Thursday, October 17, 2013
US needs new consoles sooner than later
US retail sales of video games have not been good at all this year, with
monthly declines regularly in the double digits. In an NPD data preview
note, Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter said that September's
results (to be published this Thursday) won't be much better and that
the industry really needs new consoles from Microsoft and Sony to push
sales into positive territory again. Even big software this holiday
(Halo, Call of Duty, etc.) and the launch of the Wii U won't be enough
to really reverse the damage done throughout the year. "We expect
October - December to be relatively flat, and expect a return to
negative territory again next year, at least until the launch of a
next-generation console from Microsoft or Sony," Pachter said. He
continued, "A new console cycle is likely to reverse the negative sales
trends of the last several years, with next-generation consoles expected
from each of the three manufacturers over the next 18 months. Nintendo
will launch the Wii U on November 18, and, while neither Sony nor
Microsoft has yet announced new hardware, we expect a PS4 no later than
November 2013, and a next Xbox no later than March 2014." "Competition
from social and mobile games hurt packaged goods sales over the last
three years, but should serve to expand the market for console games
over the long run, although it appears that the addressable market for
handheld games will continue to erode. We expect the publishers to
address the "problem" of free online multiplayer with evolving business
models, adding increased opportunities to purchase virtual items,
creating subscription-only serialized content, and adding premium
subscription layers to the free offerings currently provided."
Ultimately, Pachter sees the next-gen consoles selling very quickly even
if they are only a "modest improvement" over the current generation. He
believes publishers are all planning big lineups for new systems from
Microsoft and Sony, and that these games will help bring software sales
back to prominence. "We believe that the publishers plan an
unprecedented number of new games for launch in the first two years of
the next generation, providing relief from the gamer fatigue we've seen
over the last three years," he said.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
No comments :
Post a Comment