You forgot Ayre, Hovland, McIntosh, to name a few more, the first two have excellent phono stages, albeit they are optional. (I don't know much about the McIntosh preamps, so I have no idea if their phono stages are fair, good or excellent.)
While I somewhat agree with your premise (I too have a full function preamp, the Ayre K-1XE), most people don't use vinyl as a source anymore, even with the resurgence in analog. It seems to be mostly us audiophiles, as well as a youth movement (i.e. typically college students) that are leading the resurgence. In general, most of the audiophiles who have gotten back into analog already had a line stage, and so only needed a phono stage, and most of the college students only need a phono stage, as they (typically) use a receiver.
I know that when I got back in a few years ago, I just added an ARC PH-3 phono stage. (Later, when I seriously wanted to upgrade my stereo system as a whole, I upgraded to the Ayre. But that is a lot of money, even for an audiophile.) It seems to me, that you get more bang for your buck by going with a separate phono stage until you can spend the big bucks on a really good full function preamp, as the phono stages in the mid-fi preamps are mediocre at best, IMHO anyway.
My two cents on the topic anyway.
While I somewhat agree with your premise (I too have a full function preamp, the Ayre K-1XE), most people don't use vinyl as a source anymore, even with the resurgence in analog. It seems to be mostly us audiophiles, as well as a youth movement (i.e. typically college students) that are leading the resurgence. In general, most of the audiophiles who have gotten back into analog already had a line stage, and so only needed a phono stage, and most of the college students only need a phono stage, as they (typically) use a receiver.
I know that when I got back in a few years ago, I just added an ARC PH-3 phono stage. (Later, when I seriously wanted to upgrade my stereo system as a whole, I upgraded to the Ayre. But that is a lot of money, even for an audiophile.) It seems to me, that you get more bang for your buck by going with a separate phono stage until you can spend the big bucks on a really good full function preamp, as the phono stages in the mid-fi preamps are mediocre at best, IMHO anyway.
My two cents on the topic anyway.