With the country feeling a bigger pinch in the pocketbook these days, many people are being forced to cut back their spending for things that aren’t deemed essential.Â
One area that Americans are cutting back is the purchase of DVDs. Sales for DVDs dropped last year by 5.8 percent according to the Hollywood Reporter, leading many in the entertainment industry to wonder if the popular format is starting to lose it’s luster.
Sanford Bernstein analyst Michael Nathanson cited data from trade group Digital Entertainment Group, which shows that U.S. consumer spending on home entertainment fell 5.7% last year to $22.4 billion, driven by a 6.3% decline in DVD sell-through. Within sell-through, Blu-ray sales gained traction, while standard-definition DVD sales dropped 9.5%.
Further analysis unearthed “a very troubling demand trend,” Nathanson said. Not only did sell-through demand deteriorate as the year unfolded, but the drop also “appears to be most pronounced among new releases,” with unit sales down nearly 20% in 2008, compared with a 6% decline in catalog titles.
Bernstein now estimates U.S. home entertainment spending to fall 7% in 2009, 6% in 2010 and another 7% in 2011.
Growth in Blu-ray sales momentum “is unlikely to stem the decline in standard-def units,” Nathanson concluded, before adding: “We fear that the current state of the DVD market will have negative near-term implications on media conglomerate earnings.”
After a hit to film unit profits, which could lead to weaker-than-projected results in the first half of 2009, the deterioration may lead to write-downs to account for the shortfalls, Nathanson predicted.
The DVD challenge is just another obstacle for the stocks of entertainment conglomerates amid the recession, according to the analyst.
“Investing in the media conglomerate stocks for the near-term is a challenge,” Nathanson said, arguing that their earnings are economically sensitive and ad and consumer spending rebounds have often lagged economic recoveries.
Nathanson’s report coincided with a bleak December retail sales report from the Commerce Department that seemed to confirm fears of a deepening U.S. recession.
December sales at U.S. retailers fell 2.7%, more than twice as much as projected. Compared with the year-ago period, sales fell a record 9.8% during the traditionally big holiday sales month.
The December results marked the sixth consecutive monthly retail sales drop, the longest downward trend since the government began tracking such data in 1992. For all of 2008, retail sales fell 0.1%.
ejdalise says
Yes, yes . . . the economy!
. . . not the fact most new releases are crap no one wants to own.
That said, I’m surprised people would want to buy movies at all. Sure, I’ll buy a few (already bought Serenity), but they will be few and far between. I can’t think of any movie from last year (or the year before) I need to own when with a Netflix subscription I can have it here the next day, or the day after that at the latest.
jarik says
DVDs are suffering the same fate as CDs. Their over priced and their not many titles worth buying.
Alison says
Now I know why Back To The Future, Psycho and Citizen Kane have all had ‘Digital Presentation’ {projected from a hard drive} re-releases at cinemas – becuase the companies don’t have to spend bugger all on new 35mm prints and it costs them nothing! They can re-sell the same old crap, this time on the big screen. I’ll pass thanks.