I love when people present it like everyone is in business of making no money. Perhaps even running at a loss.
This is probably why BRS bought them because they too wanted to lose money selling these light fixtures.
Side note, my bean animal overflow is running very well.
Reading comprehension and context are extremely important in a conversation.
The general premise being discussed here and responded to is that many of you think that these companies (Ecotech being one of them discussed) are screwing all of us by price gouging with insane markups. The people making those claims are rather ignorant of what it takes to operate a business at that scale, let alone how or why investment groups buy into companies. (BRS bought Ecotech and BRS was heavily invested into by Bertram Capital).
Capital investors often roll-up like businesses, profitable or not, to build a bigger brand footprint and monopolize a customer base as best they can. Lesser profitable entities are boosted by the more profitable entities and shared economic resources, marketing and buying power. Business valuation, tax essets and cashflow all come into play. Sometimes this is done for short term cashflow, and others for long term tax sheltering.
So directly to YOUR direct point about nobody buying a business that is losing money. It happens every day for many reasons, often tax sheltering. Run an owned entity that has value at a negative margin, that is a direct loss to offset a larger CURRENT tax liability. I suggest a crash course in capital investment strategies if you (honestly) wish to understand more.
I am not saying this is Ecotech or any of the companies that we are discussing, but am addressing your direct point.
The bottom line (again) is that most businesses are not the goldmines that many of you think they are and in fact operate at rather slim margin when all things are considered. This hobby is littered with the corpses of business that learned that lesson the hard way. Most were not bad business, they were just not profitable enough to remain in business long term with such a small relative demographic.
As I pointed out, I am not attempting to defend any particular price or margin and an NOT a fan of MAP pricing or market price fixing. At the same time, I understand real world margins and know that these folks are not raking in the cash that you think they are.
Over the last 4 years consumer goods prices have risen over 20% almost across the board. Some areas of the economy being closer to 50% and some 100% or more. The naive of you out there think that these companies that you interface with are the ones making all of the money, and nothing could be further from the truth. Profit margins for most of these retailers are at an all time low. The money is being sucked by inflation at every stop along the way.