I would do exactly that...£3650 instead of £4499. I'm really tempted to send mine back and get one from them.
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I would do exactly that...£3650 instead of £4499. I'm really tempted to send mine back and get one from them.
Me too...£3650 instead of £4499. I'm really tempted to send mine back and get one from them.
Not sure this is right because I was told by WEX that their September shipment was 20 units and they can't be the only retailer receiving stock.Or maybe they've shipped everything they have to the USA at the expense of the rest of the world. They're still like rocking horse poop over here in the UK. I'm waiting on a replacement for a defective one and the Canon rep told my retailer that they're getting less than 20 bodies for the whole of the UK in September. Obviously that's very different to what Mark McG was told:
So who knows what the real situation is...
They had more than 300 preorders I’ve heard. Seems they get a percentage of preorders. Here a store had 26 preorders and received 2 bodies… Canon could have filled every preorder in Norway by shipping 100 bodies here. But, they’re all in the US.Not sure this is right because I was told by WEX that their September shipment was 20 units and they can't be the only retailer receiving stock.
A lens that is worth every penny. Enjoy it!What I know is that next time I read "6 months waiting", I'll take it with a huge grain of salt. I got my R5 II without waiting or having preordered it.
And wait for Panamoz to start selling the lens or camera...
And: Pay far less than the "normal" retail price. (I'm about to save euro 1000 on the 100-500).
Where in the UK are you finding R5 IIs in stock? Because believe me I've done a lot of looking (in case I could just get a refund for my defective one and buy another elsewhere rather than waiting for Canon to replace it) and nowhere I've seen has had any available for anything other than "get to the back of our pre-order line" purchase.I find it hard to believe in the limited stock notices when every time I look I can order and get the items in question.
Yeah, seemed odd to me too. That's what the shop was told though.Not sure this is right because I was told by WEX that their September shipment was 20 units and they can't be the only retailer receiving stock.
100%I find it hard to believe in the limited stock notices when every time I look I can order and get the items in question.
Be that the 24-105 2.8 Z, the 35mm 1.4 RF VC and more recently the R5 mkii. It seems like Canon is BS'ing us and taking us for mugs. Every new product gets a shortage warning on CR and I can't believe how a global multinational company as big as Canon, with the revenues they have, can be that inept as to run out of parts to produce. We're years out of Covid.
Exactly the same here (same camera, same lenses). I got them all without preordering or waiting.I find it hard to believe in the limited stock notices when every time I look I can order and get the items in question.
Be that the 24-105 2.8 Z, the 35mm 1.4 RF VC and more recently the R5 mkii. It seems like Canon is BS'ing us and taking us for mugs. Every new product gets a shortage warning on CR and I can't believe how a global multinational company as big as Canon, with the revenues they have, can be that inept as to run out of parts to produce. We're years out of Covid.
Canon profits most by putting an R5.2 in the hands of everyone who wants one. Adjusting whether stocks are sold domestically or internationally isn't a question of whether you sell in USD INSTEAD of JPY. Instead, it only adjusts whether you sell in USD BEFORE you do in JPY. Canon will still sell to every Japanese who wants to buy. You're saying they'll do the JPY sales later because the yen is weak now. But if it's yet WEAKER in 6 months, the "delay sales in Japan" strategy would cost them money.Given the weakness of the yen right now, sending the available stock out of Japan makes sense.
I don't know about Japan--though I should after living here almost 20 years--but you're certainly right that regulations on such things differ with respect to market.Isn’t it legally mandated to post such notices in Japan?
Yes. Also simple things like: import duty, VAT, tax rates their in-country sales child corporations have to pay, laws on implied warranties, exposure to lawsuits, return rates they can get on income not immediately repatriated to the mother ship, etc.It also depends on splitting out the localization costs for that market which, at a minimum involve things like different manual and different text in firmware but also can include complying with different market-specific regulations
A price difference doesn't mean one market is being "gouged," any more than it means another market is being favored.Nikon and Sony do not do the same high price gouging - their prices in the UK are similar to those in the EU, maybe 4-5% higher on occasion. The huge price gouging is Canon specific
Why do you think it's ineptness? This is a firm that's led serious camera sales since like 1989 by a huge margin and today has the largest share of this market by far. I feel like they know what they're doing!I can't believe how a global multinational company as big as Canon, with the revenues they have, can be that inept as to run out of parts to produce
I get my kit from Panamoz who have had stock continously since launch.Where in the UK are you finding R5 IIs in stock? Because believe me I've done a lot of looking (in case I could just get a refund for my defective one and buy another elsewhere rather than waiting for Canon to replace it) and nowhere I've seen has had any available for anything other than "get to the back of our pre-order line" purchase.
Yeah, seemed odd to me too. That's what the shop was told though.
Come off it. It's being going on for a couple of years now, irrespective of FX trends. The grey market greatly undercuts the UK (and EU) prices over the same periods irrespective of FX rates. It absolutely beats me when despite all the evidence naysayers leap into Canon's defence without any evidence to back up what they claim.A price difference doesn't mean one market is being "gouged," any more than it means another market is being favored.
Firms like this make business plans based on only a thin margin of profit that would be totally wiped out if they didn't hedge their FX exposure and the markets went against them. All the firms are locking in their FX exposure, but not all simultaneously, so they're not going to be selling at exactly equivalent rates based on today's FX rate from Google. If firm XYZ seems to have prices that look quite even at the spot rate it just means they happened to lock in their FX exposure around the spot rate. Those that don't, didn't.
Worse than that. Tomorrow's movements are going to be based on peoples' often emotional and irrational opinions on news about things that haven't even happened yet.Really, even pros on a trading floor can't tell you what the markets will do, because tomorrow's movements are going to be based on news about things that haven't even happened yet.
I mentioned factors leading to that in a separate comment: VAT, import duties, testing regimes, tax rates on the gross profit etc.It's being going on for a couple of years now, irrespective of FX trends. The grey market greatly undercuts the UK (and EU) prices over the same periods irrespective of FX rates.
I must have missed where you mentioned how those factors are unique to Canon, and do not apply to Sony or Nikon.I mentioned factors leading to that in a separate comment: VAT, import duties, testing regimes, tax rates on the gross profit etc.
You don't have to believe me, though. I don't really care. Think as you wish.