U.S. gun sales soar amid pandemic, social unrest, election fears
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[October 15, 2020]
By Tim McLaughlin and Melissa Fares
(Reuters) - Andreyah Garland, a 44-year-old
single mother of three daughters, bought a shotgun in May for protection
in the quaint middle-class town of Fishkill, New York. She joined a new
and fast-growing local gun club to learn how to shoot.
She has since applied for a pistol permit and constantly hunts for
increasingly scarce ammunition – making three trips weekly to a local
Walmart. “They’re always out,” she said.
Like legions of other first-time buyers who are contributing to record
sales for the U.S. gun industry this year, Garland’s decision to take up
arms is driven in part by disturbing news about the coronavirus
pandemic, social unrest over police killings of Black people and a
potentially contested election that many fear could spark violence.
“With everything going on around us,” she said, “you see a need.”
Surges in U.S. firearm sales have in recent decades been predictably
driven by events sparking fears of impending gun-control legislation,
such as the election of a Democratic president or a spate of mass
shootings, federal gun background check data show. Industry experts and
academics who study gun ownership say such surges came largely among the
gun-industry’s core base of white, male and politically conservative
customers who often already owned one or multiple guns.
That market is widening this year to include a new rush of first-time
buyers, including many women, minorities and politically liberal buyers
who once would not have considered gun ownership, according to Reuters
interviews with more than a dozen industry experts, academics and gun
store owners.
“People who don’t normally think about firearms are being forced to
contemplate something outside their universe,” said Dan Eldridge, owner
of Maxon Shooter’s Supplies and Indoor Range in the Chicago suburb of
Des Plaines, Illinois.
The number of first-time buyers has skyrocketed this year, according to
industry analysts, trade groups and the CEO of major gun manufacturer
Smith & Wesson Brands Inc <SWBI.O>, Mark Peter Smith. In a Sept. 3
conference call with investors, Smith estimated that firearms neophytes
accounted for about 40% of sales this year, an estimate he called
conservative and “double the national average” in past years. In a Sept.
2 call, Sportsman’s Warehouse Holdings Inc <SPWH.O> CEO Jon Barker said
the company estimated that 5 million people purchased firearms for the
first time across the industry in the first seven months of the year,
which matched a recent figure put out by the National Shooting Sports
Foundation, a trade group, based on a national survey of retailers.
In a statement to Reuters, Walmart Inc <WMT.N> acknowledged supply
shortages in outdoor products including hunting but provided no details
of its gun and ammunition sales or inventory. “We are working with our
suppliers to make product available for our customers as quickly as
possible,” the company said.
Among the first-timers is Bailey Beeken, 61, who lives in Riverdale, New
York and describes herself as a white, politically liberal, middle-class
woman. She started taking shooting lessons this summer, she said,
because “whichever way this election goes, it could get really scary,
and it could get bloody.”
With the pandemic pitting mask-wearers against mask protesters, and
police-brutality protests sparking violent street clashes, “I just feel
like it’s a powder keg,” she said. “I want to be armed and dangerous.”
‘MORE GUNS IS MORE DEATH’
Neither gun companies nor the government releases detailed data on
firearm sales or the demographics of buyers. The FBI’s National Instant
Criminal Background Check System (NICS) - a widely accepted proxy -
shows a 41% increase in activity during the first nine months of this
year, compared to the same period in 2019, which was a record year. With
28.8 million background checks through the end of September, this year’s
surge has already surpassed last year’s all-time high of 28.4 million.
Background checks verify that buyers do not have a criminal record or
another issue that might make them ineligible to buy a weapon, such as
an arrest warrant or a documented drug addiction. Less than 1% of
applicants are denied, according to FBI figures.
Eight of the top 10 all-time weeks for background checks have happened
this year, according to NICS data that goes back to 1998. The top week
came in March, when the World Health Organization declared the
coronavirus crisis a pandemic. The top month this year came in June,
following the late-May killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police.
(For graphics on surging gun sales, click https://tmsnrt.rs/316cbBP and
https://tmsnrt.rs/3iY33FA )
Shares of Smith & Wesson and Sturm Ruger & Co Inc <RGR.N>, the two top
U.S. manufacturers, have soared 131% and 59%, respectively, this year.
Both companies did not respond to requests for comment.
The historically high sales are adding millions of weapons to a nation
that already has more guns than people. The Geneva-based Small Arms
Survey estimated the number of U.S. guns at 393 million in 2017. That
dwarfed the next highest totals of 71 million in India and nearly 50
million in China - countries that both have populations four times the
size of the United States.
