@prof -- totally agree with your assessment. But there are two sides to this coin. If you've taken an economics course you're aware of the term "luxury goods." These items, like jewelry or paintings, derive their value because they're desired, and the higher you set the price, the more desireable they actually become. And yeah, I'm sure there's an element of this in the speaker market, especially at the highest levels.
But, there's another way to look at this. What if a speaker manufacturer found a way to build a magnificent speaker through technology or whatever that outperformed speakers 10x their price? Let's say his speaker cost him $1000 to build, but it competes with or even outperforms other speakers that cost $5000 to build and sell retail at $20k. Should he charge $4000 for his speakers, or should he price them at $20k? In the end, there's a difference between price and value. If the $1000 at cost speakers outperform other $20k speakers at retail, do you really care what it cost to produce them? In the end, it's the end result that matters to me as an audiophile. If someone can figure out how to achieve superior results at a lower cost, good for them! I don't care how much profit he makes, I'm only concerned with what I hear in my room. But, especially with speakers, if you dare to overprice your product you are flirting with disaster. Anyway...
But, there's another way to look at this. What if a speaker manufacturer found a way to build a magnificent speaker through technology or whatever that outperformed speakers 10x their price? Let's say his speaker cost him $1000 to build, but it competes with or even outperforms other speakers that cost $5000 to build and sell retail at $20k. Should he charge $4000 for his speakers, or should he price them at $20k? In the end, there's a difference between price and value. If the $1000 at cost speakers outperform other $20k speakers at retail, do you really care what it cost to produce them? In the end, it's the end result that matters to me as an audiophile. If someone can figure out how to achieve superior results at a lower cost, good for them! I don't care how much profit he makes, I'm only concerned with what I hear in my room. But, especially with speakers, if you dare to overprice your product you are flirting with disaster. Anyway...