And still none flooding in from overseas. That's the odd thing.
The article didn't say where the $100,000,000 came from. Maybe Vista is going from owning 3 of the 4 US primer manufacturers to owning 4 of the 5 US primer manufacturers.
Lets hope Winchester stays independent. Or if they get bought out someone beside Vista buys them. Mergers and buyouts can get blocked by the FTC for being anti-competitive. And owning all the major ammo companies in the US would definitely qualify.
Winchester ammunition is owned by General Dynamics, a MASSIVE defense contractor. No way they will divest themselves of their small arms ammunition division.
Winchester ammunition is owned by General Dynamics, a MASSIVE defense contractor. No way they will divest themselves of their small arms ammunition division.
Since when? Winchester has for a great many years been a division of the Olin Corporation, which is not owned by any other company and trades on the New York Stock Exchange. Olin has two major divisions, Winchester Ammunition and Chemicals.
I know of several companies looking to expand into primer manufacturing.
Considering what I don't see on grocery shelves and in other stores, the primer shortage isn't all that surprising. Supply chain issues and those involved in it are taking care of the large customers first.
"...we might never see another brick of primers ever again."
NEVER, EVER, AGAIN...?
I was going to ask where you are coming from until I saw where you are at... (I, too, can slaughter almost any communication: imagine trying to diagram my sentence?)
You must REALLY not be seeing ANY primers over in your neck-o'-the-woods if it is truly that bad! Is that something unique to the Baked Bean State? (I know there are some weird firearm rules, regulations, policies & procedures?)
Hope things improve for you. I have been able to find a brick (or two) online, occasionally, this last 6 months or so: not enough to reload at my normal volume but enough to not have to delve into my supply.
Cheers!
P.S. Those cci #41s will also work for small magnum loads if your revolver has a good strong hammer spring...
That is so true these days. The primer is the slowest part of a cartridge to manufacture. Plus they can only work with a limited amount of priming compound at any one time. There is a lot of hand work that can't really be automated. They are not like bullets or brass where a guy loads 10 machines and flips a switch. No one is working these days so I'm guessing that the ammo companies have the same problem that everyone else does getting help. Add to that a 2 year backlog on NATO orders that I'm sure has priority and everything pretty much grinds to a halt. We will see things loosen up. I bet that by the fall, we will see a regular supply of primers......
and my non expert opinion is that the price will stabilize at about $50 per M. That brings the pre COVID price up to the present inflation level. Then again,