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08-10-2011, 12:04 PM | #81 | |
Brewcifer
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Re: What Was Your First Box Purchased?
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08-10-2011, 02:52 PM | #82 | |
Ain't Never Gonna Leave
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Todd
Location: Northcentral woods of Wisconsin
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Re: What Was Your First Box Purchased?
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In fact, the overwhelming majority of cigar smokers buy such cigars by a significant margin. (OK, who has the numbers out there?) My first box was a box of Arturo Fuente Rothschilds for which I paid around $20 for a box of 25 (back in 1981). Peace of the Lord be with you.
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Todd__ "Smoke what you like, and enjoy it!" |
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08-10-2011, 04:13 PM | #83 | |
Guest
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Re: What Was Your First Box Purchased?
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Anyways, I tried searching for the number of US machine made cigars sold in US annually to no avail. |
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08-10-2011, 04:45 PM | #84 | |
Ain't Never Gonna Leave
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Todd
Location: Northcentral woods of Wisconsin
Posts: 6,849
Trading: (51)
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Re: What Was Your First Box Purchased?
Quote:
Peace of the Lord be with you.
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Todd__ "Smoke what you like, and enjoy it!" |
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08-10-2011, 05:26 PM | #85 | |
Ain't Never Gonna Leave
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Todd
Location: Northcentral woods of Wisconsin
Posts: 6,849
Trading: (51)
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Re: What Was Your First Box Purchased?
Quote:
Another link speaking about cigars gives a better idea when it talks about the billions of cigars and the millions of premium cigars. You can read here. http://business.highbeam.com/industr...ts/food/cigars Here's a paragraph from another source that gives an idea about the premium -vs- machine rolled cigars from the 1990s. (I assume that percentages haven't changed all that much - although I may be wrong.) By 1994, the scarcity of premium, brand name products caused a horde of start-up companies, some foreign. As many as 150 small manufacturers of inferior cigars sprang up to meet the new need to provide smokers with the perishable product they desired, inundating the American market with lower-quality cigars. These "Don Nobodies' sold for as much as the better quality, better known brands due to a supply and demand imbalance. The established premium companies, whose products accounted for 40 percent of sales in dollar terms (ten percent of product sold), faced further competition from another set of foreign companies, mostly Caribbean, that used the shortage to establish a bigger foothold in the United States for their handmade cigar brands. Another note. In 2009, the two leading cigar companies in the United States had more than 60% of the market: •Swisher International (i.e., nearly 50% of the U.S. market share with Swisher Sweets® and Swisher Little® brands) •Middleton (i.e., about 13% of the U.S. market share with Black & Mild® brand) Hopefully this helps. Peace of the Lord be with you.
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Todd__ "Smoke what you like, and enjoy it!" |
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