Where we are in 2020 and the cost of road bikes
#101
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Lineups were also more extensive. A look on BicycleBlueBook of eg. Tarmacs in 2014, shows 4 models available with CF frames that fell in a price range of $2100 to $2950. (the progression is from Tiagra/105, to 105, to Rival to Ultegra). Today, the 4th model up from the lowest, costs $4,000 more ($3k vs $7k).
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Lineups were also more extensive. A look on BicycleBlueBook of eg. Tarmacs in 2014, shows 4 models available with CF frames that fell in a price range of $2100 to $2950. (the progression is from Tiagra/105, to 105, to Rival to Ultegra). Today, the 4th model up from the lowest, costs $4,000 more ($3k vs $7k).
I gave some actual info about Tarmacs (then and now) a ways up in this thread, and -- in real terms, i.e. adjusted for inflation) the price of one equipped with Ultegra is virtually the same as in 2008 -- but today's version has many improvements. In other words, you're getting more for your money right now, at least at that price point in that product line.
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#104
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105: https://www.cannondale.com/en-us/bik...ku=c12350m1048
Ultegra: https://www.cannondale.com/en-us/bik...ku=c12300m1048
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Except that reason doesn't hold as you progress upward in price on the various models.
Example
Emonda SL frameset $1700
Emonda SL5 (105) $2700
Emonda SL6 (Ultegra) $3300
$600 diff
You get.. an upgrade to Ultegra (on Merlin, cost diff between 105 and Ultegra groupset is $185)
Wheelset upgrade (the upgraded wheelset costs $370 retail). No idea if they even sell the lower tier wheelset (Affinity disc), but let's put $100 as value difference.
Upgraded handlebar ($50 value difference)
Upgraded alloy stem (supposedly another $50 value upgrade)
Overall I come up with $385 difference in parts. If buying power enabled better better pricing, then Trek should be able to price these two models eg. only $250 apart in price. Pretty much you can almost always find it would be better to buy a lower specced bike, remove and sell the stuff on it, and buy and install the same 'upgrades' yourself.
Example
Emonda SL frameset $1700
Emonda SL5 (105) $2700
Emonda SL6 (Ultegra) $3300
$600 diff
You get.. an upgrade to Ultegra (on Merlin, cost diff between 105 and Ultegra groupset is $185)
Wheelset upgrade (the upgraded wheelset costs $370 retail). No idea if they even sell the lower tier wheelset (Affinity disc), but let's put $100 as value difference.
Upgraded handlebar ($50 value difference)
Upgraded alloy stem (supposedly another $50 value upgrade)
Overall I come up with $385 difference in parts. If buying power enabled better better pricing, then Trek should be able to price these two models eg. only $250 apart in price. Pretty much you can almost always find it would be better to buy a lower specced bike, remove and sell the stuff on it, and buy and install the same 'upgrades' yourself.
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I purchased a Cervelo S3 in 2014 and had a very pleasant experience. The retail price was $4k, I received a good discount and I felt good about my purchase. Now I am looking for something between road/gravel bike and am astonished at the prices for what companies are selling. To continue with Cervelo, their Caledona base with Di2 is $4500. For $4500, the base model comes with alloy stem and bars, doesn't have integrated cockpit, crap wheels, and has an alloy seatpost. It is the $6500 Caledona 5 Di2 that has these features and even still, the wheels/hubs leave a lot to be desired.
So $6500 to feel like I am purchasing a bike in the food chain where I was in 2014?
Total out of the door in 2014 was $3600. The Caledona 5 Di2 would be $7100. I'm seeing this across the board. Trek selling $6500 road bikes that have alloy bars/stems, low grade saddles and questionable wheelsets.
This seems the equivalent of walking onto a BMW lot and seeing a base 3 Series is suddenly $75000. Am I missing something here?
So $6500 to feel like I am purchasing a bike in the food chain where I was in 2014?
Total out of the door in 2014 was $3600. The Caledona 5 Di2 would be $7100. I'm seeing this across the board. Trek selling $6500 road bikes that have alloy bars/stems, low grade saddles and questionable wheelsets.
This seems the equivalent of walking onto a BMW lot and seeing a base 3 Series is suddenly $75000. Am I missing something here?
Supply and demand.
Period.
