Have anyone else noticed that we are paying more for parts but are being asked sell them at a MSRP that hasn't changed. At least that I am seeing in my prices that I download from my distributors. Otherwords we as shop owner are expected to take the price hikes caused by the tariffs but are not expected to pass this along to the customers. What ends up is having items that actually sell below cost when shipping is figured in especially when shops like mine have orders below the free shipping level. No wonder some shops in the area is charging shipping on all parts sold.
Personally I can not absorb these additional costs just to shield the customer from these increased costs. I usually make about 30% net profit including my labor but this year I am running around 10%. I am now trying to figure how to reprice the price files MSRP prices at a flat percentage rate of mark-up to take these tariffs cost into account as I once did before having distributors. This way I don't need to manually check and change prices on every repair job or parts counter sale. Kinda hard to do; unless, I can find a way to the formula to a whole column of prices as one file of 158,000 lines of SKUs. Now my accounting will allow to do percentage markup of the current MSRP but I prefer to do it base on the cost instead.
A good example is the Murray belt that I sold earlier in the week where cost me $28 and retailed at $32. Heck the shipping was $11.49. A lost of nearly $8. If I keep this up I end up going out business. I am also wondering just how higher those 3 quart fuel tanks are to be. They was nearly $100 cost the last one I brought and they are out of Mexico so I figure they will go up the rates trump threatening to add in tariffs. Customers are already balking at the $128 MSRP.