Anybody having trouble getting near-your-asking-price for used gear ? (Plz. no hype)


I buy and sell gear "on a whim" and have done so for 40 years. Mostly high-end tube stuff that I get an itch to move from my rig to make room for other high-end stuff that I have been dreaming of.  It's fun and gives me a fresh faces to fall in and out of love with.

Lately I am having a really hard time getting any serious offers above 1/4 to 1/3 of retail- actually zero offers over that. And winter is the time of year gear sells. Once the sun comes out things get really quiet.  Not terribly long ago I could ask 50% of retail and get serious offers pretty close to the ask.  

I am especially having trouble selling ARC gear. It's prices are steadily collapsing. On HiFi Shark that stuff sits for close to a year (or more) before it moves.  For example SP 15s are under 2K now. They were selling (not asking) at 3K a year ago. It took me almost a year to sell a new-in--box I/50 for $3000 (!)   Ref 75s are moving under $3000 and TMR will only offer 2K for one of them. The older stuff is selling in the hundreds not the thousands. Top-Of the-line stuff like Reference 10 preamps are moving under 12K (asking is around 17K) 

I recently sold a Bryston BR-20 brand new in the box and it took me 7 months to get 48% of MSRP.  This is NEW stuff- not somebody's junk. 

My guy at Magnepan told me their stuff is really moving slowly as well. He blamed it on the political environment. ARC is pretending all is well but I have a little birdie inside there that tells me their stuff is stagnant as and dealers are actually cancelling orders. 

Now, assuming you are being honest and not "fluffing the market" with bullbleep because you have something for sale and hoping for the greater fool,  are you seeing/experiencing the same thing I am experiencing? 

NO RETAILERS PLESASE- you guys tend to "exaggerate" to put it kindly- plus most of us here at AG know who you are and your 1000s of posts are a big clue. 

Signed/ Depressed about my favorite side gig. 

128x128Ag insider logo xs@2xyesiam_a_pirate

I own (and occasionally buy and sell)  mostly 'vintage' audio equipment (1960s - 1970s), so my comments may not be 100% transferrable to the more modern audio community... but, IMO:

I do feel like we MAY have now passed the 'peak' in terms of getting top dollar for used equipment. I think many of the factors mentioned by other commenters are valid partial reasons for this (current economic climate, large increases in shipping costs, ease of comparison shopping via the Internet / more people 'flipping' and selling, etc.) but I also feel there are larger forces at play.

I think the main reason for the decline in the modern used audio market is that modern audio enthusiasts put more of a premium on having the latest technology; a lot of their interest in purchasing equipment is to access new tech and new features. And even 3 or 4 year old gear might not have all the latest tech and features. So they skew more towards buying brand-new vs. used right off the bat.

For the vintage audio sector, interest in general is more driven by nostalgia and not as much by the technology itself... middle aged (and older) guys like me who either want stuff they had when they where younger (or a parent or relative had) or they always wanted "back in the day" but couldn't afford it back then... the main reason for a decline in vintage is simply - and bluntly - the main pool of hobbyists are dying off, and there's not a lot of younger people filling in the ranks (most younger people, if they have any interest in audio AT ALL will gravitate towards the modern equipment with the technology they are more familiar with...)

The other main problem in both audio communities (IMO) is that sellers are often overly optimistic about setting a price point. They look at listings on places like eBay, Audio Mart, Reverb, etc. and often times feel justified setting their own pricing based on the highest priced listings they see... and many times that listing has been sitting there, with basically zero interest, for months or even years. One obvious thing is to filter down to the actual "sold" price for the same equipment; as there is often a large difference in what something is listed at, and what it actually sold for. I also suggest looking at how long the item was listed (when that information is available) so you can decide on perhaps a balance between what you want to get for your gear, and how long you want to have to list it for, answer messages, send demo videos or host in-person demos for, etc...

Another important factor is you need to price for the local market you are in. With shipping becoming so expensive - and horror stories of buyers receiving damaged gear on their doorsteps becoming easier to find and read about - more people are shying away from buying expensive, heavy electronics that need to be shipped to them. I don't sell a lot of equipment, but I have noticed a trend towards more and more of what I do sell being bought locally. And those potential out-of-state buyers being a lot more concerned with shipping details such as how is the equipment being packed / who is packing it (DIY or a professional shipper); which shipping company am I going to use; details on what my 'policy' is if something arrives damaged, etc. Honestly, for me, losing a little in sale price because it's a local sale and not getting shipped to LA / NY / Chicago for top dollar... is often offset by not having to hassle with packing and shipping - and the buyers who still insist you can ship a 60 pound piece of audio equipment across the country for $50, so why I am I "ripping them off" when I quote $150 to (professionally) pack and ship my unit..?

 

 

 

@grislybutter that would make sense: essentially initial increased prices in the used market (depending on the extent of economic health and tariffs) due to supply and demand from people avoiding purchasing the same or similar product new then, correct?

And +1 @carlso63 

 

@toro3 Yes, I think if a new e.g. Simaudio 340 price goes up 25%, the used one will be worth more. But once we feel the effects, people will stay away from discretionary spending, demand will go down and prices have to follow. 

There is an audio feature though: sellers seem to be wealthy and not have to sell, they can just hold it and won't drop the price just to make money or clean out the basement. 

There are some really thoughtful and honest responses here. I really appreciate the insights. 

I don’t think uncertainty is as big of a factor as some suggest. The audiophile population is aging and passing on. Part of aging is losing the desire to regularly buy and sell heavy and expensive gear. I am now 63 and am not as interested in going through all of the hassle associated with buying, trying and selling. Demand is down because the marketplace, which has always been rather small, is opting out of the constant buying and selling routine because of burn out and age. I rank this as the #1 reason for lower demand. Some opt out due to uncertainty while an equal number of others sense things are positive.  I see an equal split on this factor.