R. Eventide
So say we all!
Honestly, I believe most of the price drops are a direct result of the economy. High supply, low demand, for one. But it's also a matter of affordability. Can a small-time breeder afford to keep a snake for a few months and sell at a higher price later as opposed to selling it cheaper earlier (so they don't have to pay for additional months of feeding, etc.)? Some can, but from what I've seen and heard, the vast majority cannot. If/When the economy improves, prices will stabilize and then probably go up at least a little as suddenly more people can afford more snakes and demand increases.
Supply and demand can still work in breeders' favor, though. Look at the price of Enchis over the past few years. A few really cool Enchi combo morphs come out and suddenly the demand increases, which then increases the price.
As more morphs become more common, prices will fall. None of us can stop that. Look at Pieds. The demand for Pieds shot up several years ago, and prices remained somewhat stable (though they still dropped). As a result, now there are Pieds everywhere...and the dropping prices reflect that. Same goes for Spiders and Pastels. Suddenly, everyone wanted to produce Bumblebees, and now Bumblebees are everywhere and the price of all three has tanked.
An example of a somewhat-stable morph is the BEL. I wondered for a couple years why there seemed to be so few BELs, especially considering both their selling price and how many morphs could produce them. There still don't seem to be many on the market, and even though the price has dropped, it hasn't dropped nearly as precipitously as other morphs. Medium supply, medium demand.
I find it amusing that big-time breeders blame it on the little guys. I see big breeders as having two main paths of income: a high quantity of lower-end morphs and small number of exclusive, extremely rare morphs. The former doesn't change, though what morphs fall into that category may (some might not bother with straight-up Pastels anymore, for example). Thing is, their expensive, rare morphs seem to drop even more than the common morphs. A couple years ago, Bananas were going for $65k. The next year, it was down to $30-$35k. How many of the common morphs lose 50% of their value in one year?
I guess my point is that none of us complaining about it (I'm including myself, here, 'cause I complain too) is ever going to change it. Quite frankly, we'd have to get every breeder on board to stabilize prices, and (1) that's never going to happen and (2) even that probably wouldn't work. Big guys, little guys--doesn't matter. We are all part of the lowering prices, whether we like it or not. Breeding snakes introduces more of particular morphs onto the market, no matter what, which will cause the price to drop, most of the time, even in a good economy.
Additionally, I'm not sure about my own feelings on the subject of people undercutting others to make a sale. A year or two ago, I spoke with a friend who's trying to become a professional artist, and she was unhappy that hobby/amateur artists were charging pennies for good-quality work because they weren't trying to make a living off of it--they were just doing it for fun. Is it wrong for them to do that? If so, why? To me, the for-fun people will either run out of time to do it for fun or, if they're good, they'll realize they can make a decent living off of it and start charging more, becoming one of the people whom this person used to undercut. In my [limited] experience, it seems that the people willing to sell BPs very cheap are similarly short-lived. Or, barring that, they become a part of the market that deals in low-end morphs. This is where we have a little bit of a chance to affect prices. Lots of people on here say they would pay more for a high-end morph than a low-end, which means they'll produce high-end morphs, too. If we insist on even slightly higher prices for our better-quality, more healthy snakes than what the typical market price is, we can at least slow the drop a little.
I really hope some of that made sense....
Supply and demand can still work in breeders' favor, though. Look at the price of Enchis over the past few years. A few really cool Enchi combo morphs come out and suddenly the demand increases, which then increases the price.
As more morphs become more common, prices will fall. None of us can stop that. Look at Pieds. The demand for Pieds shot up several years ago, and prices remained somewhat stable (though they still dropped). As a result, now there are Pieds everywhere...and the dropping prices reflect that. Same goes for Spiders and Pastels. Suddenly, everyone wanted to produce Bumblebees, and now Bumblebees are everywhere and the price of all three has tanked.
An example of a somewhat-stable morph is the BEL. I wondered for a couple years why there seemed to be so few BELs, especially considering both their selling price and how many morphs could produce them. There still don't seem to be many on the market, and even though the price has dropped, it hasn't dropped nearly as precipitously as other morphs. Medium supply, medium demand.
I find it amusing that big-time breeders blame it on the little guys. I see big breeders as having two main paths of income: a high quantity of lower-end morphs and small number of exclusive, extremely rare morphs. The former doesn't change, though what morphs fall into that category may (some might not bother with straight-up Pastels anymore, for example). Thing is, their expensive, rare morphs seem to drop even more than the common morphs. A couple years ago, Bananas were going for $65k. The next year, it was down to $30-$35k. How many of the common morphs lose 50% of their value in one year?
I guess my point is that none of us complaining about it (I'm including myself, here, 'cause I complain too) is ever going to change it. Quite frankly, we'd have to get every breeder on board to stabilize prices, and (1) that's never going to happen and (2) even that probably wouldn't work. Big guys, little guys--doesn't matter. We are all part of the lowering prices, whether we like it or not. Breeding snakes introduces more of particular morphs onto the market, no matter what, which will cause the price to drop, most of the time, even in a good economy.
Additionally, I'm not sure about my own feelings on the subject of people undercutting others to make a sale. A year or two ago, I spoke with a friend who's trying to become a professional artist, and she was unhappy that hobby/amateur artists were charging pennies for good-quality work because they weren't trying to make a living off of it--they were just doing it for fun. Is it wrong for them to do that? If so, why? To me, the for-fun people will either run out of time to do it for fun or, if they're good, they'll realize they can make a decent living off of it and start charging more, becoming one of the people whom this person used to undercut. In my [limited] experience, it seems that the people willing to sell BPs very cheap are similarly short-lived. Or, barring that, they become a part of the market that deals in low-end morphs. This is where we have a little bit of a chance to affect prices. Lots of people on here say they would pay more for a high-end morph than a low-end, which means they'll produce high-end morphs, too. If we insist on even slightly higher prices for our better-quality, more healthy snakes than what the typical market price is, we can at least slow the drop a little.
I really hope some of that made sense....

my self, I think that sometimes it is better to hold the animals before give them for free, if you can hold them don't make them. just my 2 cent Thanks
, yes....much of the morph trade is now "breeders" selling to "breeders" (I just deleted another lengthy tangent
but you are exactly right Harold. Not sure where it will take the market but obviously people are figuring out they have to buy in early if they want a return investment. The market will continue to grow as long as new people continue to filter in otherwise eventually the supply will overrun the demand. I'm pretty new still myself I've been into reptiles since 07ish and joined here in 09 but your right on how much changes so fast!