Loggerdude
Well-Known Member
toilet paper and sanitizers
Can you provide proof of this?I firmly believe that at this point a lot of the price increases are being done by retailers. I own my own business and understand material cost increases. What we are seeing now is far more than material cost increases! The manufacturers are not doing this to us, the retailers are.
A classic example of lack of experience leading to a misunderstanding of the situation. I have built many websites in my career, and I can tell you it is not nearly as simple as you are attempting to make it.I might be wrong but i believe the purpose of website retailers having that gotcha (I'm not a robot) thing is meant to stop bots. So if true that seems a simple way to stop the use of bots buying everything up
The scarcity of items allows entities to use bots, which buy it before you see it, and that gives them the power to control the market by ensuring scarcity. People are making millions of dollars on ammo, components, game consoles, and computer parts via this mechanism right now. Manufacturers are pricing to hedge against inflation, and that's about it. They are not responsible for monstrous price increases. Some dealers are doing it. The same ones that can always be seen doing it. They are happy to take advantage of the situation, but it isn't really their creation. This is individuals. Tech savvy folks that see an opportunity for a quick buck. The people deploying bots, aren't shooters any more than they are console gamers. They are capitalists, however.
There's no conspiracy. This is just raw capitalism when unchained greed has no negative repercussion. So long as people keep buying at absurd prices, the absurd prices will persist. The individual, and their individual choices, is what allows this situation to exist. Without peoples fear of missing out, the bots and their owners, would be completely powerless. When you have someone willing to pay you $1000 for a 1k primers... and you bought them for $55, you'd have to be nearly out of your mind to turn it down. The buyers control this situation... not the sellers.
Maybe RCBS should move operations to Wyoming...?Things to consider:
Background checks done on gun purchases last year substantiate industry estimates of over 40 million guns sold. That can easily translate into 5 billion rounds of ammo with those gun purchases.
Coved regulations have severely impacted manufacturing capabilities along with where housing, distribution, and receiving. Some major companies are/were at 25-30% capacity due to this. California regulations have almost killed off RCBS.
Hazmat regulations are a huge impact on distribution of powder and primers. Manufacturers make their greatest profit using these items in their manufactured ammo.
Side note-Berreta rep told us they don't have a Tikka warehoused anywhere in the US. Everyone they can make over the next year has already been sold.