Boston Herald

For some, gun sales hit mark

Hunting clients satisfied

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DUNDEE, Mich. — Some big retailers have curbed sales of assault weapons after last month’s school shooting in Florida. But others are sticking to their guns.

Several outdoor chains, including Bass Pro Shops, Cabela’s, Gander Outdoors and Academy Sports, continue to sell assault-style rifles online and in stores as part of their mix of hunting equipment. The decision is in stark contrast to Dick’s Sporting Goods, which recently banned sales of assault rifles, and Walmart, which stopped carrying assault rifles in 2015 but says it will no longer sell guns or ammunition to anyone under 21.

Bass Pro Shops — which owns Cabela’s — and the firms that own Gander Outdoors and Academy Sports didn’t respond to requests for comment from The Associated Press. But the stores have clearly made the calculatio­n that they could lose more than they might gain by taking a stand against assault-style weapons.

Outdoor stores are in a tough position. Hunters account for a large part of their bottom lines and any steps to curb gun sales could alienate loyal customers like Sherry Lindamood, who was shopping with her toddler granddaugh­ter last week at a Cabela’s in Dundee, Mich., a rural community about an hour southwest of Detroit.

“I don’t think our rights should be impeached because of the wrongdoing­s of others,” said Lindamood, who owns a handgun.

Most gun buyers make their purchases at independen­t shops, not big retailers, according to the National Shooting Sports Federation, an advocacy group. In 2016, big box stores like Bass Pro Shops or Dick’s sold about 23 percent of traditiona­l hunting rifles and 12 percent of assault-style rifles, which are dubbed “modern sporting rifles” in the industry.

But for outdoor retailers, that 23 percent is still very big business. Bass Pro Shops, which operates about 185 Bass Pro and Cabela’s stores, is a private company and doesn’t publicly release its financial results. But in 2016, before the companies merged, Cabela’s said hunting equipment made up 48 percent of its merchandis­e revenue, or $1.7 billion.

Before it was taken private in 2010, Gander Mountain — now Gander Outdoors — said hunting equipment made up 43 percent of its sales.

By contrast, the vast majority of Dick’s business is selling things like golf clubs and apparel. Joseph Feldman, a senior managing director at the Telsey Advisory Group, estimated that guns and ammunition account for just 8 percent of the company’s sales, or about $633 million in its most recent fiscal year. Walmart doesn’t break out sales from guns, but more than half of its revenue comes from groceries.

“It’s a lot easier to take a moral stand when it’s likely to cost you 1 percent of your sales than when it could cost you 10 percent of your sales,” said Erik Gordon, a professor at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business. Gordon says outdoor stores don’t just risk gun sales, but also sales of accessorie­s like camouflage jackets, hunting blinds and gun safes.

Raphael Thomadsen, an associate professor of marketing at Washington University in St. Louis, said outdoor stores have likely calculated that their customers are more likely progun than anti-gun, and they can’t afford to alienate that base. Even if they were to ban assault weapons, they may not get much bump in sales from anti-gun customers, who may not have frequented outdoor stores anyway.

“The downside,” he said, “is bigger than the upside in my view.”

 ?? APFILEPHot­o ?? BUSINESS AS USUAL: Jerry Lyons, left, talks with Pat Ison at a Cabela’s store in Dundee, Mich. Cabela’s is among several retailers that continue to sell assault-style rifles.
APFILEPHot­o BUSINESS AS USUAL: Jerry Lyons, left, talks with Pat Ison at a Cabela’s store in Dundee, Mich. Cabela’s is among several retailers that continue to sell assault-style rifles.

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