Nature of the current used speaker market


What do you think of the current market for used speakers above the $6,000 price point?  It seems to me like the market is soft, really soft, since I keep seeing the same speakers posted for sale over and over again by the same seller.  And these are top flight speakers from solid manufacturers such as Focal, B&W, Rockport, Sonus Faber, etc.  Does this mean the number of audiophiles and audio enthusiasts is on the wane, or is there just a glut of used speakers for sale out there? 
mtrot
Post removed 
Orpheus,
i disagee. The problem is not that economic conditions are holding people back from buying 6k speakers.
i went to the NY audio show in November, majority of people walking around were 60+ , very depressing.
Compare that to when I was young hanging out in Crazy Eddiie’s original store, a bunch of doctors and dentists and young Wall Street types getting “salesjobbed” laying down serious money.
the money hasn’t disappeared, the interest has.
on another note, speakers shouldn’t depreciate like cars. My Andra I’s shouldn’t be worth 20% of what the Andra III’s cost.  I just don’t think there is an 80% improvement in the sound.
@jacksky
I attended both AXPONA and RMAF this year, and I would agree that the majority of attendees appeared to be 60+.  At RMAF, I did run into a good number of guys who were 40-ish and seemed to have an ample supply of money to own such speakers as Sonus Faber Stradivari.  But their frequency of such purchases is not very high.  Man, I would sure hate to be a dealer trying to sell high end in this market. 

I hope folks don’t mind me sharing my views on these forums. They can come off alarming I know, but my posts here are based in reality not fiction.

The 80’s and 90’s we spent our time as insiders recruiting young and middle aged listeners into this wonderful hobby. HEA up till the mid-90’s fit. The hobby was still pure in many ways bringing in fresh designers who were sound driven more than money. The CES was the mother of shows and then the other shows were the regional spin offs supporting the CES. The main floor of the CES today, is young an full of innovation, teamed up with a mature foundation. Electronics now are performance based with affordability and practicality in mind. Today’s electronics aren’t here to replace the room, but to use it as part of the equation.

The now generation looks at equipment stacked against a wall quite differently vs the guys trying to impress by saying how much their system cost them. Now, hobbyist using a dollar amount to describe their system means nothing. Look at the posts here using a dollar figure to describe their sound instead of sound itself describing the sound. Those statements hold no appeal for the guy or gal walking around the CES main floor. HEA has isolated itself for 20 some years now, not being the leader any more, and not even being a competitor in smart systems.

Smart audio is about using the environment as the medium, not sitting there looking at components as if they can do something magical. Are you following me yet? Saying "my system cost $250,000.00" is yesteryear. It registers a zero for a 25 year old music lover looking to be inside of a soundstage. Listeners now are looking to the experience not a component chassis. Most of them don’t know what a radioshack RTA even is. Today’s listener is beyond home brew bench testing, or home brew "experts" looking at numbers to explain their distortion levels. Some of the new listeners reading this post right now are going to be getting ahold of me, simply for the reason that I’m talking about now. And, that’s not going to change or suddenly flip back to some old school belief in expensive chassis. Remember the days when there was a radioshack or 2 in every town along with a couple of stereo stores? There’s a reason they are no longer there. There's a reason HEA is no longer on the main floor of the CES.

mg

What a myopic point of view. We regret the geniuses of the past, and their passing. But there are new ones on the rise. There are commercial people who know what current markets are. HEA is still there because there are more millionaires in this world than ever. More billionaires than ever. They cover the high end and middle markets just on their own.

There is a bigger market than contributors and readers on Audiogon.