#108
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More apt might be how a contractor prices things put into a new house build? Eg. bathroom fixture. Is his price differential on the entire house, less, more or same than you'd find if you priced out the 2 choices of bathroom fixture yourself at home depot? I honestly don't know how house industry works and if there's cost itemization of parts etc. that are verifiable.
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#110
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I'm afraid it's time for Economics 201 to begin.
Ever heard of the concept of Price Elasticity / Elastic and Inelastic goods? Elastic goods are those things that the general population NEEDS. I.e. Toilet paper, soap, basic food, etc. Inelastic goods are those things people WANT. I.e. Mercedes and $12000 road bikes.
Elastic goods - Along the supply demand curve there is an equilibrium price that the market will find that maximizes profit. The higher the price, the fewer items will be sold. The lower the price, more items will be sold. The market will find the optimum price.
Inelastic goods - Are typically priced higher and lowering the price can often lower the demand.
Most the high rollers here are all too willing to pay insane prices because you think you are Peter Sagan (you are not).
I stand by my original statement. The pricing of road bikes is highly contrived. This excessive pricing started long before Covid, so it's stupid that so many of you are associating bulk of the excessive pricing to the pandemic. What has changed is that the stores are not lower prices. The retail prices had been raised long ago. What is your next excuse?
Yes I can afford a $10k road bike. If I wanted, I could buy a $300k road bike. And the reason I can is because I AM CAREFUL WITH MY MONEY.
People keep referring to hydraulic brakes and Di2 as a driver for rising prices. This is largely a lie as well. How much is a complete Di2 + disk setup? $2200. Let's do the math: $2200 minus $1000 (for Ultegra Mechanical). So a 'modern' bike with Ultegra Di2 + disc should cost around $1200 more than mechanical old school (at the max). Yet prices have increased many thousands of dollars and the frames are basically the same. In 2014, a Cervelo S3 frameset was $2300. Now the S Series frameset is $4k. Yes the S Series may be a couple percentage points stiffer, but high end road frames are at diminishing returns.
Face it. You're paying excessively higher sums of money for minute returns because you think you're Peter Sagan.
And no I don't have any interest in paying $6500 for a bike that is basically the same as my old $3500 bike with a $1200 group.
Ever heard of the concept of Price Elasticity / Elastic and Inelastic goods? Elastic goods are those things that the general population NEEDS. I.e. Toilet paper, soap, basic food, etc. Inelastic goods are those things people WANT. I.e. Mercedes and $12000 road bikes.
Elastic goods - Along the supply demand curve there is an equilibrium price that the market will find that maximizes profit. The higher the price, the fewer items will be sold. The lower the price, more items will be sold. The market will find the optimum price.
Inelastic goods - Are typically priced higher and lowering the price can often lower the demand.
Most the high rollers here are all too willing to pay insane prices because you think you are Peter Sagan (you are not).
I stand by my original statement. The pricing of road bikes is highly contrived. This excessive pricing started long before Covid, so it's stupid that so many of you are associating bulk of the excessive pricing to the pandemic. What has changed is that the stores are not lower prices. The retail prices had been raised long ago. What is your next excuse?
Yes I can afford a $10k road bike. If I wanted, I could buy a $300k road bike. And the reason I can is because I AM CAREFUL WITH MY MONEY.
People keep referring to hydraulic brakes and Di2 as a driver for rising prices. This is largely a lie as well. How much is a complete Di2 + disk setup? $2200. Let's do the math: $2200 minus $1000 (for Ultegra Mechanical). So a 'modern' bike with Ultegra Di2 + disc should cost around $1200 more than mechanical old school (at the max). Yet prices have increased many thousands of dollars and the frames are basically the same. In 2014, a Cervelo S3 frameset was $2300. Now the S Series frameset is $4k. Yes the S Series may be a couple percentage points stiffer, but high end road frames are at diminishing returns.
Face it. You're paying excessively higher sums of money for minute returns because you think you're Peter Sagan.
And no I don't have any interest in paying $6500 for a bike that is basically the same as my old $3500 bike with a $1200 group.
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I suspect a lot of really expensive bikes are bought to ride to the café and parked by the outdoor table. Or, are bought by the hyper-competitive "modern executive" type who eityher spends a lot of time in the gym, or on the golf course, or on a bike, or whatever, to inflate his/her ego and have strong competitive talking points in the expensive wine/ single-barrel single-malt scotch bragging sessions.
