Actually this is very concerning, as I also assumed from everything I have read that my fee was returned. On high value low profit items like potions, this could mean losing tons of gold when you thought you were making a profit.
starkerealm wrote: »Sort of stating the obvious here, but UESP is not infallible..
starkerealm wrote: »Sort of stating the obvious here, but UESP is not infallible..
Of course not, we are not at wiki AI level yet!
I was citing an example of this information in the wild ( since 2016 ). Someone has corrected it since this thread. I know there are many out there who already know that you do not receive a listing fee back, I touched on that when I started this thread. More to raise awareness to new traders, like myself, who had been told otherwise.
As you can see from some of the responses here, and from my own guilds, many experienced traders were under the impression of a return as well
Hapexamendios wrote: »I thought it was common knowledge the listing fees weren't returned. 🤷🏽♂️
robertthebard wrote: »robertthebard wrote: »Actually this is very concerning, as I also assumed from everything I have read that my fee was returned. On high value low profit items like potions, this could mean losing tons of gold when you thought you were making a profit.
If you've been increasing your net worth via selling the potions, every time you sell them, then no. A simple test would simply be to subtract 8% from your list price, A, and compare the result to what you spent making the potions, B. If A is greater than B, then you're still turning a profit.
I will need to adjust the spreadsheet I use for this to take into account the additional 1% loss. But generally, I do not post items in markets myself when the profit margin has become that slim. That said, a lot of people seem to post final products for considerably less profit than simply selling the mats would have made, and sold a lot quicker to boot.
For me, it would be all profit. I gather my own mats, so there's no overhead.
Easily_Lost wrote: »I do a lot of trading, and every time I sell something my listing fee is refunded to me. I use the addons Master Merchant and AwsomeGuildStore. I am not sure which one lists the Selling fee that is deducted from your purchase price, it also lists the listing fee as a refund.
Also - ZoS, if the listing fee isn't returned, why is it a sink and not given to the guilds?
spartaxoxo wrote: »robertthebard wrote: »robertthebard wrote: »Actually this is very concerning, as I also assumed from everything I have read that my fee was returned. On high value low profit items like potions, this could mean losing tons of gold when you thought you were making a profit.
If you've been increasing your net worth via selling the potions, every time you sell them, then no. A simple test would simply be to subtract 8% from your list price, A, and compare the result to what you spent making the potions, B. If A is greater than B, then you're still turning a profit.
I will need to adjust the spreadsheet I use for this to take into account the additional 1% loss. But generally, I do not post items in markets myself when the profit margin has become that slim. That said, a lot of people seem to post final products for considerably less profit than simply selling the mats would have made, and sold a lot quicker to boot.
For me, it would be all profit. I gather my own mats, so there's no overhead.
@robertthebard
That's untrue because you still have an opportunity cost. In this case, the opportunity cost is the coin you would have earned if you had sold the materials directly. If the amount you make from selling potions is lower than the opportunity cost, you're operating at a loss because your materials were more valuable than your potion.
So for example less say you were trying to sell the fictional Potion of Proving.
And the potion of proving requires the following materials, and let's also give them prices you can make at the guild trader.
1 flower of courage = 100 coins
1 bag of salt = 100 coins
Total amount you can make selling the materials directly= 200 coins
You'd need to sell your Potion of Proving at a minimum of 201 coins to make a profit. 200 coins is even, and anything less is at a loss.
EirgarthEldjarns wrote: »I think that someone made an error long ago, and others kept running with it... I have also been trading for a long time (some posting in this thread are in my guilds) and I can tell you that you do not get that listing fee back... I am really not sure of any non-auction based game that gives you that fee back (but I could be wrong on that account)... I can only say that ESO does not...
Folks have placed proof in the thread (some much more coherent then what I put), so unsure why there are still questions... I mean, try it yourselves... hell, disable all AddOns, list and see the result.
Eir
I never thought this was refunded. I always understood it to be a gold sink of 1% regardless of what happens to the item.
robertthebard wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »robertthebard wrote: »robertthebard wrote: »Actually this is very concerning, as I also assumed from everything I have read that my fee was returned. On high value low profit items like potions, this could mean losing tons of gold when you thought you were making a profit.
If you've been increasing your net worth via selling the potions, every time you sell them, then no. A simple test would simply be to subtract 8% from your list price, A, and compare the result to what you spent making the potions, B. If A is greater than B, then you're still turning a profit.
I will need to adjust the spreadsheet I use for this to take into account the additional 1% loss. But generally, I do not post items in markets myself when the profit margin has become that slim. That said, a lot of people seem to post final products for considerably less profit than simply selling the mats would have made, and sold a lot quicker to boot.
