Rule 6. Do not bid too soon
The most important rule at an auction is NEVER BID UNTIL THE PROPERTY REACHES RESERVE. Until then, it is not for sale and it makes no sense to bid on anything that is not for sale. No matter how much pressure you receive, do not play into the agent’s hands by bidding too soon.
Dummy Bidding
Agents are so desperate for early bidders, they will do anything to get the bidding up from its low beginning.
The television program, Money, once did an expose` on dummy bidding. Hidden cameras filmed an agent boasting how he paid dummy bidders. Later, a reporter asked him if he ever paid dummy bidders. His answer was “No. Never”. The TV program showed two scenes – one with him proudly describing his deceit and the other with him denying it publicly.
Dummy bids are a central part of the auction system, despite the denials of agents and Real Estate Institutes.
But dummy bidding stops once the home reaches the reserve price and is ‘officially’ for sale. And that is the only time you should bid.
The Reserve Price
The reserve price is the lowest price the agents have been able to ‘crunch’ sellers into accepting.
And this is where auctions really favour you as a buyer. You will know the sellers’ lowest price, but no-one knows your highest price.
With the attention on the sellers’ lowest price, buyers save thousands at auctions.