Well, back to the original question. As I posted early on, Nikon currently makes 11 different manual focus lenses. Until about five years ago, Nikon made I think it was 23 different manual focusing lenses in 35mm. Nikon QUIT making ALL large-format lenses during the decade of the 2000's. Just not enough market share to bother pursuing for Nikon to even want to compete for its tiny slice of the pie. Sooo...Nikon still makes and sells 11 manual focus lenses, three of which are tilt/shift models. In this, the second decade of the 21st century, manually focusing lenses are quite simply, less-desirable than autofocusing lenses, in almost all product categories. History is filled with examples other obsolete items, which were at ONE TIME, considered mass-market items. Straight razors once ruled; now "safety razor" blades dominate. Hand-cranked cars once dominated; now cars are started by electric motors. At one time, radios and TV sets used vacuum tubes, but today solid-state components dominate. At one time, there was a pretty good trade in slide rules, but electronic calculators took over. At one time, pagers were all the rage, but today the cool kids all have smart phones. At one time, cribs filled with corn cobs had value; the year 1865 or so marked the year of the first toilet paper. At one time, salted pork and salted codfish were the sailor's food supply; today sailor's world-wide eat freeze-dried or vacuum-packaged foods of ALL types. See how this works?
How about some hand-cranked cars, some salt pork snacks, some corn-cob TP, and an old tube-fired radio? You could borrow my 1974 Pickett slide rule to figure out the costs, and the per-unit expected return on investment, and so on. Working of course, by a nice whale-oil lamp.