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The Economics of Piracy

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Re: The Economics of Piracy
Post by Somtaaw   » Fri Apr 29, 2016 9:24 am

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Silverwall wrote:
Somtaaw wrote:So the Verge had armed freighters already floating about, and the Verge is the very edge of Solarian influence. Silesia must be absolutely rotten with armed freighters, regardless of the prior Silesian stance of 'no-privately armed ships'


Which makes Manticore pretty damn brave, or pretty damn stupid to be operating unarmed freighters, when the pirates in Silesia had already crept into commonly being large frigate and light cruiser ranges without batting eyelashes.


There is no evidence of armed freighters being common anywhere. The Solly designs such as the dromadary are not only unarmed and so unconcerned by the possibility of damage that they are spinal mounts with core components in highly exposed by easy to maintain locations. Manty and Andy freighters are not armed as is shown by various events in silesia but do design ships to take light battle damage with a central core design.


Re-quoting Wierd Harold who already dug out the relevant passages, and added bolding. 10 to 15% of the VERGE freighters are armed, and again Verge=Solarian sphere of influence, which you'd think would be safer. Pirates not wanting to risk pissing off the largest navy in existance, and until Second manticore, what was thought as the most powerful navy as well...

Weird Harold wrote:
Shadow of Saganami
Chapter Forty wrote:
She was also armed, although no one in his right mind—and certainly not Duan Binyan—would ever confuse her with a warship. She didn't make any effort to pretend she wasn't armed, although her official papers significantly understated the power of the two lasers she mounted in each broadside and her engineering log always showed that at least one of them was down for lack of spare parts. The Verge could be a dangerous place, and probably ten or fifteen percent of the merchies which plied it were armed, after a fashion, at least. The "inoperable" broadside mount was simply part of Marianne's down-at-the-heels masquerade, and half her point defense clusters and counter-missiles tubes were concealed behind jettisonable plating, again in keeping with her pretense of parsimonious owners.

All in all, Marianne was capable of holding her own against any pirate she was likely to meet. She could even encounter a light warship—a destroyer, say—from one of the podunk navies out here with a more than even chance of success. And on at least two occasions, Marianne herself had turned "pirate" for specific operations. On the other hand, any modern warship would turn her into so much drifting debris in short order. Which was the reason Duan and his crew vastly preferred to depend upon stealth and guile.



And if 10-15% of ships travelling in Solarian Verge space are armed, you can damn well guarantee that more ships that travel to even more lawless places (Silesia before it got carved up, springs to mind) are going to be even more common, regardless of the 'official' Silesian stance of no privately-armed ships. After all, you could just bribe a Silesian inspection team and they'd certify you as whatever you want, as long as the bribe is high enough.
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Re: The Economics of Piracy
Post by Somtaaw   » Fri Apr 29, 2016 9:33 am

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Pirates snap up entire ships, they don't just raid for high-value, low-mass cargo's and then leave the ship intact and going on it's way, now slighty emptier than before.

The ships are expensive suckers, and as soon as you jigger with the nodes and RADAR type emissions, a simple transponder change and you've got a "brand new, only slightly used hyper-capable freighter" to sell. Any cargo's are only an added benefit in Honoverse, unless it's something truly valuable, like say Kodiak max pelts? There was millions of Manticoran dollars loaded aboard the OBS Mondragon which was only a 4.5 Mton freighter, but the whole ship was impounded and added to the prizes for Honor's crew.
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Re: The Economics of Piracy
Post by Silverwall   » Fri Apr 29, 2016 9:38 am

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Somtaaw, your too quick for me. I posted fast then realised the mistake and went to edit it but got caught up trying to estimate the real value of a BC and got delayed an hour before I fixed the error.

BTW my estimated cost of a new BC is actually a minimum of 2.75 billion manty dollars.
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Re: The Economics of Piracy
Post by cthia   » Fri Apr 29, 2016 10:10 am

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Silverwall wrote:Somtaaw, your too quick for me. I posted fast then realised the mistake and went to edit it but got caught up trying to estimate the real value of a BC and got delayed an hour before I fixed the error.

BTW my estimated cost of a new BC is actually a minimum of 2.75 billion manty dollars.