Aside from rising concerns over street violence related to political
unrest, surging gun sales can translate to more routine gun deaths,
researchers say. Harvard University professor David Hemenway said there
is overwhelming evidence that buying a gun greatly increases a
household’s risk of suicide, shooting accidents and violence against a
domestic partner.
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Andreyah Garland, a 44-year-old single mother of three daughters and
member of the Hudson Valley Nubian Gun Club, looks on as club
founder Damon Finch demonstrates pointing a Mossberg 590M 12 gauge
shotgun during a gun training session in Newburgh, New York, U.S.,
October 13, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Segar
“It’s pretty clear that more guns is more death,” said Hemenway,
director of the school’s Injury Control Research Center, which
studies injury prevention.
This year’s historic demand has forced buyers and sellers to get
creative in finding weapons and ammo, more than a dozen buyers,
industry experts and gun-shop owners say. The owner of a shooting
range in Monroe, New York, for instance, told Reuters it has started
buying ammunition from customers who have stockpiles at home. Online
auction sites for guns and ammunition have seen prices skyrocket.
Bootstrapping entrepreneurs are hitting estate sales looking for gun
collections to resell. In Kenosha, Wisconsin - the site of deadly
street clashes after the police killing of Jacob Blake in August -
gunsmith Jared Carlson said he has been inundated with calls from
would-be customers who can’t find guns or ammo at traditional
outlets.
Christopher Metz, CEO of Vista Outdoor Inc - one of the nation’s
largest ammunition makers - told analysts in August that it can’t
get bullets to its distributors fast enough. “It’s the leanest we
have ever seen them in inventory,” he said, noting that the lack of
ammunition is particularly frustrating to first-time gun buyers
WHO IS BUYING?
Gun shop owners and club leaders, in interviews, reported a rush of
interest from people who have never considered owning a gun before,
often from outside the gun industry’s traditional customer base of
conservative white males.
Garland, the first-time gun buyer, is a Black woman and a registered
Democrat who voted for Barack Obama. But she also expresses deep
dissatisfaction with both parties and says she hasn’t decided how to
vote in the November presidential election. She’s one of about 125
members in the new and fast-growing Hudson Valley Nubian Gun Club.
More than half of members are female, and more than two-thirds are
Black, including founder Damon Finch. He said he started the club in
March, as the pandemic hit, and saw another big boost in interest
after George Floyd’s death. Finch says he now gets 15 calls or
emails a day from people asking about joining or getting gun safety
training. Many ask him: “How do I use this tool if - God forbid - I
ever have to defend my family?”
In Boston, innovation consultant Eugene Buff, who is Jewish and
politically conservative, got a similar reaction when he posted on
Facebook this summer that he was a licensed firearms instructor. His
first class was booked immediately, mostly with Jewish senior
citizens who feared for their safety because of synagogue shootings
and the pandemic. “A lot of them didn’t like guns and feared them,”
he said, but now they felt a need for protection that outweighed
those fears.
Historically, white males are overwhelmingly the biggest group
buying guns in the United States. Nearly half of white men in
America own a gun, compared to about a quarter of nonwhite men,
according to a 2017 study by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center.
There’s not enough data to confirm whether those demographics have
substantially changed with this year’s rush of gun-buying, three
academic experts on the gun industry told Reuters in interviews. But
it’s clear that deep political and racial divisions in this
tumultuous year are driving up firearm sales, said Florida State
University public health professor Benjamin Dowd-Arrow. In these
tense times, he said, buyers across the ideological spectrum view
themselves as the “good guys” protecting themselves from “bad guys.”
“So all the ‘good guys’ need to go out and buy a gun,” he said.
Current events - along with fears of gun-control if Democrats take
power in upcoming elections - are also driving sales among
traditional customers, said Eldridge, the owner of the shooting
range and supply store in suburban Chicago.
Eldridge is in the epicenter of U.S. gun-buying - driven in part by
spikes of violence in Chicago and incendiary political rhetoric over
its causes. Illinois is the top state for background checks, with
5.6 million through the end of September, more than doubling the
next highest state’s total.
That compared to 4.9 million background checks in Illinois for all
of 2019 and 2.8 million in 2018.
“You have people sitting in their high-rise apartments and seeing
the Walgreens store they go to every day get looted,” he said.
(Reporting by Tim McLaughlin and Melissa Fares; Editing by Brian
Thevenot)
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