You have to send items purchased from the auction house to your stash explicitly. This extra step is so you can purchase things you don't actually have space in your stash for, it lets you queue up to 50 things in the auction house "outside" of the game.
You do so from the left side of the Completed tab.
Select the item purchased, then hit "Send To Stash".
Pictured here is sending gold from the sale of an item, but the same system applies to buying items.
It doesn't really make sense that you have to send gold to the stash IMO, but whatever.
Determining the "fair market value" of an item is a chore at this point, although I'm certain that at some point in the near future auction house analysis tools will be created by Blizzard or the community.
Market value is likely to fluctuate considerably as people play the game in different patterns, so saying "X is a good rule of thumb," especially in the early going, is a losing proposition. Right now, for instance, low level crafting components are probably vastly undervalued as many people are playing low level areas. When the game starts to age, we'll likely see far fewer low level items, and more bits of high-level components.
Essentially the three pieces of information you're seeing are:
- The current lowest price available for you to buy the quantity of the item in question.
- The average sales price of the last 10 of those commodity sold, which is supposed to indicate the short-term trading value of the item. However, this is unclear as to whether the price is inclusive of "bulk orders" or not - if someone buys 100, what 10 of these count?
- The average sales price of the last 24 hours worth of sales, which is supposed to indicate the long-term trading value of the item. However, this appears buggy - at times, this has read 0 for extended periods, even though it's clear there are many sales going on.
If you're listing a commodity below the lowest price on offer, and then not seeing the buyout price change, that's because you can't buy your own auction - so you're seeing the next cheapest item for sale from another vendor. This is what you'd want if you're going for a quick sale, but might not be what you want if you're trying to maximize profit.
As far as pricing your own commodity auctions, I've found that only empirical data sampled over time is available at this time. For instance, I'm often buying Square Rubies, and I know that around ~8k gold is an "average" price - I see them listed for far less and occasionally try to buy, but frequently am out-sniped. If all I see is 10k+ gems on offer, I'll probably wait for a price break.
Selling is similar to buying, just in reverse. If you've got something you think is particularly valuable, sample the current values of the 3 pieces of information you have available, and then watch for times when the current market price is above what you've determined is fair. Then you can list your item slightly below this and turn a profit, or list it at what's typically "average" for a quick sale.
Best Answer
The cause of error 31071 is not clear but it seems related to auction house server or connectivity problems.
from Bashiok - Blizzard Entertainment, Community Manager
There are many users report that it happens when trying to buy gems or tomes, but it could be only a coincidence linked to the fact that these are items with a big market. There are users that got this error also on other equipment.