RE: Survey KittyCat market prices
My thoughts and experience with pricing:
You can only charge what the market will bear. It does not matter what you paid to breed the cat. If a cat sits for to long then it is priced to high. I have found that live cats sell better than boxed cats. Generally, boxed cats tend to sit. Most breeders don't want to wait two weeks before they can breed their cats, especially with the volatile new trait market. The price on a new trait can fall quickly over a two week period.
When pricing my cats I check Togon's and throw out the highest price and the lowest price, and try to find the average. Every week a live cat sits it costs me money to feed it. I will mark a cat down every week a live cat sits. I price my best cats highest. As a new generation is born I mark down the previous generation that still sits. I will menagerie live cats that sit before I menagerie a box. Boxes only cost land impact, as live cats cost food. I am shocked sometimes the quality of the live cats I have had to menagerie, but it is what it is. You cannot control the market. There will always be those who undersell, and those that oversell. I do what I feel is right, and just try to enjoy the process.
I menagerie cats that are less then 9T unless it is a brand new trait. Since menagerie only pays $20L, I will continually mark a 9T boxed cat that has sit for to long down till I find the selling point. I have even sold boxed cats that have sat for years for $50L. At least I am getting something for it, and more then twice what I will get to menagerie it. Overall, I spend more than I make on sales, but the sales help to offset the cost. I don't think you can expect that the hobby will pay for itself. I find the cat business to be very much like buying and selling stocks. Sometimes we get lucky and we make money, and sometimes we lose.
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