DAGTAPH;
" My guess this is probably the reason why Jaro backed out. He is limited by contracts too. "
I hope this does not drag on, our order/contract was already in place when they made the agreement with another company, our agreement was violated....
John
This is a suprisingly common retail practice... The manufacturer sets the MSRP and sells at a discount rate to vendors, and thats usually where it ends. Some manufacturers maintain clauses that products cannot be ADVERTISED below msrp (hence in store only specials, etc). One step beyond that however, would be you MUST sell the given product(s) at the price the manufacturer decides.John; with respect, your statements don't make any sense to me, please help me out here. Marstar bought and paid for a shipment of product and the supplier backed out because you were selling too low!!!! Correct me if I'm wrong but once the supplier has been paid his price per unit, what does he care what you sell them for? Marstar could sell them for absolutely 0 profit if it wanted to...no skin off the suppliers nose!?! Sounds like a bit of a tantrum on your part for a deal gone sour for reasons (real ones) unexplained. (flame suit on...just remember who started the thread is all I'll say)
This is from Blue line post "We have just signed an agreement to be the exclusive Canadian distributor for Grand Power products." My guess this is probably the reason why Jaro backed out. He is limited by contracts too.
Luckily there isn't a whole lot of metal in a GP pistol. LOL.I suggest in the future you avoid sending pre payments to any Slovic companies. The only thing worse than their business ethics is their legal system. Anyone thinking of buying a grand power gun should probably save their money and buy something that wasn't made from melted down old cold war era tanks.
This is a suprisingly common retail practice... The manufacturer sets the MSRP and sells at a discount rate to vendors, and thats usually where it ends. Some manufacturers maintain clauses that products cannot be ADVERTISED below msrp (hence in store only specials, etc). One step beyond that however, would be you MUST sell the given product(s) at the price the manufacturer decides.
You might think why would a manufacturer do this? Answer is not easy or simple... Could be brand image... Could be manufacturer not wanting to deal with vendors getting all pissy with eachother because vendor A is selling a few percent lower and causing vendor B to not sell... blah, blah, blah. Turns into a drama after that. And believe me, you would be surprised how many people would go complain to a distributor about advartised pricing instead of trying to be competetive. Hope this helps... My statements are from my own expereince in a different industry.
Let me say this, over the week end I will go to the office and pull the file, I will publish the retail prices we were going to sell the Grand Power pistols, then you can be the judge.... Fair enough ??
John
last fiscal year we purchased more than 25 million rds of 7.62x39 for the Candian market, [/B]
MARSTAR PLANNED RETAIL PRICING ON GRAND POWER....
First shipment....
K-100 Mk7 basic, 4 grips, two mags $499.oo X-CALIBUR 4 grips, 2 mags $795.oo K-100 Mk7/1 Basic SA/DA 2 mags $425.oo
K-22 2 mags $375.oo K-22 Mk-7(1) X-Trim 2 mags $395.oo
John
MARSTAR PLANNED RETAIL PRICING ON GRAND POWER....
First shipment....
K-100 Mk7 basic, 4 grips, two mags $499.oo X-CALIBUR 4 grips, 2 mags $795.oo K-100 Mk7/1 Basic SA/DA 2 mags $425.oo
K-22 2 mags $375.oo K-22 Mk-7(1) X-Trim 2 mags $395.oo
John
MARSTAR PLANNED RETAIL PRICING ON GRAND POWER....
First shipment....
K-100 Mk7 basic, 4 grips, two mags $499.oo X-CALIBUR 4 grips, 2 mags $795.oo K-100 Mk7/1 Basic SA/DA 2 mags $425.oo
K-22 2 mags $375.oo K-22 Mk-7(1) X-Trim 2 mags $395.oo
John




























