Seagate even increased their prices despite their factories not getting flooded. I'd expect prices to remain higher until the manufacturers recover the cost of repairing their factories as well as additional labour costs incurred to increase production to catch up with demand.
Some sellers do still count on the expected ignorance of South Africans to overcharge. Still to this day I'll encounter someone trying to justify their exorbitant local price with excuses about import duties. Unfortunately for them I can just pull the import duties documents from SARS and quickly see they're full of it.
Some sellers do still count on the expected ignorance of South Africans to overcharge. Still to this day I'll encounter someone trying to justify their exorbitant local price with excuses about import duties. Unfortunately for them I can just pull the import duties documents from SARS and quickly see they're full of it.
My suppliers only put up their prices when they brought in new stock, so I expect the prices to drop again once they get stock at a lower price. SSDs unfortunately remain a huge premium over a standard hard drive.The local suppliers will keep their prices intact until they have sold all of the high priced hardware. Only once their purchase price drop will they consider lowering their prices. Hopefully this spike in HDD prices will be enough to win over the SSD argument, and allow SSD to reach critical mass.
Your supplier must have old stock.From what i've noticed, I see that WD HDD's did not go up that much. Or the supplier I use, bought a large quantity of HDD's before the problem started