It never seems to turn up for sale at reasonable prices, even when the market corrects.
Seems like once people have gotten $80 for that brick of Winchester Wildcats or Remington Thunderbolts, they're focused on getting that price forever.
I find reloading components to be a bit different in this respect than ammo; namely, actually using them up requires a significant investment of time and attention to detail that a lot of folks don't have.
Every time there's a market run, all the gun rags/websites extol the virtues of reloading; a bunch of folks decide now is the time to get into reloading, and they buy whatever they can because it's all they can get.
2-3 years later, they're sitting on powder/primers/brass/dies that they don't have any interest in using. These things show up at gunshows with a significant markdown.
The key is the crisis has to actually end to the point where these folks lose interest. With the 24 hour news cycle focused on gun control, that could take a very long time.