GameStop
may need a new start. The videogame retailer released details about its
holiday sales Friday, and they weren’t pretty. It’s yet another sign of
the eroding business for physical games.
Sales at GameStop fell
16.4% in the last nine weeks of 2016, the company said, compared with
the same period a year earlier. Shares of GameStop tumbled 9% on the
news, to $22.50.
All sides of the gaming business contributed to the decline. Even the hot new Nintendo NES Classic device couldn’t make up for big drops in Sony’s PlayStation 4 and Microsoft’s Xbox One console sales.
And
the company struggled to sell new video games “due to difficult
comparisons to titles launched a year ago,” according to a press
release. But it’s not just that some big 2015 games did well. The 2016
versions -- like Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare, released in November -- did particularly poorly.
GameStop
shares are down 16% in the last 12 months. Investors are paying just
six times estimated earnings for the stock. That price-to-earnings ratio
is 66% less than what the typical big stock gets.
There’s good
reason for the skepticism. Even though 2017 is expected to bring a
better slate of games, the challenges facing traditional game retailers
aren’t going away. It’s tough to get people to buy physical games in
stores these days when they can play games on their phone or download
titles directly to their consoles.
Stores like Target and Best Buy
suffer from the same game problems, but they sell plenty of other items
too. GameStop needs to distance itself from all this gaming.
The good news for GameStop: It has growing non-gaming businesses. The company has had success selling Apple
products through its Simply Mac stores, prepaid phone plans through its
Cricket Wireless stores, and collectible items like Pokémon
memorabilia.
These areas have their own challenges -- Pokémon won’t be cool forever, and sales of iPhones, iPads, and Macs all took hits in the latest quarter
– but non-gaming businesses may have made up 40% of 2016 earnings. This
is the sort of diversification the company needs to prioritize.
Meanwhile, there could be one more hope. Last night, Nintendo announced that its latest console, the Switch, will go on sale on March 3 for $299. A successful launch could provide at least some relief for GameStop shares.
Big Picture: GameStop had a dismal holiday season, underscoring the problems facing traditional game retailers.
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