Yet, what would be the cost of an aging, slight to medium-damaged BC on the black market, horse traded with a good ol' boy - or if lucky, thrown in as a bonus on another deal? I learned horse trading, Silicon Valley 'without-a-dry-run' style and it's an intricate world of commodities espionage. lol

And what does anyone venture to estimate the value of the most valuable single freighter shipments? I'm guessing 10 - 15 billion dollar single freighters are quite common. Especially along the high-rent district routes.

When planets lose shipments in the Honorverse, they are potentially losing billions. These freighters may be carrying goods for several systems. If only a billion dollar shipment, that may lose money. It may cost you that in insurance. lol

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: The Economics of Piracy
Post by Jonathan_S   » Fri Apr 29, 2016 10:54 am

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Somtaaw wrote:So the Verge had armed freighters already floating about, and the Verge is the very edge of Solarian influence. Silesia must be absolutely rotten with armed freighters, regardless of the prior Silesian stance of 'no-privately armed ships'


Which makes Manticore pretty damn brave, or pretty damn stupid to be operating unarmed freighters, when the pirates in Silesia had already crept into commonly being large frigate and light cruiser ranges without batting eyelashes.
I don't know that Silesia is actually overrun with as many armed freighters as you're saying.

Freighters need to actually dock at stations and load and unlock cargo, and undergo inspections. So if there are rules against armed freighters even casual inspections should rapidly discover their violation. Their ability to continue operation would then depend on the willingness of the station / system / naval authorities to turn a blind eye to the violation; or be bribed to do so :D.

There are certainly some system governors that would seem to be willing to do so. But an armed freighter would need every system it stopped in (plus any random naval forces that stopped it for random inspection) to let it continue violating the rules.


Based on the trouble gone to to get Pirate's Bane official papers allowing it to operate armed in Silesia I'd guess those regulations are fairly effective - otherwise it would have been easier and attracted less attention to just grease the necessary palms to have an unregistered armed freighter.
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Re: The Economics of Piracy
Post by cthia   » Fri Apr 29, 2016 11:05 am

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The E wrote:
cthia wrote:I'm not rejecting the more practical use of eight frigates. I'm just saying that if a capable captain & crew found itself with the possibility of purchasing a BC, that they wouldn't pass it up. Or may even go out to explicitly acquire one to execute the big score, which would render the BC as a use once get away vehicle. Then you destroy it in a back alley of space if you can't sell it to a chop shop.


No, they wouldn't, because any pirate with the ability to acquire heavy firepower knows it would be stupid for him to do so (unless he has backing by some major power like Frontier Fleet).

Again. Nice posts. Everyone. Thanks for the guestimates munroburton. There I go thinking that a BC costs lots more. But an aging BC would have to be worth what, half that? If sold at cost, or within the "good ol' boy network."


His estimates are based on false assumptions though. 400 Million Dollars is what the RMN would pay to buy these ships into service, not what Haven paid to build them.

By comparison. A modern day cargo ship can carry a maximum of 169M DWT. High-grade marijuana sells for $6,000 lb. If a container ship shipped loaded with high grade weed. That would be 169T X 2204.62lb X $6000 = a shipment valued at
$2,235,484,680. Surely there are many items in the Honorverse shipping lanes with values significantly higher than Old Earth pot. Even if it is high-grade weed. And an Honorverse freighter can carry just how much more DWT? (Deadweight tonnage)

Seriously, I wouldn't be surprised, of the capability at least, if several hundred billion to quite more in shipments of a single freighter are common!

I just can't shake the feeling that we may be jumping the gun at the value of a BC to that rare breed of pirate with impeccable tactics&strategy that can plan, implement and pull off, this type of heist. Let's say a scorned ex-payee on Janacek's payroll. This calibre of pirate can take this sort of shipment away from even a convoy escorted by two DDs. And if he can get a double freighter grab??? Ultra-booty-licious! Then retire and buy yourself a small planet in the Verge.


Except that it doesn't work that way.

Assume you intercept a mid-sized honorverse freighter, packed to capacity with goods. Something on the order of 3 or 4 million tons of cargo, or roughly equivalent to the output of one of Earth's bigger industrialized countries for a year. There is no single buyer able to take that cargo off your hands, let alone at book value, so it has to be parcelled off and fed into the shadow economy piecemeal, or held in custody until the shipping company pays a ransom. Neither method will result in quick payouts, and whatever the final payout will be, it's not going to be anywhere close to the book value of the goods.

