Well if it contains a prime breede queen, then it could be possible.
I raise about 30 Queens a year and let them get mated at the mating station.
Half oft them are one breed, others are an other breed.
From these i get about 26 back, 1-4 fail in the same, due to mit beeing accepted or are just not able to establish a good hive.
From that point i'am left in spring with 18-20 of those queens.
They all have to be revisited, starting when i get the queens back, shaking a package for all of them, so they have an equal start.
After that they get examined at least 8 times. Which means watching how gentle they are, how much brood do they produce, do they try to swarm, and signs of chalkbrood or nosema and do they put up with varoa or not?
After that they get examined to check, if they are pure race breed or hybribs.
(We got a lot of problems with hybrids in germany, leading to a lot of problems in the F2 due to the ammount of carnolians here.)
After all this i am happy if, i get one good breeder queen of each of this breeds. Those queens aren't for sale.
Maybe 2 more, ok queens which can be breed from as a backup or for someone who wants to raise his own queens for bis operation, 2 more average breeder queens, ok for a hobby beekeper to raise his own (typically very gentle but less honey) and 4-5 queens that are below average and not usable for breeding.
If you are unlucky you lose everything in the second winter, only having that backup queen left.
For all that work, you wont be able to buy that top breeder queen, just the backup after the breeder queen is overwintered succesfull.
Just calculate all the other costs you have for raising queens, the breeder queen is still the only one who allows you to raise good queens and maybe worth 5$ per queen, so if you raise and sell 400 queens (which isn't much) you would already have paid for that queen. Meaning every queen over 400 yields you a 5$ more.?