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PS3 expected to remain the driving force behind Blu-ray sales

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Trendwatch
By Wolfgang Gruener   
Wednesday, July 02, 2008 00:23
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PS3 expected to remain the driving force behind Blu-ray sales
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Chicago (IL) – The Entertainment Merchants Association (EMA) released its 2008 annual report with a wealth of data revealing the most trends in TV, home video and video gaming segments. The flood of data reveals that video game publishers are closing in on the revenue of stagnating home video sales, Blu-ray looked like the losing HD format in 2006, but was able to reverse the trend thanks to the PS3 in 2007, Microsoft has sold 316,000 now useless HD DVD add-ons for its Xbox 360 console and the average person now spends $310 on movie and game entertainment per year.

The annual report of the EMA is among the most comprehensive and perhaps confusing reports on the state of the entertainment industry of its kind. The 32-page document lists several hundred revenue and unit sales numbers from different market research firms in an effort to provide an impression of entertainment industry trends.

In general, we now know that most of our entertainment content budget goes to home video. Of the total $310 the average person is spending, $116 goes to home videos, $56 to consumer Internet content, $52 to music, $37 to the box office, $36 to video games and $13 to mobile content.

Let’s look a bit closer how the movie industry, TV and playback devices as well as the video game segment did in 2007.   


Home video


According to the EMA, 49% of our movie budget goes to home video, 25% cable TV, 23% to the box office and 3% to on-demand content.  Consumers spent $24.1 billion on home videos in 2007 ($16.5 billion in buy-to-own and 8.2 billion in rentals), which is down from $24.7 billion last year and down from a peak of $25.5 billion in 2004. The EMA believes that this trend will continue for some years with revenues declining to $23.6 billion in 2008 and $23.3 billion in 2009.

A total of 12,177 DVDs (including HD media, and all types of content, including TV shows) were released in 2007, which is down 13,637 in 2006.

300 movies were released on Blu-ray, while 234 movies became available on HD DVD. The EMA said that 800 different titles were available on either HD DVD or Blu-ray at the end of 2007. Nearly nine million high-def discs were sold during the year, raking in revenues of $260 million. Blu-ray discs accounted for 67% (about $170 million) of all HD video sales (40% in 2006), despite the fact that these movies were more expensive than HD DVD titles. According to the EMA, the average Blu-ray title was priced at $33.03, while HD DVD movies cost an average of $31.77. Contrary to common belief, these prices were not much higher than new theatrical releases on DVD, which were priced at an average of $27.13, the EMA said. According to the industry organization, the Playstation 3 may have been the decisive factor to provide Blu-ray with the necessary edge to win over the majority of high-def movie sales.

Digital delivery of movies is still a minor factor in the equation and hit $1 billion for video-on-demand and pay-per-view programming delivered via Internet, cable and satellite seems paltry. $123 million were spent on spent on Internet downloads.

The top-selling DVD titles of 2007 were Happy Feet, Transformers and Pirates of the Caribbean 3 - At World's End. The top-selling HD titles were 300 (Blu-ray), Transformers (HD DVD) and Pirates of the Caribbean 3 - At World's End (Blu-ray).

It is interesting to note that movie studios are bringing their movies much faster to the home video market than ever before. On average DVDs are following the theatrical release with a distance of 126 days, down from 129 in 2006 and down from 171 days just five years ago.    

Six major publishers currently control almost 85% of the home video market – Warner holds 18.8%, followed by Fox (15.3%), Sony (13.5%), Paramount (13.4%), Disney (13.1%) and Universal (10.7%).

 

Read on the next page HDTVs and DVD players, video games



 

Shop Keywords: PS3, Blu-ray, HD DVD, 2007, DVD, movie

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