lovinthehed:
I can offer anecdotal information only. My own experience purchasing a few new records during 2016.
I was pretty surprised at the cost of a vinyl LP these days. It seems to be that a vinyl LP is 3x to 4x the cost of a CD. YMMV , caveat caveat caveat. What I've seen on Amazon.com is that if a CD is priced at $10 USD, the vinyl is likely to be at $29.995 to $39.95. I don't place any particular value judgement of good or bad on that, its just what my personal experience has been buying vinyl this last year.
I do get the sense that vinyl is getting some momentum in certain market segments. Increased demand without an increase in supply will drive up the price. With more machines coming online to produce vinyl, that would serve to increase supply, thus driving down the price. If demand and supply tend to equalize, then we could see prices pretty much stay where they are.
I'm interested to see what happens. More interest from new audio enthusiasts is goodness from my point of view
I pretty much never even look at new vinyl, not new releases anyway. For newly released music, I purchase the CD, and even at that hopefully it is used. I have a hard time paying more than about $12 for a CD. If it's something I really want (few and far between), then I may pay up to $20 for a CD. I may look at a vinly remaster of QRP every now and then and pay up to $50 for something from them.
I purchased 90% of my vinyl collection in the late 1990s. That was an AWESOME time to be purchasing vinyl! Back then, CDs ruled the day and vinyl was dirt cheap! Today, I agree with your assessment-- CDs and Vinyl prices have inverted, vinyl seems to be more expensive now.
Back in the 90s, I could typically purchase ~3 records for $20 at the record shop across the street from my college campus, I would go in there just about every Friday between classes. I love it, I often would take my receipt and shove it between the sleeve and the outer plastic shrink wrap, so many of my vinyls have the price tag, and the receipt so I know exactly the day that I bought it.
Records that I paid $5 for back then, I routinely see going for $50 today! BUT, I didn't purchase those as an investment, I purchased then to hear.
At those prices, I was able to listen to a lot more music than I would have been able to at the cost of a CD. Also, over the years, several people have gifted me with vinyl records. Over 50% of that was crap, but I did get several gems for free over the years.