Commodities are bought on an open market. A dollar’s worth of copper in one year is not the same as a dollar’s worth of copper in another. As the Federal Reserve continues to pump dollar after dollar into the economy, each dollar is able to buy a much smaller amount of copper, nickel, lead, tin… All components in the making of ammunition.
There are four major components in a cartridge ,the actual name of the “round” put into a rifle or pistol: the bullet, the case or casing, the primer and the powder.
The bullet is the projectile – that which flies from the barrel at incredible speed. The bullet is typically made from lead, many times with a copper or brass jacket and it may include a core material of steel or other material.
The case or casing is the part of the cartridge that holds the components together and is what is expelled from the gun after firing. In the U.S.A. the vast majority of cartridge cases are made from brass with a smaller number made from nickel.
Copper is used as a jacket on many bullets and is a component in the manufacturing of brass. Nickel, an alternative for case material, mainly comes from the mining and processing of pentlandite which comes from Ontario, Canada.
As of today, Nickel is about 10% more expensive than brass, but the the possible copper shortage soon coming may change that equation quickly.
Bullets are mainly lead-core. Lead is a commodity, priced and bought at market prices. As the dollar gets weaker, lead gets more expensive – as do all the components.
The EPA has put severe restrictions around lead. What used to be a cheap and highly-available material is becoming expensive and onerous to get.
To make matters worse, some are saying that we are already at the “copper peak” and supply will only get more difficult from here:
We’re running out of soft metals! In scientific circles, this is called “Peak Copper” and “Peak Minerals.” This is when what were easy to extract metals become fewer, and we phase to expensive and smaller returns on energy expended to get those metals. –The Daily Caller
Short-term, incredible consumer demand is to blame. Some are shooters stuffing shelves so that they never have to deal with this again. Others are profiteers buying every round they can get, upcharging and reselling it. Some are simply buying the ammo as barter currency. If things get ugly, ammo will likely be in much higher demand than an inedible, mainly useless, shiny metal. Only if people agree on gold as a medium of exchange will it be worth anything. Otherwise, food, whiskey, guns and ammo may be what become most valuable.
China’s Ministry of State Security vowed on Monday to stop “Taiwan independence” in a rare message…
Fox News analyst Gregg Jarrett accused prosecutors working for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg of…
Last Friday, the Biden administration quietly dropped 1,577 pages of regulations that redefine sex to include…
German-based grocer Aldi has seen an uptick in its American business over the last year…
Forget the $500 hammer. The newest report from the Government Accountability Office puts the cost of…
The United Nations (U.N.) selected China — a country that perpetrates genocide and crimes against…