It's a retail store trying to make a profit, they will sell their entire stock off to the right person, as long as they have the money to pay the bill.
Some retailers are happy to operate that way, but they'd also be selling off their goodwill. Part of maintaining it, is keeping the customers happy, and returning. Never having any inventory in stock isn't a good way to do that. That's why many stores limit purchase quantity of on sale or scarce items they anticipate to be in high demand. They'd rather have lots of happy customers than one REALLY happy one, and a lot of unhappy ones!
If I walk into my local grocery store, no one is going to stop me from buying every bottle of water, as long as I've got the funds to cover it. People in my community won't have clean water to drink if I do this, now ask me if the grocery store gives two shits if that's the case?
Again, some stores will be happy to have the sale all at once, some won't. Depends on management; depends on inventory, and depends on what's going on at the time of the sale. Try this during a natural disaster, and damn right there will be stores that will limit the number of bottles they'll let you or anyone else carry out. Other stores will happily charge you 10x the pre-storm per bottle price. . .take as many as you need.
Unless you drive around in a semi-truck you probably can't even physically load your vehicle with all the water in some big stores. Even if you did, chances are pretty good, the store in question would re-stock in a short period of time. . .perhaps even within 1 business day, since many are supplied daily. And even if you did buy out all the water, short of an emergency, nobody is going to pay more for it to take it off your hands than what you paid. So even if you depleted the entire water inventory, you wouldn't disadvantage the other paying customers for very long, and buying the water at retail would help ensure that you wouldn't make much (or any) profit re-selling it later. Bottom line, water is a necessary and unregulated commodity, cannabis beans are a highly regulated and highly scrutinized luxury item. ..they're not exactly comparable.
Except for the fact that 303 is discontinuing their worldwide production/distribution, not only to focus on in-state sales, but to also stay within state laws.
As a counterexample to 303, Rare Dankness is another boutique breeder based in CO. That company has its "CO only" strains, but it also has a completely separate "sister" corporation in Spain for international sales with its own production and packaging. How? Because CO laws are inoperative outside the jurisdiction of CO. 303 may say its stopping worldwide distribution now. . .lets see what happens if international demand for their product quintuples, and/or if some other extra-American breeder approaches them with a good international distribution offer.
Do you really think that the state would let them operate a legal state sanctioned business that also visibly sells to the global black market online?
Where did I say that? No, of course the State won't let them openly distribute beans out of CO. That's against CO law, and its also against US Federal law. But there isn't really anything the State of CO could do to stop 303 from franchising a subsidiary in Spain to manufacture and market its products in Europe or elsewhere. That's what Rare Dankness has done, and so far as I know Rare Dankness Europe isn't closing down in two months time.
Then why are you questioning what I said if "there is no doubt in your mind"? Because if there's "no doubt in your mind", you'd realize that you were actually agreeing with me to begin with, thus making your post unnecessary.
If my post is unnecessary, why are you responding to it? I disagree with your premise here; I don't think there are "big bucks" to be made trying to buy up legal beans in CO at retail and auctioning them out of State. Of course anyone trying to do that in quantity will probably attract unwanted attention.
The biggest issue I see here is that legal CO beans are already priced at about the same price as illegal black market ones (and in many cases higher). So far as I know, nobody is expecting retail prices to DROP in two months time. You're not really going to get them any cheaper off a shelf in CO than you would other beans from say "Sea of Seeds" or such. Since there is a limit to what people are willing to pay for black market beans in any case, there is only so much room for markup reselling them into the black market.
Basically the only profit margin here is the premium over normal retail that some growers will be willing to pay for "CO only" beans. How much that premium will be depends on how badly the growers want these, and how scarce they actually are. These things remain to be seen, but I'm skeptical that "CO only" genetics will be so damn desirable that they'll command a huge premium over say beans from half a dozen internationally known and award winning breeders outside of CO. Again, if they did, that would provide strong incentive for the CO breeders to divest outside of CO, or for existing breeders outside of CO to appropriate the lines.