


Furore over ticket availability and moreso the dynamic pricing (that they apparently agreed to) however : I won't repeat examples here as you have all seen them.
Do they sell them at 4x the price on day 2?dinny_g wrote: Thu Sep 05, 2024 4:05 pm Lots of products are sold in that manner - watches are a good example where the marked isn't flooded day 1 for new releases etc.
Exactly. Although it's worse than that even. When effectively one body controls the venues, the promoters, the ticket sales and the ticket re-sales, that's treading well into dodgy ground. I'm amazed that this hasn't been picked up years ago by the likes of the CMA over here, or the EU and US equivalents. It's a massive racket.Jobbo wrote: Thu Sep 05, 2024 3:41 pm If you sell through one agency which artificially restricts the supply in order to bolster demand and prices then I think that’s unfair.
No they "artificially restricts the supply in order to bolster demand and prices"
So that’s totally different. the equivalent would be them not restricting supply, just every now and then hiking up the pricing from what it was when you walked in the shop, so when you get to the till they ask 3 times the price you thought they were.dinny_g wrote: Thu Sep 05, 2024 5:26 pmNo they "artificially restricts the supply in order to bolster demand and prices"
That seems.....unlikely240PP wrote: Sat Sep 14, 2024 9:20 am Got two tickets for Wembley in the ballot this morning. Prices were £75-200. There’ll be some pissed off people that paid £350 for standard tickets a few weeks ago. Wonder if they’ll offer partial refunds?