He’d have to ask Elon for the money. You know what Warren Buffet said about him: “for a supposed billionaire, he spends more time begging for money than your average bum.”
They just finished this big upgrade of the Marshall England production facility.
Either their going to still do stuff in England or they did that upgrade all for naught.
Bose bought Mc intosh. There's going to be Mcintosh car audio now, or so we hear.
China bought Marshall. Marshall is going to be digital amps or so I heard the plan was...but Marshall is headphones and blu tooth speakers.
There's a big gap to fill but there won't be any money to fill it.
This is not a complete, outright sale of the Marshall Group, itself. The Chinese group, HongShan Capital Group, has acquired a majority stake in Marshall. But, the Marshall family will still retain 20% ownership. There is also no word if locations of manufacture will change. True, it seems inevitable, but current reporting does not say what will happen, if anything, as far as where products will be made.
Marshall Group CEO Jeremy de Maillard has revealed the company's plans to venture into the digital amp market, with just 5% of sales coming from amps in 2023.
guitar.com
Essentially, in this article from March 2024 (so nearly a year ago), Marshall revealed that only about 5% of the prior year's revenue (that would be 2023) came from amplifier sales.
Most of the revenue came from speaker and headphone sales. In fact, headphones alone made up 25% of revenue. Yet, they had also spent a lot of money on the facility in the UK, where premium tube amps are made.
So, it does offer food for speculation as to what direction the new majority owner will want to take. Since a lot of money had already been invested in the facility in the UK, perhaps the new majority owner will just let that facility continue to make amps - at least the higher-end tube amps - but seek to expand on the other consumer-level items.
Marshall Group CEO Jeremy de Maillard has revealed the company's plans to venture into the digital amp market, with just 5% of sales coming from amps in 2023.
guitar.com
Essentially, in this article from March 2024 (so nearly a year ago), Marshall revealed that only about 5% of the prior year's revenue (that would be 2023) came from amplifier sales.
Most of the revenue came from speaker and headphone sales. In fact, headphones alone made up 25% of revenue. Yet, they had also spent a lot of money on the facility in the UK, where premium tube amps are made.
So, it does offer food for speculation as to what direction the new majority owner will want to take. Since a lot of money had already been invested in the facility in the UK, perhaps the new majority owner will just let that facility continue to make amps - at least the higher-end tube amps - but seek to expand on the other consumer-level items.
They said they would make digital amps.
This is presumably what all the recent UK factory floor upgrades were intended to produce.
But with all the other digital amps from China, I don't see how they are going to compete against manufacturers with much lower overhead and much lower labor costs.
They are priced out of the market again.
So...they just sell off the name.
Cheap stuff from China will have the Marshall name badge, and depends on name brand recognition to gain sales from Marshall buyer loyalty.
But the quality of course will go way downhill.
Per the article I cited, premium, hand-made, tube amps are made in the UK facility. I don't know what else is currently made there, or is intended to be made there. Is the intention to make the digital amps in the UK, also? I don't know. There are already Marshall amps made in other parts of the world, such as in Marshall's factory in Vietnam, so they may decide to go the less expensive route and make them elsewhere right off the bat. The Marshall Code series of amplifiers were made in Vietnam, so there's that.
Or, to your point, maybe - to capitalize on the UK cachet - they may make the digital amps in the UK, at least for awhile.
I'm sure we'll find out. Honestly, I'm not sure how popular a digital Marshall amp will be. I can see both sides of this. I can see them being either a success or a flop.
Per the article I cited, premium, hand-made, tube amps are made in the UK facility. I don't know what else is currently made there, or is intended to be made there. Is the intention to make the digital amps in the UK, also? I don't know. There are already Marshall amps made in other parts of the world, so they may decide to go the less expensive route and make them elsewhere right off the bat.
Or, to your point, maybe - to capitalize on the UK cachet - they may make the digital amps in the UK, at least for awhile.
I'm sure we'll find out. Honestly, I'm not sure how popular a digital Marshall amp will be. I can see both sides of this. I can see them being either a success or a flop.
Per the article I cited, premium, hand-made, tube amps are made in the UK facility. I don't know what else is currently made there, or is intended to be made there. Is the intention to make the digital amps in the UK, also? I don't know. There are already Marshall amps made in other parts of the world, such as in Marshall's factory in Vietnam, so they may decide to go the less expensive route and make them elsewhere right off the bat. The Marshall Code series of amplifiers were made in Vietnam, so there's that.
Or, to your point, maybe - to capitalize on the UK cachet - they may make the digital amps in the UK, at least for awhile.
I'm sure we'll find out. Honestly, I'm not sure how popular a digital Marshall amp will be. I can see both sides of this. I can see them being either a success or a flop.
That's what I'm saying.
I don't see how Marshall digital will be any different, because they are all made with the same chinese computer parts.
The only viable place to manufacture them will be in China.
The way I also see it:
we are headed (shortly) into a catastrophic global economic collapse.
Nobody will have any money to buy amplifiers anyway.
It's started now, just as predicted.
The whole thing will collapse just like a house of cards. (Ted's exact words)
Ted Nugent was 100% correct.
Ted and I would not agree on many things, but we both got this one right.
See? some people see something so clearly...
some people can't see the forest through the trees.
And the most frustrating thing is: we can't do anything about it. Too late now to save ourselves.