I figure the real riders get slightly less bling because they are going to race and know the bike will get torn up, and have a few sets of wheels and a favorite saddle already .... and want their bikes to actually score race results, not just be the first in every stop-sign sprint on the Wednesday-night group ride.
I figure the real riders get slightly less bling because they are going to race and know the bike will get torn up, and have a few sets of wheels and a favorite saddle already .... and want their bikes to actually score race results, not just be the first in every stop-sign sprint on the Wednesday-night group ride.
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I'm afraid it's time for Economics 201 to begin.
Ever heard of the concept of Price Elasticity / Elastic and Inelastic goods? Elastic goods are those things that the general population NEEDS. I.e. Toilet paper, soap, basic food, etc. Inelastic goods are those things people WANT. I.e. Mercedes and $12000 road bikes.
Ever heard of the concept of Price Elasticity / Elastic and Inelastic goods? Elastic goods are those things that the general population NEEDS. I.e. Toilet paper, soap, basic food, etc. Inelastic goods are those things people WANT. I.e. Mercedes and $12000 road bikes.
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#114
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I'm afraid it's time for Economics 201 to begin.
Ever heard of the concept of Price Elasticity / Elastic and Inelastic goods? Elastic goods are those things that the general population NEEDS. I.e. Toilet paper, soap, basic food, etc. Inelastic goods are those things people WANT. I.e. Mercedes and $12000 road bikes.
.
Ever heard of the concept of Price Elasticity / Elastic and Inelastic goods? Elastic goods are those things that the general population NEEDS. I.e. Toilet paper, soap, basic food, etc. Inelastic goods are those things people WANT. I.e. Mercedes and $12000 road bikes.
.
Edited to add: I read a bit more because I’m on my trainer and bored. If one of my students ever referred to a “supply demand curve,“ I would ask him to make up his mind: there’s a supply curve, and there’s a demand curve, but there is no “supply demand“ curve.
Economics 201, indeed.
Last edited by Koyote; 12-19-20 at 01:43 PM.
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I stopped reading right there. I can tell you, as a person with a PhD in economics and 35 years of experience in the profession – which includes a tenured full professorship – that statement is completely wrong.
Edited to add: I read a bit more because I’m on my trainer and bored. If one of my students ever referred to a “supply demand curve,“ I would ask him to make up his mind: there’s a supply curve, and there’s a demand curve, but there is no “supply demand“ curve.
Edited to add: I read a bit more because I’m on my trainer and bored. If one of my students ever referred to a “supply demand curve,“ I would ask him to make up his mind: there’s a supply curve, and there’s a demand curve, but there is no “supply demand“ curve.
People who tout their useless PhD's are usually democrats.
#116
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I get paid to teach the subject to people. Since you’re not paying me, you can learn it on your own.
My PhD must be useful for something, as I am easily able to afford any of the bikes that you are whining about.
Last edited by Koyote; 12-19-20 at 01:57 PM.
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#118
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Fist off .... when you say stuff about degrees and political parties you are proving that however smart you might be in other aspects, in that one respect your idiotic bias makes you one of the stupidest life forms to ooze across the face of the planet. I don't care it it is democrat, socialist, GOP, green, whatever .... "Partyism" is just as prejudicial as racism, and just as stupid and offensive.
Just saying .....
Also saying, the "appeal to authority" argument ... yeah, it was a scientist who "invented" the idea of human races which has since been rejected by the scientific community .... Kepler vs Copernicus? A lot of scientists have been entirely wrong, or simply mistaken.
As for the "elastic" and "inelastic" stuff .... I don't know the terms but some of what you says is described accurately ... there is indeed a different pricing method for necessities and luxury goods, which I perhaps mistakenly described a "discretionary income purchases." There is an even different pricing system for "Conspicuous Consumption" items, where often the items sell better with higher prices because people want the exclusivity and the bragging rights.
But as I think most of us realize, people pricing bikes aren't doing it based on cost, but on ... . "what the market will bear." People who want to own the Latest and Greatest, simply because someone told them it is the latest and greatest.
Here is another bit of data --- real-world data.
I sometimes buy houses ... not as quick as bikes, but I don't need a Fahgedaboutit lock when I leave it either. And I have gone into a development when it is just starting to build out, and priced houses, then returned a few times, deciding whether to buy or not ... and the prices go up as the development fills out.
