If any of them were bought by dealers, they'll be back, with reserves. This happens regularly when dealers are offered the opportunity to bid on an entire collection, in an estate. They're bought for a song, then the dealer puts a high price on them and just sits and waits. They are the guns so many show on here, in a dealer's inventory, that are complained about being way too high. Dealer doesn't care, because he can afford to sit on them. When one sells, he gets back all the carrying costs, plus a lot more.
SRH
I would not want to be a retail storefront gun dealer operating in our sphere of interest. After 35 years of working with retailers, from little golf and tennis pro shops, medical clinics and other specialty retailers right up to Walmart, JC Penny and Sears, I have some first hand experience in the kinds of strategies they employ to try to make a profit.
A couple rules of thumb.....the first is hard goods (sports equipment, hardware, guns) retailers can afford to take a shorter (less) margin because the product does not go stale as fast as with soft goods (clothing, shoes). The second is inventory turn (the speed with which you buy, hold and then sell something) is the single biggest determinate of annual gross profit and therefore net profit at the end of the year.
Because the retail gun industry has so many channels of distribution with wildly different levels of overhead (retail stores, gun show sellers, private sales, auction houses) with wildly different motivations, those rules of thumb I described earlier get turned on their heads.
One thing I had concluded at some point in my career is I wanted to stay away from working with retailers who were in love, personally, with their product and that's why they were in the business. They often suffer from business irrationality. Give me someone with a pure profit motive and I can make sense of and predict their behavior.
This auction is a perfect example of the apparent irrationality that fine gun retailers like Kirby have to deal with. Although a credible auctioneer, little effort was made to get market value for these lots because, in the disposal of the estate overall, these guns were likely an insignificant portion. No cash was invested by the auction house in inventory, no carrying costs and no initial cost of goods. And their margin is guaranteed. It is a difficult competitor to deal with if you are a fine gun retailer.