Well, not just Sam Ash. Pretty much all music stores, particularly the "big guys".
They are capitalists. Filthy, rotten capitalists. How dare they insult us by trying to make a living?!
So two days ago I traded in a Squier CV for a Taylor 324ce at my local Orlando Sam Ash and during the negotiations it was revealed that they use a formula predicated on allowing a trade in value of 60% of what they professionally estimate they can get for the instrument/amp/pedal.
That's a 66% markup (or "markdown" in this case), about a 40% Gross Profit - not unreasonable for a retail operation with that level of sobering overhead.
But one can infer more from that. One can easily assume that this margin is not arrived at by accident, that it is a corporately established formula that would translate not just to trade-ins, but to all products on their floor as well.
In other words, if they are going to PAY you for something predicated on a 40% GP, then they are going to get that same 40% GP when the SELL you something.
Meaning that they likely paid somewhere in close vicinity to $1325 for that instrument (sounds about right, right?) and they are STILL going to end up with that 40% profit on it even after discounting the MSRP a bit by virtue of recouping that loss on the sale of the trade in.
No real point to this. It's fine, it's not usurious, just interesting to me to see how the sausage is made once in a while.
Still, it would be nice if maybe some music store would be opened by missionaries, give me that Martin D (fill in the highest number you like here) for free.
Dang capitalists. No D45 for me...
(Note: I used a Martin instead of a Taylor in that example 'cuz ain't nobody givin' no Taylors away fer free.)