Where's my ability to out-bid the high bidders? That's a fair market instead of selling to gangsters.
Wait, do we like brokers or not? I thought we hated brokers auctioning components last week
Strange, isn't it; I was shouted down last time when I observed that they also serve an inventory-holding function.
Well, fortunately for me, on the design side I've been relatively isolated from this whole mess; those mired deep in it have no end of frustrations however.
And so, anyone who buys up precious parts, that isn't themselves, is an automatic villain. (Not to dismiss those frustrations, mind; the frustration is real, and lashing out at anything is an understandable response. And lashing out at resellers in particular probably isn't that unjustified of a response on the whole, at that!)
Also, something something blah blah free market, but also we don't actually operate in a free market because that would require openness and regulation, something a lot of "blah blah free market" types seem to miss; but also we do, it's just that you don't have the $10M in cash to play the game; but also ......and so on and so on. It's complicated, probably more complicated than you think; and, unless you have the kind of money to change it, it simply is what it is. (And if you did have that money, the system would be working in your favor anyway.)
I guess I wonder what a futures market would look like for semis, but presumably this isn't going to last long enough for that to matter. And it's not like you'd be trading contracts on a dozen components at a time, again, these would be whole orders, pallets of goods. Hmm, probably part of that is, there are only so many (dozens?) of buyers in such quantities -- major mfgs and distributors -- whereas the commodities that are traded this way, have thousands of sources and buyers across the country, or globe.
Tim