med-img

Video Game Industry Recovery Depends on PS3, Wii Price Cuts, says Analyst

Posted July 27, 2009 by James Brightman

The U.S. game industry in June saw the biggest decline in nine years and analysts are now concerned that the weak economy is finally catching up with gaming. If the industry wants to have any chance of breaking the record sales pace it set in 2008, then a few things will need to happen, including hardware price cuts, says Broadpoint AmTech analyst Ben Schachter. 

"Exiting 2Q09, two trends continue to impact the video game industry, 1) hardware sales remain weak, and 2) non-top 10 titles continue to be shunned at retail. The latter issue has been consistent since the holiday and we expect it to continue throughout the year. In other words, like last holiday, 2009 will again be sharply divided between the haves and the have-nots, the winners and the losers. Notably... 2Q industry software weakness has been disproportionately felt by the first-parties (down 28.4.% y/y) versus the five publishers we cover (down just 13% y/y). As for hardware sales, there is clear cause for concern around both the PlayStation 3 and the Wii. In our view, in order for the industry to recover in the back half of the year, we will need to see a $100 price cut for the Sony PS3 and a $50 price cut for the Wii. And while we expect both of these to be forthcoming this fall, industry expectations of price cuts have been wrong throughout this hardware generation," he said.

It could potentially be a tough holiday season for publishers, but Schachter expects Activision Blizzard to perform the best, thanks to Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, which most believe will be one of the top selling titles of the entire year. "...we view ATVI's pipeline of titles as giving it the best opportunity among publishers to have something to cheer about this holiday. We continue to believe that Modern Warfare 2 will be the best-selling title this holiday and will likely outsell CoD 4's 7mil units sold in CY'07 (in less than two months worth of sales). In addition, titles such as Tony Hawk, DJ Hero, and Wolfenstein could also show upside," he noted.

"While Music clearly will not be the growth driver of prior years, we believe ATVI's strategy of releasing multiple different Guitar Hero SKUs at multiple different price points is a smart way to manage the franchise in the current macro/retail environment. Also, perhaps most importantly, we expect Warcraft to continue to perform well and remind investors that we estimate Warcraft will account for ~26% of ATVI revenue in CY'09. In fact, we estimate that 75%-85% of ATVI's EBIT estimate is driven by WoW and CoD, both of which we have a high level of confidence will hit or beat expectations," he added.

James Brightman has been covering the games industry since 2003 and has been an avid gamer ever since the days of Atari and Intellivision. He was previously the EIC of GameDaily Biz.

3 Comments

Justin Davis
July 27, 2009

I think we're probably going to see price drops for *all three* consoles, this calendar year. Impressive the Wii has held out until now, though.

James Brightman
July 27, 2009

I agree that the Wii's $249 price point has been impressive, and I do think both Wii and PS3 will get the price cuts everyone's talking about, but I'm not so sure about 360. MS just posted its second profitable year for the Xbox division, BUT that profit was down 66% and they've been having a pretty solid year in 09. The pressure of price cuts from Sony and Nintendo might get to them, and possibly force their hand, but they could probably do OK without a cut.

David Radd
July 28, 2009

Sony needs to cut the price of the PS3- plain and simple. The Wii might also see a price cut, but it wouldn't surprise me if it was under $50. There might be a price cut from Microsoft, but I'd expect it to be more minor one, like a discount to the Elite system or something of the sort.




Newsletter

Sign up for our FREE morning newsletter outlining the day's top stories, and the[a]listdaily for game marketing news.

Sign up