Monitoring people's right to effective self-defence..
A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed
HOW ODD THAT MASSACRES MOSTLY HAPPEN IN "GUN-FREE ZONES"! When will the brain-dead Left wake up and draw the obvious conclusion? Gun bans kill kids
Saturday, June 07, 2014
The Coming Crash in Ammunition Prices
The Obama caused bubble in ammunition prices seems ready to bust. Over the last few years people have seen ammunition prices double or triple. Handgun and rifle ammunition has been hard to find at times. .22 long rifle ammunition tripled in price over the last 18 months. People would line up to buy ammunition at prices two and three times the level that they were just two years ago.
All of that is about to change. Ammunition supply looks as though it is ready to catch up with demand. Centerfire pistol and rifle cartridges are available on most store shelves. When I walked into a local Wal-Mart this morning, their were over 30 signs on the ammunition case indicating a rollback of prices by 10-15%.
In classic economic fashion, the bubble was fueled by actions of the Federal government. Many federal agencies bought enormous quantities of ammunition. While the quantities were only a small percentage of total production, the raw figures fueled conspiracy theories. Obama administration actions fueled fear of coming shortages, gun bans, registration of ammunition sales, even potential low level warfare. All of this led to the current bubble of ammunition sales.
In response, the economy reacted the way that free markets are supposed to work. Ammunition suppliers started running their manufacturing plants day and night, adding additional shifts. Importers scoured the world markets, trying to buy everything they could to satisfy the insatiable demand. Foreign manufacturers bumped up their production to try to fill the desire for more and more ammunition. Ammunition production was at the highest level ever for small arms, short of war.
But unlike during war, this ammunition was not being fired in combat. Most of it was not being fired at all. It was being stored against future need. Very little was actually being used.
There are limits to this sort of demand. I gave away a couple of thousand .22 rounds to make a point. A person who only had 37 .22 shells out of a box of 50 is well justified in wanting a thousand or two, or a case of 5,000 "just because". Once they have the 5,000, their desire for more becomes less. Then demand drops, likely below pre-bubble levels for a while.
In the meantime, manufactures cannot stop production instantly. They have orders in the pipeline. They have supplies coming in that they have no storage space for. They have employees that they have trained and who they do not want to lay off. For all these reasons, demand drops suddenly, but supply cannot drop as quickly. As supply took a while to spin up, it will take a while to spin down.
This means that retailers and wholesalers will be saddled with a glut of merchandise that they cannot sell at the current high prices. They will have to put it on sale. Lower prices bring about the expectation that prices will fall even further. The prices crash.
That is when a prudent person buys what they want, at very good prices. Demand will not stay at the artificially low prices of the crash. The new crop of urban, hip, shooters will want to feed their equipment, and the new demand will be higher than it was before the bubble, but it will take a while to settle out.
Metal prices have already fallen from the highs of the bubble. Copper and lead are far lower than they were. You will know that the bubble is close to the bottom when you see .22 LR on sale for below 4 cents per round. At the lowest, we might see .22 cartridges below $10 for 500.
©2014 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice is included.
Link to Gun Watch
Here is another article saying much the same:
Mark Nale: Seeking answers to why rimfire ammunition is so hard to find
We understand ammo stocks at home but others always ask "Why so many bullets?" Or "Why do you need so mny guns?"
ReplyDeleteThe very idea of practice, as in target pratice never enters their mind. They must believe guns just automatically hit the target no matter what it is.
Even thoughi no longer own a firearm, I feel the need to purchase .22, 9mm, 40 and 45 ammo just in case I do find a wepon I want at a good price.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot, Phil. You have contributed to a problem that plagues people who actually own firearms and practice regularly.
ReplyDeleteHere in DFW area of Texas, it is better than a few months ago, but prices are still 50% higher than pre-Sandy Hook for 9mm. .22LR is still not common and is priced at 4X the normal price.
ReplyDelete5.56/.223 is almost back to normal prices.
And 5,000 rounds sounds like a lot but...
ReplyDeleteIf we go shooting with two or three of our friends and all of us shoot 250 rounds that is over 1,000 rounds just that day. Say we want to shoot two or three times a month then we have nearly exhausted our supply of ammo.
Ah, well. We can't afford to shoot like that now with prices as they are. I hope you are correct because we do like to go to the range.
Wishful thinking at this point. Wal-marts in SW WA, as well as other sporting goods stores still have problems filling their shelves. .22LR ammo is scarce. Prices are leveling off somewhat, but we've got a long way to go before things get back to normal.
ReplyDeleteObama caused the ammo price spike, lol. It was caused by the delusional predictions of morons who horded it.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to see more supplies getting out for longer. Locally, there was one place that didn't charge outrageous prices, and had stock for the most part. 22 was not in consistently, but they had it, as did wal mart if one was there at the right times. It sold out very quickly from wal mart.
ReplyDeletePrices at the manufacturers wholesale level didn't go up 2-3X, that was the supply chain sellers, retailers and scalpers doing. To be fair, many retailers had to pay inflated prices to get stock, though some I believe were charging much more than their normal cost+ formula, but the price from the factories didn't go up 2-3X normal.
You can't hoard product that isn't even on the shelf. I don't buy the hoarding augment because gun shops are telling me that they can't get any.22 ammo in the store period. The shortage hit Canada 6 months ago now the only thing on the shelves is the bulk crap that nobody else wants, if anything at all.
ReplyDeleteIt bothers me to think that most Dads teach their kids to shoot with a 22. Teaching is the foundation to responsible and safe gun use. I would hate to think we are trying to prevent our next generations to be victims unable to defend themselves.
ReplyDeleteSo when will it drop? I STILL cannot find .22 LR ammo and even .22 mag is hard to find and very expensive. What a joke.
ReplyDeleteI cannot understand the reasoning to buy a thousand rounds of 22 shells. I have been a hunter since I was 10 and am now 71 and never had over 2 or 3 boxes of shells at one time. Either we have raised a bunch of people that cant hit what they shoot at or are burning up several hundred shells at the range every week and havent improved thier skills at all.
ReplyDeleteAgreed!! If one is shooting 1000 rounds and not becoming a better shooter, it is time for a new hobby.
ReplyDeleteYou misspelled self-defense.
ReplyDeleteNice post. Purchase Bulk pistol ammo at bite the bullet, catch the superiority best pistol & rifle ammunition, gun magazines & accessories at discounted price.
ReplyDelete