I sold a few to a friend at good buddy prices.
He turned around and dealt them for a real profit. Then told me how well he had done.
Good way to sour a friendship.
Yup, been there.
I sold a few to a friend at good buddy prices.
He turned around and dealt them for a real profit. Then told me how well he had done.
Good way to sour a friendship.
I sold a few to a friend at good buddy prices.
He turned around and dealt them for a real profit. Then told me how well he had done.
Good way to sour a friendship.
If your buddy is interested perhaps he has a number in mind and should make an offer.... if it's acceptable to you then that would be the easiest route.
.... is he a good enough buddy to pay you a fair price for something he wants?
Or is he only a good enough buddy to expect you to discount it for some reason but not for him to reciprocate by paying you a fair price?
Friends and money - that can turn into a problem, especially when you give him a deal and he turns around and sells them for a profit.
I'd suggest charging him what they're worth on the market. Search EE here as well as GP and TP, used dealers online, etc.
I sold a few to a friend at good buddy prices.
He turned around and dealt them for a real profit. Then told me how well he had done.
Good way to sour a friendship.
3) Never borrow anything to anybody no matter who it is because it may never come back
Though I ve been asked several times if someone could borrow one of my firearms (mainly by relatives) I never ever loan them out.Mainly just looking on how they treat their own property is a good reason not to let them have access to mine.As far as discounting guns for a friend once he has them their his property so if he flips them then it is what it is but it’s a lesson learned for the next time he asks