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wizard | 11:24 Thu 11th Apr 2013 | Civil
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I wonder if anyone can help with a property auction query.

At an auction, without instruction from the seller, can the auctioneer bid up the price up to the reserve price when there are actually no bids?

I was under the impression that this was a process of shill bidding and not permitted?
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Yes, it is permissible, but only up to the reserve price.

It's called 'off the wall' bidding.
but I am afraid some auctioneers 'run up' the price by pretending that they have a bid when they don't, they to do this when they know the vender and want to get the best price for them, they also 'miss' bids to keep the price low when they know someone that wants it, this happens at all auctions that I have been to, which is quite a few.
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@jackthehat

So what makes an auctioneer exempt for shill bidding?

I appreciate that they bid "off the walls" but doesn't this defeat the object of the auction? I.e. wouldn't it be in their interests to lower the bid to the point of a genuine bidder placing a legitimate bid and then go from there?

The fact that two "bidders" have been fighting it out between themselves that didn't actually exist is surely illegal?
The reserve price doesn't have to be announced in the room.

As the Auctioneer is on commission, it is in their interests to ensure that all lots at least reach/match their reserve price.
I'd certainly say that as you describe it, it's fraud. wizard
Question Author
@jackthehat

It's not in their best interests to start the auction on a fabricated bid and then allow two fabricated bidders to bid against each other because it's never going to sell.

Am I ill-informed to assume they would keep dropping the opening bid until a GENUINE bidder became attracted to it and put in a bid?
Occasionally, the wheels *do* come off, if there is no-one in the room prepared to outbid the 'off the wall' bidders.........at which point the property is generally removed from the Auction.

In such cases, the Auctioneer usually apologises and re-lists it for the next sale waiving any 're-list' fees.......
*.....usually apologises to the Vendor...
or it is called taking bids off the wall,

and I thought it as definitely unlawful (out lawed under the same legislation as outlawing dealeres' 'rings' = communal underbidding to defraud the seller )

until I saw a beeb auction program when it was done cheerfully with the auctioneer admitting it.

so it must be lawful
and Jack the Hat that is EXACTLY what happened on the Beed prog

the wheels came off and room went silent at a fantastic price 182 000
andhe started again at 100k
I'd guess that, since the object won't be sold unless the reserve is reached then it isn't so bad as it would be after that limit. If someone is willing to pay the reserve it isn't such a bad thing to encourage them to do so (since they're not going to be allowed to buy it at any lower price) but if they aren't prepared to pay the reserve it has no affect anyway. Ergo no fraud.
It sounds dangerously close to obtaining, or attempting to obtain, money, by deception; the bidder is subject to the dishonest false representation that there is someone else who is wants to buy at the given price. The difficulty is that the house that opens bidding by suggesting a figure, which they all do,is inviting a bid at that price yet nobody has offered it.Nobody could reasonably complain about that. Anyone who bids at it might be the only person in the world who would take the price. It is difficult to distinguish between the two situations.

In addition,with art and and antiques, the major auction houses have a term that the house may bid up any lot in which they have an interest. The interest is not specified, but may be that they have advanced money, against it, to the vendor .

Either way, off the wall or "off the chandelier" (for those who bid in posh places!) bids are common. That's why the old hands stand at the back of the room, leaving dozens of empty seats in front of them. That way, they can see whether there is a bidder. That won't stop the pretence that there are bids "on the book", commission bids submitted and recorded by the house beforehand, but it does help.

I've never heard of a prosecution of a "ring", though there have been for pretend auctions where everything is fraudulent, and the Act must be one of the least used on the statute book.

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