Time for some quick economics for you wow auction house nuts.
Flooding is when you post too many items in any one market and cause the supply to rise above the demand for a commodity.
Just like in the real world, in world of warcraft when you flood the market the end result will always be a sharp decrease in price as supply surpasses demand. Forcing a flood on the market can be used as a tool to get your fellow auctioneers to dump items on the auction house for less gold than they normally would.
For instance, you put up thirty items for ten gold each when the normal price is six gold each and usually there are 4-8 of the item on the auction house at any one time. Many players see what you are doing and dump their items onto the AH for cheaper than you. Eventually, these players will get into an undercutting frenzy and you will have the same commodity which normally goes for six gold selling at a rate maybe as low as three gold in this example. You could then buy out the under cutters and sell again at a more normal price.
Flooding is never a good idea when you see the opportunity to sell items.
Remember that the fewer items you post, the better price you can demand for your items (supply vs demand). There’s nothing wrong with selling items over the course of several days in short, controlled bursts vs. dumping stockpiled goods and flooding the market.
The perfect market to practice flooding is greater cosmic essence. They are free to post and in low supply on most servers. I would advise testing flooding with this first.
There are other uses for flooding such as effecting other players' addons (Auctioneer for instance). I'll get into this subject more in a future post.
Popular Posts
-
Undercutting is an art form in its own right. Some players undercut by 1 copper, others by 10-50% of the original price. Some use the Quick ...
-
Hey Markco, Just wanted to tell you another gold tip. With patch 3.1 the JC pattern Citrine Ring Of Rapid Healing no longer requires 2 eleme...
-
There’s a lot of information to sort through when bidding, buying, or posting items on the auction house. In fact it’s too much for any one ...
-
What is a blogging Carnival? A blogging Carnival is an event where bloggers of a certain niche, in this case world of wacraft gold, write ...
-
The large majority of players using the auction house are one time shoppers/sellers who are unaware of the eb and flow of the river they are...
-
Mommar here. On some servers it was a barren wasteland as players ran to get the first few hits on their new gaming drug. ...
-
I was up late last night working on some unfinished business (which is code word for playing on Farmville 2) when I received an email...
-
Look at this amazing piece of software, the Undermine Journal , which I saw reading an article from wow confidential , that is going to revo...
-
I like to concentrate on the here and now when it comes to making gold in World of Warcraft. But some things really cannot be held b...
-
Tips, tricks and general suggestions are the bread and butter of what I write here. Sometimes they are simple ideas and other times the...
7 comments: on "Flooding the Auction House - How to Use/Avoid"
Odd said... January 17, 2009 at 12:27 PM
completly random question...
do u use a bank alt? is it worth all the mailing?
Anonymous said... January 17, 2009 at 12:30 PM
Hey, I like your Blog a lot, but it would be very nice if you can list good items to resale(Items most ppl want) such as Trade goods. Because as a noob...Beginner :) at AH. I'm a little confused about what some crafting materials are used for and a list would be very awesome.
also is it possible to make SearchUI only show trade goods?
Thanks keep updating this place :)
OT: can't login to me google acc :P
Markco said... January 17, 2009 at 1:21 PM
Bank alts will be discussed in an upcoming post and yes I use 4 with guild banks each. I like your idea for a post on 'good sellers,' I'll try to write a list and maybe stick it on the front page.
Anonymous said... January 20, 2009 at 5:50 PM
So like I bought 500 dream shards for 9-12g each this past week in anticipation of the patch. At the start of patch day, one of the major guild banks bought all the dream shards at 19g and lower. He then tried to set the price at 19g. But he flooded the market with around 40 shards. Should I undercut him slightly with only a few shards? Or did what I did and undercut his starting and buyout value by 1 silver and posted 80 shards... (LOL this drove the price back down to 15g)
Anonymous said... January 20, 2009 at 5:53 PM
I did that because I'm going to work for 6 hrs and didnt want him out selling me while i was out. (i'm out during peak times aka 3-9pm pst) In retrospect, I guess just putting a couple would have raised the price to setup for tomorrow, but he would have out sold me while i was gone. What do you think is the right play?
Markco said... January 21, 2009 at 10:05 AM
Relax and let the market settle, the demand for shards is going up and although there will be a high supply at first, hopefully demand will drop the supply and quickly raise the price. It might take a week but they will go up in value eventually.
eyeball knight said... January 23, 2009 at 8:22 AM
If theres one thing I hate the most, its a flooder destroying my market for the week.
Post a Comment