To clarify: When there is nothing but a sign, some pvc pipes sticking up and some wooden stakes with ribbons marking where the utilities will be, the base prices are low. When a few houses are built, the base prices go up a few thousand dollars. Every month or two, depending on how fast the units sell (including unbuilt lots) the prices go up another couple thousand. Six months in, the homes you could have bought for a $195,000 now cost $210,000 or $225,000.
Same houses, same lots, same build quality .... and it isn't "supply and demand" because there are still a lot of lots left, and in one or more cases, the same builder has a whole new neighborhood planned for right next door. It is what people will pay when they see a fledgling neighborhood instead of a barren field with stakes and pipes. it is the lack of imagination which forces sellers to start low, and the appeal of pretty landscapes let them raise the prices for the exact same products later.
And if there are real estate forums .... I don't imagine anyone is posting "So Unfair!! Outrageous price increases! The manufacturers are robbing us!"
Bike buyers, however ......
Just saying .....
Also saying, the "appeal to authority" argument ... yeah, it was a scientist who "invented" the idea of human races which has since been rejected by the scientific community .... Kepler vs Copernicus? A lot of scientists have been entirely wrong, or simply mistaken.
As for the "elastic" and "inelastic" stuff .... I don't know the terms but some of what you says is described accurately ... there is indeed a different pricing method for necessities and luxury goods, which I perhaps mistakenly described a "discretionary income purchases." There is an even different pricing system for "Conspicuous Consumption" items, where often the items sell better with higher prices because people want the exclusivity and the bragging rights.
But as I think most of us realize, people pricing bikes aren't doing it based on cost, but on ... . "what the market will bear." People who want to own the Latest and Greatest, simply because someone told them it is the latest and greatest.
Here is another bit of data --- real-world data.
I sometimes buy houses ... not as quick as bikes, but I don't need a Fahgedaboutit lock when I leave it either. And I have gone into a development when it is just starting to build out, and priced houses, then returned a few times, deciding whether to buy or not ... and the prices go up as the development fills out.
To clarify: When there is nothing but a sign, some pvc pipes sticking up and some wooden stakes with ribbons marking where the utilities will be, the base prices are low. When a few houses are built, the base prices go up a few thousand dollars. Every month or two, depending on how fast the units sell (including unbuilt lots) the prices go up another couple thousand. Six months in, the homes you could have bought for a $195,000 now cost $210,000 or $225,000.
Same houses, same lots, same build quality .... and it isn't "supply and demand" because there are still a lot of lots left, and in one or more cases, the same builder has a whole new neighborhood planned for right next door. It is what people will pay when they see a fledgling neighborhood instead of a barren field with stakes and pipes. it is the lack of imagination which forces sellers to start low, and the appeal of pretty landscapes let them raise the prices for the exact same products later.
And if there are real estate forums .... I don't imagine anyone is posting "So Unfair!! Outrageous price increases! The manufacturers are robbing us!"
Bike buyers, however ......
Last edited by Maelochs; 12-19-20 at 02:18 PM.
#119
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I'm afraid it's time for Economics 201 to begin.
Ever heard of the concept of Price Elasticity / Elastic and Inelastic goods? Elastic goods are those things that the general population NEEDS. I.e. Toilet paper, soap, basic food, etc. Inelastic goods are those things people WANT. I.e. Mercedes and $12000 road bikes.
Elastic goods - Along the supply demand curve there is an equilibrium price that the market will find that maximizes profit. The higher the price, the fewer items will be sold. The lower the price, more items will be sold. The market will find the optimum price.
Inelastic goods - Are typically priced higher and lowering the price can often lower the demand.
Most the high rollers here are all too willing to pay insane prices because you think you are Peter Sagan (you are not).
I stand by my original statement. The pricing of road bikes is highly contrived. This excessive pricing started long before Covid, so it's stupid that so many of you are associating bulk of the excessive pricing to the pandemic. What has changed is that the stores are not lower prices. The retail prices had been raised long ago. What is your next excuse?
Yes I can afford a $10k road bike. If I wanted, I could buy a $300k road bike. And the reason I can is because I AM CAREFUL WITH MY MONEY.
People keep referring to hydraulic brakes and Di2 as a driver for rising prices. This is largely a lie as well. How much is a complete Di2 + disk setup? $2200. Let's do the math: $2200 minus $1000 (for Ultegra Mechanical). So a 'modern' bike with Ultegra Di2 + disc should cost around $1200 more than mechanical old school (at the max). Yet prices have increased many thousands of dollars and the frames are basically the same. In 2014, a Cervelo S3 frameset was $2300. Now the S Series frameset is $4k. Yes the S Series may be a couple percentage points stiffer, but high end road frames are at diminishing returns.
