Not at all. It's what you do when you need liquid capital or are moving/consolidating warehouses.I bet they’re regretting scheduling that sale now!
Not at all. It's what you do when you need liquid capital or are moving/consolidating warehouses.I bet they’re regretting scheduling that sale now!
First time I've seen them do a Christmas crawl and at least three of the members here are employed by Laudasi. Strike while the iron's hot. Still more than I'll pay for Mac Baren but their Low Country tins are 20% off as well.I'd have to believe their Christmas crawls are planned out on the promotions calendars way in advance.
If that 4 1/2% margin is true, they are getting screwed by the middlemen. The tobacco, even blended, isn't all that expensive. Still, tinning, plant maintenance, shipping, advertising add to the wholesale cost, but even that, margins of less than 10%, are pretty much unheard of here, and margins are more likely to be in the 35% to 65% range.The key is what happens between field and shop is what I've heard. A pipe tobacco blender I knew once told me it cost them $40/kilo for whole leaf Latakia, that's below peanuts indeed considering how many tins can this kilo be used for (estimate using 20-35%% Lat in an English blend means 250-400x50g tins sold for $15-20).
There are so many middlemen and levies along the way that what is actually a dirt cheap product allows precious little margin for anyone once it's actually bought by a consumer. Kiosk owner in Greece told me their margin on cigarettes is 2-5% which essentially losing them money in shelf space, yet they can't afford to take cigs off the shelf because it's what generates a ton of footfall.
Frankly I'm more than happy to pay a big margin, considering I get immense enjoyment for as little as $1/smoke. I've long felt that pipe smoking is TOO enjoyable for being this cheap, I'd want pipe tobacco manufacturers to remain in business for as long as possible
Everything always makes a Christmas crawl.First time I've seen them do a Christmas crawl and at least three of the members here are employed by Laudasi. Strike while the iron's hot. Still more than I'll pay for Mac Baren but their Low Country tins are 20% off as well.
Sales yes but those usually occur closer to Christmas.Everything always makes a Christmas crawl.
So, one thing to consider is that both facilities have considerable amounts of their tobaccos stockpiled, perhaps a couple of years worth, to protect against unexpected shortages interrupting the ability to turn out their core line up. At some point the stock will get transferred to the Assens Plant, so it's possible that MacBaren and Sutliff blends will be continued with those stockpiles, or STG will "extend" them by cutting them with their own supplies, which is more probable.If anything can be made of the above announcements, it may be that many of the tobaccos made by the two factories shutting down will still exist - but nothing is known of whether they will in essence continue to be the same tobaccos. How frustrating.
Buying stummels from St Claude, to then finish and mount with a stem, was standard practice with all of the British pipe makers in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Toward the final decade of the 19th century you see increased evidence of greater portions of pipes being entirely made on the premises, eg BBB "own make" as opposed to just a BBB stamp.When doing research on a Salmon & Gluckstein pipe hallmarked for 1896, I remember reading something about them getting pipes from St. Claude and that they also provided unfinished pipes to Dunhill until Dunhill started buying directly from St. Claude.
It left me with the impression that in the early days Dunhill was just doing the finished work on the stummels.
I THINK they were outsourcing before the St. Andrews Road factory was established.
I'm going to have to dig around to see if I can find my old research.
Yes on both counts.Is it Mac Baren?
Both.Is the pipe tobacco industry dying or am I just panicking?
It just isn't that much of an interest for them big tobacco companies, I assume cigar market (both machine rolled and hand made ones) would bring more income that this time and labor intensive pipe tobacco productionIs the pipe tobacco industry dying or am I just panicking?
So it is not dying but getting smaller. Quality pipe tobacco is almost impossible to find in Turkey, and now it will be harder.It just isn't that much of an interest for them big tobacco companies, I assume cigar market (both machine rolled and hand made ones) would bring more income that this time and labor intensive pipe tobacco production
Doesn't Türkey produce some two pipe tobacco brands for domestic market?So it is not dying but getting smaller. Quality pipe tobacco is almost impossible to find in Turkey, and now it will be harder.
The only one I know is Gladora.Doesn't Türkey produce some two pipe tobacco brands for domestic market?
Define "dying".So it is not dying but getting smaller. Quality pipe tobacco is almost impossible to find in Turkey, and now it will be harder.
Like so many other things, pipe smoking is a cyclical thing. Cigars were way, way down and then 30 years ago they started coming back and now are still popular.Is the pipe tobacco industry dying or am I just panicking?