I'm a bit new into collecting 1:6 figures so please bare with me
Anyway, noticed that most of the 1:6 figures (ESPECIALLY Marvel and DC related) made by makers such as Hot Toys and Enterbay get a huge spike increase in its market value upon arrival / distribution of the actual figures. For example, the HT DX11 Joker 2.0 was around the area of USD 230-240 when it was up for pre-order but now has a market price of around USD 300 onwards. HT Iron Man Mark VII was pretty much the same, except that selling price is even a bit higher. Apart from some figures such as Red Skull and Goblin, it's safe to say that majority of them see their prices skyrocket upon the figure's actual arrival.
Can anyone explain to me the driving force behind this? Also wondering if companies such as HT and Enterbay just mass produce these figures and completely stop doing so after just 1 initial run? I mean, for example, do they just set an allocation for a certain figure (hypothetically 10,000) and once they have distributed it, stop producing another batch even if the sales are very strong?
Am very interested in getting your insights on this guys, thanks
EXTRA NOTE:
I understand why prices increase on Ebay. Obviously, demand is high while supply is not enough. However, what I would like to know is why doesn't HT just produce another batch for these? Or do they? For figures such as Iron Man Mark VI / Hawkeye / Dark Knight DX12 / Joker DX11 etc, I'm sure they'd sell like hotcakes. Why let the scalpers / resellers earn if they can just reproduce another batch and have the profit for themselves? Not saying that they should triple or quadruple the figures for the next batch of reproduction - as that would be very risky on their part. Just a safe number would do so they can also keep the frenzy and the hype on their figures.
I'm sure a company as huge as Hot Toys keeps the data and mold for most (if not all) of their figures. Even if starting up another run would cost them, I'm pretty sure they'd get enough profit back for the sought after figures such as Mark VI / Hawkeye. Let's put it this way, for example, they did an initial run of 3,000 pcs (hypothetically) for IM Mark VI / Hawkeye. If they matched their first run of 3,000 pcs on their 2nd run, it's probably safe to say that the new 3,000 pcs would also sell out - which means they would have matched the profit on their first production run. So why not just do this instead of sitting idly by and watch the scalpers make a living that could have easily been theirs (Hot Toys)?
If someone has information on how HT or Enterbay's production works, that would be very helpful to the topic on hand.
Anyway, noticed that most of the 1:6 figures (ESPECIALLY Marvel and DC related) made by makers such as Hot Toys and Enterbay get a huge spike increase in its market value upon arrival / distribution of the actual figures. For example, the HT DX11 Joker 2.0 was around the area of USD 230-240 when it was up for pre-order but now has a market price of around USD 300 onwards. HT Iron Man Mark VII was pretty much the same, except that selling price is even a bit higher. Apart from some figures such as Red Skull and Goblin, it's safe to say that majority of them see their prices skyrocket upon the figure's actual arrival.
Can anyone explain to me the driving force behind this? Also wondering if companies such as HT and Enterbay just mass produce these figures and completely stop doing so after just 1 initial run? I mean, for example, do they just set an allocation for a certain figure (hypothetically 10,000) and once they have distributed it, stop producing another batch even if the sales are very strong?
Am very interested in getting your insights on this guys, thanks
EXTRA NOTE:
I understand why prices increase on Ebay. Obviously, demand is high while supply is not enough. However, what I would like to know is why doesn't HT just produce another batch for these? Or do they? For figures such as Iron Man Mark VI / Hawkeye / Dark Knight DX12 / Joker DX11 etc, I'm sure they'd sell like hotcakes. Why let the scalpers / resellers earn if they can just reproduce another batch and have the profit for themselves? Not saying that they should triple or quadruple the figures for the next batch of reproduction - as that would be very risky on their part. Just a safe number would do so they can also keep the frenzy and the hype on their figures.
I'm sure a company as huge as Hot Toys keeps the data and mold for most (if not all) of their figures. Even if starting up another run would cost them, I'm pretty sure they'd get enough profit back for the sought after figures such as Mark VI / Hawkeye. Let's put it this way, for example, they did an initial run of 3,000 pcs (hypothetically) for IM Mark VI / Hawkeye. If they matched their first run of 3,000 pcs on their 2nd run, it's probably safe to say that the new 3,000 pcs would also sell out - which means they would have matched the profit on their first production run. So why not just do this instead of sitting idly by and watch the scalpers make a living that could have easily been theirs (Hot Toys)?
If someone has information on how HT or Enterbay's production works, that would be very helpful to the topic on hand.
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