Reloading Equipment Shortage

In the firearms biz, with exclusivity deals (such as R. Nicholls and H.K.), standard rules of business etiquette do NOT apply.

I had no idea R. Nicholls was into manufacturing but I'm happy, and confused, that hoarding what they make works well for them. I can understand if they're retailing out of a low and hard to replace inventory how they'd want to maintain prices but that's not what we're discussing.

For the rest of the business world, high inventory and back orders = $$$$$ that you can't get your hands on to pay overhead, OE, etc. so they tend to push for higher sales which reduces both and creates profit. That this works in reverse for some outfits is just one of those mysteries of life I guess. Maybe they should run up their receivables too.

You don't happen to know what Bank these people deal with do you? I've got some really creative ideas that involve large inventories and open ended backing :D.
 
For the rest of the business world, high inventory and back orders = $$$$$ that you can't get your hands on to pay overhead, OE, etc. so they tend to push for higher sales which reduces both and creates profit.

Does the rest of the business world lay off employees, when they have a large back-order of inventory and customers readily throwing cash at them? According to ATK (federal) they are caught up on all their orders, yet try and find 210M primers...IMO someone is creating the shortage, and increasing the price, knowing that the Americans are buying all they can...
 
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