Originally Posted by
BRASSCATCHER
Old dude has hit the nail on the head. You can see it in the quantity of pre 2000 computers. As the chinese boards start to come more and more into the market prices will be adjusted accordingly by refiners, which trickles down to the buyers here which will affect the sellers(us) bottom lines. The other problem is competing with those that are buying towers at 100 times what they are worth. Check out some of your local gov auctions. One that I followed was for 5 pallets of dell optiplex towers. Each pallet had 40 towers. To me my top bid would have been about $1200.00 Well the final price was $4800.00 two factors are working here. Either someone bought them to refurbish and resell, or the competition is coming from overseas...china. The more I watch these auctions the more I believe it is the latter of the two. The auctions stipulate that winning bidders MUST pick up with either a 48 ft trailer or a 40 ft shipping container. Now most of the auctions that I watch are pretty close to shipping ports up here in the north east. So if you add everything up it has to be overseas buyers that are pricing the small timers out since labor and overhead is so cheap. Just my two cents...but then again I like conspiracy theory's.
I’ve been giving this some thought and I think what olddude and some of the other guys are saying are spot-on, however, look at some of the other metrics. I read somewhere that individuals used to replace their computers every 5-7 years whereas today it is every 2 years. The same holds true for other consumer electronics like cell phones and TV’s. Businesses are also replacing their servers/telecommunication equipment at a much faster rate.
What i’m saying is, although we might not get $4.50 per pound motherboards moving forward, we may get $1.25 per pound boards in much larger volume.
With this being said, we all need to start thinking of additional avenues within the
e-waste business to secure income. Selling parts, charging to destroy information, doing mobile data destruction, looking overseas for buyers and sellers, etc.
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