Ed... Where have you been for the last two months?!?! It's nuts out there!
Oh, I've been out there watching gun, ammo and component prices - availability, too (or lack thereof). I just hadn't noticed guns like that one experiencing such a value spike until that auction.
Oddly, the auction drew no bids for several days, so I started it with a $300 bid knowing full well it wouldn't hold up. But I didn't expect it to go that high. Having a gun just like it, I didn't plan to bid any higher. The next day, it was at $500 and hasn't stopped yet.
I'm seeing a similar thing with Remington Model 700BDLs made between 1997 and 2001. They had scroll engraving on the receiver but weren't bringing more than a non-engraved gun two and three years ago, when I bought six like-new ones for no more than $600 each. Some of the ones I bought have detachable box magazines, which Remington no longer offers on anything but the blued version of the 700SPS. Today, I'm seeing them SELL for $900 and there are some priced at or over a grand!
I'm writing about this buying craze for my July column in
Shotgun Sports Magazine. In Lancaster, Pennsylvania, there was a gun show two weekends ago that saw a 33% increase in attendance over the same dates last year. People told the promoter that they were buying guns as a hedge against a recession, not just because they fear a ban on guns in general.
It really is nuts right now. Dealers are telling me that their distributors are refusing orders for guns, citing a FOUR-YEAR backlog of orders at the manufacturers. Smith & Wesson is one of the manufacturers that two dealers told me they could not order, so it's not just black guns that are in high demand.
I'm glad I bought when I did!
Ed