Hi Chris,
To use Bilstein as an example - for my car, the local importer (through their retail store) wanted AUD$3500 for PSS9s (same setup for a Mk1 Quattro TT). And that was before fitting. They "kindly" reduced the price to $3000 to clear stock off their shelves - and then promptly told me to stop shopping around for a better price (I asked another supplier, who it turns out get their product from the importer as well, and the importer figured out I was chasing better pricing) - the exact words were "you've shopped around enough".
I ended up getting them through ECS (indirectly) fitted, for $2400 total. And that included someone locally making a bit of profit on top of doing the work, importing the parts, paying the taxes and paying their own costs (insurance, etc), covering warranty and legal liability, etc.
My understanding is that someone who's working with bulk volumes should be able to do it cheaper than on a one-by-one basis.
So why so expensive here?
We're a small market. We're geographically remote and isolated. Until fairly recently, tariffs on imports were higher, shipping was more expensive. And as much as anything else, I think some importers/sellers have taken advantage of the market conditions (low prevailing supply in particular) to keep prices (and thus profits) high - why offer something at $x profit when you can offer it at $2x profit and still sell it?
I do wonder (seriously) what could be done by someone willing to go into business not just to help themselves, but work with the community, offer great support, and drive larger overall profits by volume rather than per-item margin...
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