nipponbilliards said:
Yes, I totally agree with you. Cue makers who allow that to happen make it harder for dealers to make a profit selling their cues, that would cost the cue makers business as there will be lesser dealers interested in dealing with their cues.
The dealers also need to understand, in my opinion, that they are not only protecting the interest of the cue makers, but that of the value of the cues they are selling when they stand their ground and hold on to a certain price.
It is a mutually beneficial decision which would go a long way.
The problem I think is that it takes everyone's cooperation in order for this to work. If a few dealers are selling their cues almost at cost, and the cue maker still supplies them with cues, then other dealers will feel like they have to match the price, or quit dealing with the cue maker.
Richard
Sounds to me like it's really of function of supply and demand, and desirability for a specific cue, or a cuemaker's cue.
If the price put on a new cue is unreasonable, it might not sell, unless the right buyer is found.
And if a certain price is put on a used cue, why it sells or does not sell at a certain price is one of those things people can discuss endlessly.
If someone buys a cue as an investment, it seems to me it should have intrinsic worth that will justify someone paying dearly for it. In this case, perhaps gold, silver, diamonds, rubies, rare wood that is most beautiful, etc. etc.
The quality of workmanship is something that may or may not command a price. And if it looks great but hits not so well, what's going to happen with it?
I know a fellow who bought a beautiful cue, full of exquisite filigree silver inlays, paid a pretty penny for it. After a month he wanted to unload it. Why? He didn't like and was unable to get used to the way it hit, and played.
In his case, he didn't especially need the money, and I don't know if he ever sold it. But he sure didn't like the hit. Had the hit worked for him, he'd still be playing with a spectacular looking, somewhat understated cue.
Another thing. A cuemaker lives by selling cues, or repairing them, or whatever. If it is his only livelihood, and he has a family to feed, he needs to move the cues. If his price isn't right, he'll lower the price until it sells, or maybe go out of business. Just because the price drops doesn't mean the quality isn't there....
If he moves his cues by selling to dealers and they in turn hawk them for 10 or 15 percent above what they paid, that's their business too.
The really good cuemakers who put out top quality sticks don't seem to have any trouble selling their wares. Why? Quality, the name, the way their cues play.
Flex