Meanwhile, your supposed pirate still had to go through the troubles involved in acquiring a capital ship, getting a crew, getting the ship set up for a raiding mission, and for what purpose? The mission you describe doesn't require a Battlecruiser to pull off, a couple smaller ships are perfectly sufficient for it, increasing the overall payout and decreasing the individual risk.

No, cthia. What you describe is something only a terminally stupid pirate would do.

What do you think I'm describing? My original premise is 'why aren't there some very rich pirates,' who can afford to at least pimp and trick out their ships - even if they're DD's? Milgrade everything, even coffee!

I'm detailing booties exceeding 10 biliion dollars. I rather thought a BC would make sense to help ensure that sort of pay off. But it seems I might've overestimated the firepower needed to effect the really big scores. But you're saying that two cheaper DDs can do it? Marvelous! The notion of BCs isn't non-negotiable. lol

So we're right back to my original thought, why haven't there been some very rich pirates over the many prolonged years? I like the thought offered by someone that there are quite successful pirates, but long since retired and storyline hasn't yet found a need to advertise for him/her yet.



It's appalling that pirates aren't in the peddlers business as well. Why can't pirates have seized ships refurbished & reworked and make shipments themselves? Why can't a huge shipment in seized widgets be sold to as many nations that will buy stolen bulk?

Aren't pirates terminally stupid by definition?

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: The Economics of Piracy
Post by cthia   » Fri Apr 29, 2016 11:16 am

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Also, I would think that piracy before pods and the whirlwind of tech that came out of Project Gram was the Golden Era of piracy.

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: The Economics of Piracy
Post by Jonathan_S   » Fri Apr 29, 2016 11:32 am

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Silverwall wrote:Lets make a couple of not very sound assumptions about this money.

1) Captains get the 1/4 of the money awared in napoleonic periods. (personally I expect the captains share to much smaller in the honorverse probably closer to 10% given the changes in culture and such)

2) the crown actually buys ships in a book value to the crew not on a % basis, I would expect less than full book value to be assigned to the crews given the way ship costs have changed since the napoleonic days.

3) the only captains with a claim on this money are those in Sarnows squadron and excludes the dispersed DD's and minelayers and they decide that Dansislav's forces get a big fat 0$ as the Havenites just up and surrended before they engaged.

This gives us 25% of the ships value divided amongst the 8 BC captains and 8 CA captains.

If we take the 2.75 billion for a BC and assume that a DN is 3 times the cost that gives us a grand total prize pool of 44 billion dollars paid by the Exchecquer for the ships.

Given the assumptions above this would have given honor approx 680 million dollars prize money which sounds about right for how her wealth is described in the books.

It's also possible that the Crown buys the prize ships at a steep discount to cover the costs to refit them for RMN (or GSN) service.

Not only are ships more expensive that in Napoleonic times but so are the refits to integrate them into your own service. Those costs reduce the time/cost effectiveness of buying up an enemy ship and should correspondingly decrease the value of (and hence prize money paid for) doing so.


Trying to reverse engineer the black market costs of a BC, or even the legitimate second hand cost of a used BC sold to a friendly system, from prize money payouts in the early books seems very fraught with uncertainty.
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Re: The Economics of Piracy
Post by Somtaaw   » Fri Apr 29, 2016 11:35 am

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I called it fairly early on, but the 'most successful' pirates we've really seen, only includes:
1) the group that almost took out Bachfish and Ms. Midshipwoman Honor Harrington (remember, it was a frigate that spotted Santino clearing their wedge and passed it on to a larger ship which then tried to take out War Maiden
2) Warnecke's psychotics

Then if you want to include the technical pirates, that were either funded, based from, or received any form of support or instructions from Mesa (privateers rather than pirates):
3) the Mesa-funded group that nailed Edward Saganami
4) The People's Navy in Exile, former StateSec craft


Otherwise, it's always a singleton, operating totally alone and/or is a privateer/pirate that only seems to work in a handful of systems in Silesia.
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Re: The Economics of Piracy
Post by noblehunter   » Fri Apr 29, 2016 12:22 pm

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What do you think I'm describing? My original premise is 'why aren't there some very rich pirates,' who can afford to at least pimp and trick out their ships - even if they're DD's? Milgrade everything, even coffee!
And what would be the return on investment for all this? Very few people get rich by spending money on low-return high-cost items.

Any pirate smart enough to get rich is smart enough to get out of the business sooner rather than later.
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