How do you know It’s an inside joke?You guys don't have much of a sense of humour.
It's an inside joke from Herve
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I got off the audio merry go round quite awhile ago. I have heard too many uber expensive systems that have left me cold, not just at shows either. I am sitting here listening to a modest system and can’t believe how wonderful the sound is. Vandy 3A Signatures from 1997, a rebuilt McCormack amp with a gravity base system , a Spectral pre from 1986 fed with a Schit Yggy LIM DAC with a MacBook Pro M1 chip and LaCie drive, cabling from the 1990’s with ESP power cords and power. I just sit here with my eyes closed enjoying the hell out of what I am hearing.
I have asked myself many of the same questions throughout my audio career. Who is going to buy this? or where is this going to be sold?In the relatively short time (about 12 yrs) that I've been a part of the Audiophile world, I've noticed an accelerating trend in high-end gear pricing that has only the most tenuous relationship to actual value. The economics term for this is Veblen Pricing where, in the luxury marketplace, demand increases as price increases. Extreme examples of this are found in luxury items created for the super-rich: "designer" jewelry, perfume, yachts, cars, watches and high end audio.
We see it most commonly in some cables and fuses. And now we see even a phono cartridge, from a highly respected audio company, listed for $1million (phono pre included). As far as I can see, what separates this companies phono cartridge/pre from their other models, which retail at approximately $50k, is..... $950,000 -- and not some mind-blowing revolutionary technology.
I don't bring this up to rag on companies that choose to exploit this market. But I do wonder how it effects the industry and consumers who support high end Audio. Even though there is a healthy high-value segment in Audio, I believe the extreme pricing we're seeing is pushing a significant segment of the high-end market into the luxury-priced irrational stratosphere. As this type of pricing becomes more common, I wonder if some manufacturers actually feel they need to inflate their prices to be taken seriously in the marketplace. This is bad news any way you slice it imho.
Oscar Wilde said very well; “A cynic knows the price of everything & the value of nothing.”
I don’t think it is.How do you know It’s an inside joke?
Elliott, all the factors you state above are valid and essential for small companies like we have in high-end Audio. This kind of product is going to be expensive compared to more mass produced products.I have asked myself many of the same questions throughout my audio career. Who is going to buy this? or where is this going to be sold?
I think this is not a High End question but rather an expensive or high priced question. The last ten years or so has fostered huge price jumps on almost all manner of audio gear. I know there are many reasons for such but I agree that maybe they are self induced as well.
As someone in this business for a long time and having some background as to how manufacturers work some of this pricing is just the way of the world and reflects as to the huge excalations in costs for small business.
Audio is by nature small and very small business. There have been a few that might not be considered small but they are mostly gone at least as far as the high end is concerned ( Harman) The rest are small, even the largest of the small are small.
Let's examine the cost structure:
Real Estate- has had huge increases
Labor- up
Insurance 4 to 5x over the last 15 years
Transportation- double and more over the panedemic
Energy
Parts - both shortages and suppliers all have the same escalation factors
Almost no audio company is vertically integrated and the few that might be close have invested huge amounts into CNC machines, Paint booths etc. Even those have to buy stuff to make products whether its raw materials or partially or fully finished parts.
So when you want to build something, lets say a speaker for example, these small companies are basically buying parts at retail and paying retail plus transportation to get these required items.
Since all of this is bought in small quantitites to be built in small quantitites.
Audio truly is tiny and volume is tiny thats why this is factual.
Example last year- the largest Corvette dealer in the country sold almost 1500 cars and located in N.H. of all places. This is still a small business. GM made over 40,000 Corvettes, a boutique high end sports car. No one in the Audio Industry sells 1500 pairs of 75-85k speakers in one year.
THis is part of why things are expensive however the other part may not be for good reason and I too believe that some products are priced for other reasons as to make them seem like they matter more.
The prices wont change until the sales dont happen and so far it seems that has not happened. I go to shows every year and there is more and more and more new products, new companies and ever escalating prices.
I still dont know where it goes and who buys it !!!
This is driven by two factors. First, there is no sales tax in NH, so if you want to buy a Corvette to squirrel away as an investment, it is cheaper to ship it or drive it home on a NH temporary tag than to pay sales tax which would be collected on registration in your home state. And second, vehicle allotments and kickbacks are often tied to past order volumes. This dealer has a great order history, so he gets the best deal from GM and can give you the best price. I’ve gone to NH with my trailer many times for vehicles.Example last year- the largest Corvette dealer in the country sold almost 1500 cars and located in N.H. of all places. This is still a small business. !!
Word, Brother!This is the same discussion you can have with any hobby or any retail goods, and comes up on audio forums every 6 months. But with audio, there's a lot more indignation.
Wil, I get it but I just don't know clients that spend crazy numbers just because its expensive. In fact none of my clients do that and today it seems everyone negotiates like crazy for the best deal. I'm not sure that a Million dollar cartridge is a real thing and not someone making a joke.Elliott, all the factors you state above are valid and essential for small companies like we have in high-end Audio. This kind of product is going to be expensive compared to more mass produced products.
This is not what I'm addressing in the op. I'm talking about what seems to be a trend towards irrational, over-the-top, luxury Veblen pricing aimed at very wealthy people interested in spending crazy money for the sake of spending crazy money. This is the world of $25 million watches, multi-million dollar handbags...
When (if?) a phono cartridge is marketed for buyers willing to spend a million dollars, or a fuse is marketed for buyers at $20k, or a power cable at $80k, I believe we're leaving the world of the business structures you're speaking of and entering a radically different marketing/pricing world.
I think this has the unfortunate effect of inflating prices overall beyond the costs of running a successful business.
That wasnt my point. My point was he sells almost 1500 cars. He sells over 100 cars a month starting at around 80 k a vehicle and Chevy sells over 40k. Comparing Cars to audio is just silly. Volume or total lack of it is what Audio at the High End is. No speaker company sells 1500 pairs fo 80k speakers a year and I doubt they sell anywhere near that in the whole products life.This is driven by two factors. First, there is no sales tax in NH, so if you want to buy a Corvette to squirrel away as an investment, it is cheaper to ship it or drive it home on a NH temporary tag than to pay sales tax which would be collected on registration in your home state. And second, vehicle allotments and kickbacks are often tied to past order volumes. This dealer has a great order history, so he gets the best deal from GM and can give you the best price. I’ve gone to NH with my trailer many times for vehicles.
This is not what I'm addressing in the op. I'm talking about what seems to be a trend towards irrational, over-the-top, luxury Veblen pricing aimed at very wealthy people interested in spending crazy money for the sake of spending crazy money. This is the world of $25 million watches, multi-million dollar handbags...
Of course it wasn’t your point. But it’s still why the guy in NH has such a volume.That wasnt my point. My point was he sells almost 1500 cars. He sells over 100 cars a month starting at around 80 k a vehicle and Chevy sells over 40k. Comparing Cars to audio is just silly. Volume or total lack of it is what Audio at the High End is. No speaker company sells 1500 pairs fo 80k speakers a year and I doubt they sell anywhere near that in the whole products life.
Speaking of turntables, would there be an Obsidian if we had no Caliburn? Would there be a Doehmann Helix if we had no Caliburn? Would there be a Prime Signature if there was no HW40?
I understand the sentiment, but evidence at large points in the opposite direction. Even with a thriving luxury and ultra luxury industry, we never had as many options regarding clothing, cars, watches and any other non-essential product offers.Again, what I’m talking about is bs luxury pricing that has nothing to do with anything other asking a huge price of luxury minded consumers. If this becomes more than a rarity, I believe it leads to more of the same.