So everyone is thinking 8 cents a primer is kind of a normal price right now. If you were the primer manufacturer why would you sell for less when the "recovery" comes? Brass is approaching a 25 year high, truck driver shortages driving up the price of fuel and delivery, plus $15 minimum wage is coming, you've got the pressures of the fed leaning on the gun industry. What's the rationale for components to come back down to pre COVID prices?
I'm on the hunt, every day, for primers. I just sold, Friday, some crypto (DOGE) for .33 a coin, I paid .005 a coin, today its 53.6 a coin. I'm trying to get back in on a dip at .44. My point is everything for the foreseeable future is going higher. You'll see a huge correction in the market, the Fed can't print anymore money, how will you hold off inflation? The greater concern is stagnation. I don't like it, but frankly, I'll buy at market price to keep me going in what I'm doing. For me, having my silos full of grain today makes more sense than to wait until prices come down to a price *I* think they should be. My 2 cents.