Thx for the replies and insights. I get supply and demand. Supply dwindles, prices go up. Demand goes up, prices go up. Supply doesnt dwindle, demand goes up, lets gouge the market.
Lets hammer this question home.... is the surplus(or supply) drying up? Or is there still a million surplus rifles ready to ship out of Russia at any day of the week for the next 10 million rifles for xx dirt cheap per rifle? As a consumer, I wouldnt know. As a distributor, I might know, yet take advantage of the blind folded consumers and say here these were hard to get, this is the price x10.
Totally pulling arbitrary numbers...just trying to illustrate my question.
Can look at this the other way too I suppose... say all retailers are phoning Russia saying drop 1k rifles into a shipping container and send em...next thing you know Russia is withholding stock saying nope we're scrounging can only ship 200 at X price.
As for condition wise..... sure, 1 out of 1k rifles might be primo compared to par for course.... alright. Small market for those collecting stuff saying theirs is rare. Its worth what the market will pay. But how about a "heres a military rifle. Its used. No guarantees if the hammer even drops. Its $399 for a potential shooter or wallhanger." How about no.
Is it economics 101, or greed 101?
These are military surplus rifles. Not modern rifles with either a guarantee to fire, or guarantee to MOA.
This question has been asked and answered several times on this site and others. Supplies of European SKS rifles is dwindling. There are several reasons for this, including UN sanctions and nations preferring to destroy their existing stocks, rather than put them on the surplus market.
Likely many nations still store thousands of the rifles for a "just in case scenario." I have my doubts whether or not those rifles will ever surface for civilian sales again.
Most of the new Chinese SKS rifles are long gone. Now, just like most milsurps, the lesser grade, non FTRed, issued, but still Field Grade condition are being released onto the surplus markets.
Some of the rarer models are commanding higher prices. I never believed I would see the prices milsurps of all types are commanding these days. Best investments I ever made.
fiftycal, your post is coming off as a snivel.
Prices are regulated by availability and the market of the day.
When cheap ammo starts to disappear, the price of SKS rifles will stabilize for a few years, then continue to rise.
Mixmasters will always bring less money than unissued, all matching number specimens. The difference between the two categories will be very significant.
FTRs with matching numbers will bring more than and FTR mixmaster and so on.
If you can pick up a shootable SKS for $300 or less, in today's market conditions, that's about as fair as it gets. Some places are still advertising surplus Chinese SKS rifles. They aren't shiny, recently FTRed pieces. Some even have matching numbers. Most have oiled stocks, which don't appear to be Chu Wood, slightly worn bores that still shoot to spec etc.
Wild West out of Edmonton has both Russian at $279 and Chinese starting around $300