

HiHello,
Isn't the sales down
The last 5, 10, 15 , 20 years have had all sorts of global events that affect the world economy, and by extension, domaining.Last ones were in November, during all this times had more than 10 lowballer offers.
The problem is in your avatar. Try a less emotional approach.
Grape.com is goodGood names are always sold. Just sold one recently.
Crape names are not.
Who and when decides if a domain it's crap? Your domain, one day before it sold was crap and the next day was good? How about if I have a 100k one word .com that didn't sell and a hand reg that got sold for 2k. The hand reg it's good and the 100k it's crap? There is always something between black and white.Good names are always sold. Just sold one recently.
Crape names are not.
The market doesWho and when decides if a domain it's crap?
Single word names are where it's at. Two wonders, even in com are mostly replaceable (even after being bought for thousands as companies want to upgrade to a 1-worder)I think the market of what is selling may be changing, but the overall market still seems lively.
This is not a tested hypothesis, but I wam wondering if there is now attention to price more than in the past (due to tools like DNX and domDB allowing potential buyers to see how prices have changed and to compare prices of different domains easily). It seems to me that a lot of recently announced sales have been names priced at good retail value.
I do agree that the longer the global conflict and chaotic international trade continues, it ultimately has to hurt startup confidence and hence domain demand. However, even that can work in reverse, as people who have lost their jobs are in some cases starting small businesses.
I imagine that the very top of the market tends to always go up, great single-word names in .com, .ai, etc.
-Bob
