dealers sometimes do set the prices.  It then becomes a matter of trust
for collectors that they are not paying too much. 
Spoken from a true seller's perspective.  ;-)   Sellers can think that they set the prices, but they simply don't.  A dollar-per-gram number is not a true "price" until it's willingly paid, and only a buyer can decide to willingly pay.  If all "honest dealers" decided tomorrow (with no interference from "rogue" sellers ;-)  that the "price" of Gao was $10,000/gram, that would just be a number printed in a lot of catalogs, it wouldn't actually be "The Price of Gao".   It wouldn't be a dealer-decided price because no one would be paying it.  Dealers would have to keep lowering the price until buyers started consistently buying......voila, look who "set" the price.
The standard business
supply and demand argument only works for true commodities not for
meteorites in all cases. This is because no two falls are alike just like no
two pieces of fine art are alike.  Is fine art a commodity in the business
sense? 
Yes, it absolutely is.  I've been in the business side of the artistic community for thirty years, and I believe there are ZERO economic differences between art commerce and meteorite commerce and bread commerce and CD-player commerce  -  merely minor variations of the same unbreakable rules.
 
Gregory

J. Gregory Wilson
2118 Wilshire Blvd. #918
Santa Monica, CA 90403

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