For me, it would be all profit. I gather my own mats, so there's no overhead.
@robertthebard
That's untrue because you still have an opportunity cost. In this case, the opportunity cost is the coin you would have earned if you had sold the materials directly. If the amount you make from selling potions is lower than the opportunity cost, you're operating at a loss because your materials were more valuable than your potion.
So for example less say you were trying to sell the fictional Potion of Proving.
And the potion of proving requires the following materials, and let's also give them prices you can make at the guild trader.
1 flower of courage = 100 coins
1 bag of salt = 100 coins
Total amount you can make selling the materials directly= 200 coins
You'd need to sell your Potion of Proving at a minimum of 201 coins to make a profit. 200 coins is even, and anything less is at a loss.
If one isn't going to sell the mats anyway, there's no lost money. So for me, no lost money if I were to sell potions. The mats for your example potion don't just spawn into the Trader, so, they come from somewhere. If I'm going to worry about this potion, I would get the mats from the source. I have purchased materials at the Trader one time, in 4 years, just last night, because I needed some mats to finish a daily, and didn't feel like grinding them out. Other than that, I haven't purchased them at all. So not, it's not "untrue". In my case, I gather my own mats, I have no intention, and currently no means, since I'm not in any guild, let alone a trade guild, to sell them unless I sell to a vendor, not going to happen, and so, no lost opportunity.
spartaxoxo wrote: »robertthebard wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »robertthebard wrote: »robertthebard wrote: »Actually this is very concerning, as I also assumed from everything I have read that my fee was returned. On high value low profit items like potions, this could mean losing tons of gold when you thought you were making a profit.
If you've been increasing your net worth via selling the potions, every time you sell them, then no. A simple test would simply be to subtract 8% from your list price, A, and compare the result to what you spent making the potions, B. If A is greater than B, then you're still turning a profit.
I will need to adjust the spreadsheet I use for this to take into account the additional 1% loss. But generally, I do not post items in markets myself when the profit margin has become that slim. That said, a lot of people seem to post final products for considerably less profit than simply selling the mats would have made, and sold a lot quicker to boot.
For me, it would be all profit. I gather my own mats, so there's no overhead.
@robertthebard
That's untrue because you still have an opportunity cost. In this case, the opportunity cost is the coin you would have earned if you had sold the materials directly. If the amount you make from selling potions is lower than the opportunity cost, you're operating at a loss because your materials were more valuable than your potion.
So for example less say you were trying to sell the fictional Potion of Proving.
And the potion of proving requires the following materials, and let's also give them prices you can make at the guild trader.
1 flower of courage = 100 coins
1 bag of salt = 100 coins
Total amount you can make selling the materials directly= 200 coins
You'd need to sell your Potion of Proving at a minimum of 201 coins to make a profit. 200 coins is even, and anything less is at a loss.
If one isn't going to sell the mats anyway, there's no lost money. So for me, no lost money if I were to sell potions. The mats for your example potion don't just spawn into the Trader, so, they come from somewhere. If I'm going to worry about this potion, I would get the mats from the source. I have purchased materials at the Trader one time, in 4 years, just last night, because I needed some mats to finish a daily, and didn't feel like grinding them out. Other than that, I haven't purchased them at all. So not, it's not "untrue". In my case, I gather my own mats, I have no intention, and currently no means, since I'm not in any guild, let alone a trade guild, to sell them unless I sell to a vendor, not going to happen, and so, no lost opportunity.
If you're selling a potion, you can sell the mats. If you weren't selling anything you'd have a point. But you are selling them, you're just turning them into a potion first. Which means you should factor in the price of ingredients.
Even if you're just vendoring them it's worth checking the price to vendor the mats vs the potions.
barney2525 wrote: »You show a Minus 10 listing fee, then a Plus 10 Refund - so those wash to Zero
You got 35 to guild bank and 35 Comission = 70 gold
Subtract 70 from 1000 you get 930 gold ... NOT 940
I think this argument is a bit semantic.
How I always viewed it was if I'm listing an item for 1000 gold and paying a 10 gold listing fee up front, my gross return is actually only 990 gold. However, since the tax and trader fees are based of the listed price of 1000 = 70 gold we take those away from the maximum gross return which is this 990 I just mentioned (not 1000).
990 gold - 70 = 920
920 + my listing fee refund = 930.
This whole discussion is based on how you personally view the asking price. It's like markup vs margin in the retail world.
Olupajmibanan wrote: »Do I understand it correctly this way?
I remember back in the days of posting a classified ad, you paid for the ad up front and that money was gone forever.
Same thing here.