.
I would claim that you lost $900 on your television, but to you it might have been worth that price. It is all relative and different for each and every individual. All you can ever really count is the amount of money (or other intrinsically, universally valued goods, such as cheques or winning lottery tickets) that has exchanged hands. Everything else is your value for the item... and possibly no one else's.
HarveyH42 said:Guess there all kinds of people out there... $2100 for a 9 year old projection TV, could have gotten a brand new, and better one for half that. I guess it's more how you feel about screwing people over on stuff like this. Wonder if they can still get replacement lamps... or is that why you sold it in the first place?
HarveyH42 said:If the gift sells for $21, it's worth $21, that's it's value cost+profit. The boy traded worthless paper for a $100 value, gift + $79. The shopkeeper also had to give the neighbor $100 out of his pocket to cover the worthless paper from the boy, another $100. Still say the shopkeeper is out $200.
Pommie said:Great scenario, $100 it is.
HiTech said:TekNoir, where I work at, we've sold used, 9yr. old data/video projectors (not "movie" as that's typically reserved for 16mm, 35mm, 70mm film) for a mere $10 in working condition!!! When replacements cost upwards of $350+ and the average light output is under 700 lumens, well they aren't exactly a hot ticket item.
And risk getting caught when he already has $70 that the shopkeeper just gave to him?HarveyH42 said:Wonder if the boy also stuff a few gifts in his pockets...
dknguyen said:And risk getting caught when he already has $70 that the shopkeeper just gave to him?
I don't believe youbloody-orc said:$97 And that's final.
Do the math if you don't believe!
mcs51mc said:I don't believe you
Show me your math
Here's mine:
Lost 18$ for the gift itself (payed to manufacturer)
Lost 3$ expect profit he will never get for that one gift
Lost 97 real $ to the boy as return for the 100 false $
Lost 100 real $ he had te refund to the shopkeper next door
Total 200$ lost
One can argue about the 3$, because that is money the shopkeeper expect to receive but never will for that one gift taken by the boy.
If in your opinion you can't lose what you don't already have, one can answer 197$.
But in my opnion the shopkeper had these 3$ since it is part of the gift, what brings us back to the original 200$.
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