Irish Mike
Well-known member
I did some work in his subterranean garage that can easily hold 30 cars. It's right under his indoor pool. It's quite a place....
I did some work in his subterranean garage that can easily hold 30 cars. It's right under his indoor pool. It's quite a place....
What a great business plan. Compile so much dept their financers can't afford to allow them to fold. Then he'll be able to negotiate his debt for pennies on the dollar and restructure the business model. And in the meantime his personal wealth won't be touched.
Tarriffs are based on landed price. As cheap as Harbor Freight is, they still bring that stuff in for zip. I doubt it if it would increase the price very much.I can see how a tariff on Chinese imports could really hurt a store like HF. If such a thing does happen it may help bring tool manufacturing back to the US.
I do shop at HF, I had no idea about the owner or history of the company though.
"If such a thing does happen it may help bring tool manufacturing back to the US."
A lot of Chinese/foreign stuff is **** but without low cost items from outside the USA prices will increase due to lack of competition tremendously, then all the US manufacturers will screw us royally; without foreign imports lets see how American companies support us. They screw us right now by purchasing foreign items for $4 and selling for $50 + shipping. Do you really want tools/materials which cost >5-10x as much to produce? .....be careful what you wish for.
Did you use HF tools?
Those guys are living a life of debt, financed on the backs of their stores. One or two bad quarters and they will fold like a cheap suit and leave their customers holding the bag.
Has anyone actually seen Harbor Freight's? :
Income statement
Balance sheet
Cash Flow statement
Statement of Shareholders' Equity
HF is no different than any construction firm that profits from hiring HD-parking-lot crew, particularly in the southern US.I don't think that's accurate. For decades we had low cost Craftsman, mid cost Armstrong and high cost Snap-On, all A,erican made. Nobody felt they were getting screwed, there was a price point for every level of user, and they didn't "jack up" the prices. Of late, they have just had to "offshore" our jobs in a race to the bottom!
HF is no different than any construction firm that profits from hiring HD-parking-lot crew, particularly in the southern US.
Not sure why people are being so critical of the guys finance choices. They have a HUGELY successful chain, and the guy took money out of something HE HELPED CREATE, and invested it into real estate and some other things which he happens to live in and enjoy himself. WHO ELSE should benefit from what he built??? Stop hating - or has nobody in the forum taken a home equity loan?? That's basically what he's done.
It's funny how the biggest critics know better, yet never seem to be able to amass any wealth of their own.. haters gonna hate.. good for him..
I'd wager only about 10% of GJs members even know what these financials statements are, nevermind the fact that Harbor freight is private haha hence my armchair statement on the other page....
My buddy told me something one day I'll never forget. He said people at his company (large privately owned GC) like to complain about the big boss being rich. My buddy said "Poor people don't employ other people like myself, so I'm not complaining about our boss being rich."
To be quite honest, I'm very surprised someone else hasnt copied this business model. .

To be quite honest, I'm very surprised someone else hasnt copied this business model. There's obviously room for another big retail chain similar to this.
Originally Posted by zendriver View Post
They will probably remain just ducky!
Tariff costs are usually passed on to the consumer, which is us.
Which will raise prices of tools which will make us go elsewhere..... Especially if buy America makes one feel better when the prices are closer.
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. Meanwhile, we have all seen Sears, who was perfectly positioned to be Amazon, repeatedly shooting themselves in the foot because of their brick and mortar infastructure. Every day they hand more of their localized business to HF with a silver bow on it (Sears gets more crappy every year, HF improves every year).
.
How is (was) a 120 old business, who started bailing from mail order 60 years ago, with 180,000 employees, a conglomeration of failing financial subsidiaries, ancient failing mall retail locations, positioned to be an Amazon, a streamlined Internet startup, from the get-go?
Just curious.
Not sure why people are being so critical of the guys finance choices. They have a HUGELY successful chain, and the guy took money out of something HE HELPED CREATE, and invested it into real estate and some other things which he happens to live in and enjoy himself. WHO ELSE should benefit from what he built??? Stop hating - or has nobody in the forum taken a home equity loan?? That's basically what he's done.
It's funny how the biggest critics know better, yet never seem to be able to amass any wealth of their own.. haters gonna hate.. good for him..
Nobody likes seeing someone else, being extremely innovative and then making a pile of money, doing so.
It's the new American meme.![]()
A debt recap is an extremely common way for a private company to extract equity from the business on the form of real cash.
This guy isn't doing anything that 10,000 other business owners haven't done on varying levels of scale.
Much ado about nothing.
Nothing wrong with what he's done to create his wealth. It's all legal and above board. However, he'd probably have more fans if he spent some of the wealth on making a "made in the USA" push for at least some of his products.
Not that 95% of the populace cares about things like that. The average HF customer just cares about prices.