HolyCoast: Gun Sales Continue to Boom
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Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Gun Sales Continue to Boom

There's at least one industry in America still exploding, so to speak. Guns:
Smith & Wesson, the famed American gunmaker once owned by Tomkins, the British conglomerate, expects to nearly double its annual sales in the next three to five years as demand for its firearms soars in the recession. It is not alone.

All over America demand for firearms and ammunition is rising amid concerns that rising unemployment, which passed 10 per cent this month, will lead inexorably to higher rates of crime. Fears of terrorism have also helped to lift demand, as have concerns among gun owners that the Obama Administration may introduce restrictions on gun ownership and impose additional taxes.

Smith & Wesson is expecting sales to rise by 30 per cent to $102 million (£61 million) in the first quarter of the next financial year, after growing by more than 13 per cent this year to $335 million.

At Sturm and Ruger, sales for the third quarter hit $71.2 million, up 70 per cent from the same period last year. At Glock, the leader in law enforcement markets, pistol sales rose by 71 per cent in the first quarter of the financial year for 2010, in comparison with the same period last year.

According to the National Shooting Sports Foundation, the FBI carried out more than a million background checks on behalf of gun dealers in September (a check is required with every sale), an increase of 12.4 per cent on the same period in the previous year.

Mike Golden, chief executive at Smith and Wesson, is sceptical about the so-called Obama effect on gun sales, believing that his company’s booming revenues have “nothing to do with the administration” and everything to do with the economy.

“People are worried about personal protection with unemployment and crime on the rise,” he said in a presentation to investors, adding that 30 per cent of customers who had bought the company’s guns in the first half of this year were “first-time gun owners”, up from 9 per cent nine a year earlier.

Golden is being generous, or perhaps politically correct, in discounting the Obama effect. There's no question that gun sales have been spurred by a general fear of what Obama and the Democrats might do to our gun rights, and millions of people have purchased weapons out of fear they wouldn't be able to buy them in the future. It think the threat of terrorism is a significantly lower factor in gun sales, especially in states like California where concealed carry laws are so tough.

1 comment:

Herman said...

You will be hard pressed to find some ammunition in the retail stores as there has been a unusual run on ammo. Ammunition in the popular calibers are almost unavailable and some store shelves are almost bare. Get what you can when you find what you need as the way our country is going downhill you may need it in the future.