Face it. You're paying excessively higher sums of money for minute returns because you think you're Peter Sagan.
And no I don't have any interest in paying $6500 for a bike that is basically the same as my old $3500 bike with a $1200 group.
Ever heard of the concept of Price Elasticity / Elastic and Inelastic goods? Elastic goods are those things that the general population NEEDS. I.e. Toilet paper, soap, basic food, etc. Inelastic goods are those things people WANT. I.e. Mercedes and $12000 road bikes.
Elastic goods - Along the supply demand curve there is an equilibrium price that the market will find that maximizes profit. The higher the price, the fewer items will be sold. The lower the price, more items will be sold. The market will find the optimum price.
Inelastic goods - Are typically priced higher and lowering the price can often lower the demand.
Most the high rollers here are all too willing to pay insane prices because you think you are Peter Sagan (you are not).
I stand by my original statement. The pricing of road bikes is highly contrived. This excessive pricing started long before Covid, so it's stupid that so many of you are associating bulk of the excessive pricing to the pandemic. What has changed is that the stores are not lower prices. The retail prices had been raised long ago. What is your next excuse?
Yes I can afford a $10k road bike. If I wanted, I could buy a $300k road bike. And the reason I can is because I AM CAREFUL WITH MY MONEY.
People keep referring to hydraulic brakes and Di2 as a driver for rising prices. This is largely a lie as well. How much is a complete Di2 + disk setup? $2200. Let's do the math: $2200 minus $1000 (for Ultegra Mechanical). So a 'modern' bike with Ultegra Di2 + disc should cost around $1200 more than mechanical old school (at the max). Yet prices have increased many thousands of dollars and the frames are basically the same. In 2014, a Cervelo S3 frameset was $2300. Now the S Series frameset is $4k. Yes the S Series may be a couple percentage points stiffer, but high end road frames are at diminishing returns.
Face it. You're paying excessively higher sums of money for minute returns because you think you're Peter Sagan.
And no I don't have any interest in paying $6500 for a bike that is basically the same as my old $3500 bike with a $1200 group.
What is this strange obsession with Peter Sagan? Every one has their own personal value metric and having the freedom to choose within that metric is what makes our way of life fantastic. I ride expensive bikes and accessories yet live a very basic and frugal life in other ways. Who am I or anyone else to judge people and their motivations. If someone in a developing country looked at the ridiculous positions made regarding what is good value and not you would be embarrassed to have to support your positions.
#120
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Want to get my comment in before the thread is locked.
What is this strange obsession with Peter Sagan? Every one has their own personal value metric and having the freedom to choose within that metric is what makes our way of life fantastic. I ride expensive bikes and accessories yet live a very basic and frugal life in other ways. Who am I or anyone else to judge people and their motivations. If someone in a developing country looked at the ridiculous positions made regarding what is good value and not you would be embarrassed to have to support your positions.
What is this strange obsession with Peter Sagan? Every one has their own personal value metric and having the freedom to choose within that metric is what makes our way of life fantastic. I ride expensive bikes and accessories yet live a very basic and frugal life in other ways. Who am I or anyone else to judge people and their motivations. If someone in a developing country looked at the ridiculous positions made regarding what is good value and not you would be embarrassed to have to support your positions.
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For now, suffice it to say that he has everything ass backwards: the demand for toilet paper is highly inelastic, the demand for expensive luxury goods like high-end bikes is generally elastic.
Then his following paragraph contains a whole bunch of additional wrongness.
If AcesHigh007 is going to use a bunch of fancy disciplinary concepts to talk down to people, he should probably get it right.
Last edited by Koyote; 12-19-20 at 03:30 PM.
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#123
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I didn't want to get into it, because starting from "ignorant" there weren't a lot of better places I might get to.
The idea that inelastic items are priced differently (whichever term is correct--I certainly trust you on this one) is common snese ... anyone who has bought anything can see that.
While scientists get it wrong ... i know they get it right too. And I expect you know the terminology in the field in which you specialize.
Still, though ... if you economists are so smart, why have we been doing "Boom and Bust" and bubbles for the past 250 years?

You know what I will let trickle down on those "supply-side" economists ....

TY for the reasonable reply.
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