Difference between revisions of "Appraise (Apath)"

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Total all the modifiers and make an Appraise check and read the sale price on the table below. The price is given as a percentage of the original investment.  
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Total all the modifiers and make an Appraise check and read the sale price on the table below. Multiply the check result by 10% and multiply by the purchase cost, this is the resale price of the goods. A result below 10 indicates a loss, a result less than zero means there is no buyer. You are not forced to sell at this price, but you cannot reroll in the same locale for a year. Cargo is invested towards an eye for profit at a particular destination and suffers a -5 penalty in other locations, so refusing to sell is a risky business.
 
 
{|
 
|'''Result'''||'''Appraise result'''||'''Sale value in %'''
 
|-
 
|Disaster||Zero or lower || No buyer
 
|-
 
|Loss||1-9||Roll x5%
 
|-
 
|Profitable ||10-19|| roll *10%
 
|-
 
|Jackpot || 20+ ||roll^2% (roll squared)%
 
|}
 
 
 
You are not forced to sell at this price, but you cannot reroll in the same locale for a year. Cargo is invested towards an eye for profit at a particular destination and suffers a -5 penalty in other locations, so refusing to sell is a risky business.
 
  
 
The capacity of a settlement to produce and absorb cargo depends on its size - the purchase limit is how much value in cargo the place can handle in a month.  
 
The capacity of a settlement to produce and absorb cargo depends on its size - the purchase limit is how much value in cargo the place can handle in a month.  
 
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Revision as of 14:24, 5 September 2015

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Unofficial rules compendium

This skill is used to manage a business and to invest in caravans and cargoes.

Appraisal would seem to be a very simple skill, but when traveling and adventuring, the price of an item can be quite variable and knowing what an item is worth in different markets involves a lot of variables. This makes a character skilled at appraise a good trader and investor; knowing what an item is worth here and now allows educated guesses at what an item would be worth in another time and place.

Manage a Business

Make a roll each month with a DC based on the value of the business. For each point of margin, there is a 1% return on invested capital. This profit can be realized in money or re-invested, increasing the value of the business. If the DC is matched exactly or fails by less than 5, the business breaks even. If the roll fails by more than 5, the business makes a loss equal to the margin of failure (there is no rebate for the first 4 points here, a loss is always at least 5%); this loss must either come out of the owner of the shop's pocket or reduces the value of the shop.

Shop Value DC Profit per point of margin
1 gp or less 5 1 cp
10 gp or less 10 1 sp
100 gp or less 15 1gp
1,000 or less gp 20 10 gp
10,000 or less gp 25 100 gp
100,000 or less gp 30 1,000 gp
1,000,000 or less gp 35 10,000 gp
x10 +5 x10

Increasing the value of the shop by a factor of ten to increases the DC by 5. This can be extrapolated to businesses of even greater size.

If the owner of the business has access to some trade secret, monopoly, unique labor pool, or otherwise can capitalize on conditions, this can give a bonus. The same is true of a business involved with a local specialty; a city of weavers attracts the attention of cloth merchants.

Settlements have an effect on business conducted there. The economy modifier of a settlement is applied as a modifier on Appraise checks to run a business, but doing the possible maximum monthly profit to the purchase limit of the settlement; the market cannot support profits greater than this. A business that regularly runs into this limitation is likely to make the settlement expand quickly. Finally, sum the modifiers for corruption, crime, and law and add 10 to the result; this is the yearly loss (in %) the business suffers due to taxes, kickbacks, and crime. This cost is usually applied at new year's.

Events can give a bonus or penalty on checks to run a business. Events give a bonus or penalty depending on what the business does. A business dealing in weapons is likely to benefit from a war, a business dealing in fine arts is likely to make a loss.

Setting Up a Business

A small shop is easy to set up, but a larger investment can take months to get to run. Make an Appraise check when setting up, using a DC based on your investment capital and taking a number of days equal to the DC. For each point of margin, you manage to invest 10% of your capital in a profitable way.

Speculative Trade

When traveling, it is possible to use the difference in price between different locales to make a profit in trade. Add the applicable modifiers from the table below and make an Appraise check to find the value of the goods at the destination. For cargoes there is little bargaining room; everyone involved in the trade is fairly certain about its worth, as determined by the Appraise roll.

The first modification is for the value of the goods. Cargo is bought and sold in tons (4 mule-loads, 1 wagon-load, or 1 ton of ship's cargo capacity). More expensive goods vary less in price and are thus less profitable to speculate in, but are much easier to transport. The weight includes packaging to allow the wares to be safely transported.

Cargo valued at 10 gp/ton, such as grain, lumber, ore, and other common raw materials +10
Cargo valued at 100 gp/ton, such as meat, wool, and similar produce +5
Cargo valued at 1,000 gp/ton such as crystal, iron bars, and other exotic raw materials ±0
Cargo valued at 10,000 gp/ton (5 gp per pound) such as fine cloth, weapons, and other crafted items -5
Cargo valued at 100,000 gp/ton (50 gp per pound) such as gold, spices, other and luxury items -10
Cargo valued at 1,000,000 gp/ton (500 gp per pound) such as jewelry and magic items -15

The value of the cargo increases as it is transported; goods that are easy to produce in one locale command a better price when exported to a locale where it is hard to produce. The price increase and DC depends on the accumulated travel distance of the goods.

10 miles transport (day trade) -10
40 miles transport (local) -5
150 miles transport (regional) ±0
600 miles transport (international) +5
3,000 miles transport (continental) +10
12,000 mile transport (global) +15

Next is a modifier for what kind of transport is employed. Because ships are vastly more efficient than caravans or wagons, poor routes increase the price a lot more. Note that price increase is based on the best commonly available route, the players may have used a better or worse route than that.

Majority of transport is by pack animal (path, 1 gp/mile, 10 miles/day) +5
Majority of transport is by wagon (road, 3 sp/mile, 10 miles/day) ±0
Majority of transport is by ship (water, 1 sp/mile, 40 miles/day) -5
Trouble on the route (war, bandits, monsters) +5
Good timing (new route, seasonal demand) +5

Total all the modifiers and make an Appraise check and read the sale price on the table below. Multiply the check result by 10% and multiply by the purchase cost, this is the resale price of the goods. A result below 10 indicates a loss, a result less than zero means there is no buyer. You are not forced to sell at this price, but you cannot reroll in the same locale for a year. Cargo is invested towards an eye for profit at a particular destination and suffers a -5 penalty in other locations, so refusing to sell is a risky business.

The capacity of a settlement to produce and absorb cargo depends on its size - the purchase limit is how much value in cargo the place can handle in a month.

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