Showing posts with label Macmillan Publishers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Macmillan Publishers. Show all posts

Monday, March 12, 2012

What would you rather have: A monopoly or price-fixing?

Last week, The Wall Street Journal reported that the U.S. Justice Department has warned Apple and five of the "Big 6" trade publishers (Macmillan, Penguin, Hachette, HarperCollins and Simon & Schuster) that it's planning to file suit against them for price-fixing as a result of their implementation of agency pricing for eBooks. Here's a brief overview (and a disclaimer: I'm not a lawyer, and this isn't legal advice):

Until 2009, virtually all publishers in the U.S. sold their books (both print and eBooks) to resellers under the wholesale model. Typically, books would be sold by publishers to resellers at 50% of their suggested list prices--the prices printed on the book covers. Resellers were then free to resell the books at any price they desired. This was the model (along with co-op payments for display locations at the front of bookstores and preferred positions on bookshelves) that Barnes & Noble and Borders used to drive hundreds, if not thousands, of independent booksellers out of business with discounting. In many cases, the "big box" booksellers sold books for less than the price that independent booksellers paid to buy them.

Amazon used the same model to launch its entry into the eBooks business. Amazon's strategy was to sell all its eBooks for $9.99 or less, even if that meant selling them below the wholesale price. Amazon quickly controlled as much as 90% of the U.S. eBook market.

In 2009, as part of its entry into the eBook business, Apple proposed a different model to the Big 6 publishers (all of the companies under investigation plus Random House), which became known as agency pricing. Under agency pricing, booksellers don't actually purchase the books that they sell to customers--instead, they act as "agents" for the publishers and take a commission on each sale, which Apple set at 30%. Since the booksellers don't own (take title of) the books, the publishers can set the prices, and the booksellers are obligated to sell the books at that price. Five of the Big 6 publishers implemented agency pricing for their eBooks (Random House waited a year before it implemented agency pricing, which is why it's not under investigation.)

The five participating publishers went to their resellers at approximately the same time, and told them that, regardless of when their existing distribution contracts were to expire, their contracts would be immediately amended to require agency pricing of eBooks. Any reseller who refused would have their supply of eBooks cut off. The first skirmish was between Amazon and Macmillan--Macmillan implemented agency pricing and Amazon briefly stopped sales of all Macmillan titles, but soon relented. That opened the floodgates, and Amazon agreed to agency terms from the four other publishers (although it has refused to accept agency terms from any additional publishers except for Random House).

So far as consumers are concerned, the net result of agency pricing is that prices of eBooks from the Big 6 publishers have gone up substantially, from $9.99 to as much as $16.99. eBooks from the Big 6 were once less expensive than paperbacks; now, in many cases, they're more expensive. In some cases, eBooks are even more expensive than the discounted price of hardcovers.

Both the U.S. Justice Department and the European Union are investigating Apple and the five publishers for price-fixing. The external evidence is that all five publishers implemented the same pricing policies at the same time, and all five threatened to cut off supply to any reseller who refused to agree to the new terms. In Walter Isaacson's biography of Steve Jobs, Jobs is quoted as saying:
"We told the publishers, 'We'll go to the agency model, where you set the price, and we get our 30%, and yes, the customer pays a little more, but that's what you want anyway.' 

Jobs continued, "They went to Amazon and said, 'You're going to sign an agency contract or we're not going to give you the books."
That certainly gives the appearance of an organized effort to raise prices, orchestrated by Apple and executed by the five publishers. Publishers and their defenders argue that agency pricing is necessary to prevent Amazon from getting a monopoly in the eBook market, which, while only 20% or so of the "Big 6" publishers' sales, is likely to become 50% or more in a few years. A monopoly would give Amazon control over pricing. Advocates of the government's position say that the actions of Apple and the five publishers have substantially increased consumer prices for eBooks, and that it's hypocritical for companies like Barnes & Noble to support agency pricing when they used wholesale pricing to wipe out their independent competitors.

One of the most important things to understand about U.S. antitrust enforcement is that it's illegal to be a monopolist, but it's not illegal to have the potential of becoming a monopolist. At the time that Amazon had a 90% eBook market share, the eBook market was new ("nascent") and both small in units sold and dollar volume.  The Justice Department almost never goes after a monopoly in a nascent market. Today, Amazon has between 60% and 65% of the U.S. eBook market--a big share to be sure, but not a monopoly. If agency pricing went away tomorrow and Amazon went back to its old pricing strategy, it's very unlikely that the millions of people who own Nooks and eBooks from Barnes & Noble, Apple and other resellers would throw away their eReaders, tablets and eBook collections and start buying from Amazon. So, Amazon didn't have a monopoly, doesn't have a monopoly now and isn't likely to have one in the future.

On the other hand, price-fixing is illegal, and it doesn't even require a formal agreement among the parties to prove that price-fixing exists. There's no question that agency pricing has raised priced for consumers, at least for titles from the "Big 6". (Statistics rolled out by some defenders of agency pricing that show that eBook prices have dropped also include titles from self-publishing authors, some of whom sell their eBooks for as little as $0.99.)

Publishers argue that Amazon is a very difficult company to do business with, and all the evidence I've seen supports them. However, tough bargainers are a fact of life: Wal-Mart has made the lives of vendors miserable for years while pursuing an "Always the Lowest Price" strategy, but vendors have learned to live with it. Taking illegal action to prevent a company from becoming a monopoly is still illegal.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, February 05, 2010

Is the $9.99 eBook dead? Not at all

Earlier today, Gizmodo pronounced the $9.99 eBook dead, as a result of an announcement by Hachette that it is joining Macmillan (and probably HarperCollins) in instituting an agency pricing model where resellers such as Amazon and Apple will get a 30% commission on sales of eBooks at prices set by the publishers themselves. (I've learned from a source that Penguin is working on its own agency plan to be announced in a few months.) Of the Big 6 trade publishers, only Random House and Simon & Schuster would be without an agency model for sales of eBooks.

In response, Amazon has a number of tactics that it can execute. First, it can limit distribution of print titles from publishers who impose agency deals. The "nuclear option" that Amazon exercised against Macmillan backfired because the company "capitulated" almost immediately. However, a longer-term strategy of purchasing fewer print copies of Macmillan's titles, letting them go out of stock more often and taking longer to refill inventories would serve the same purpose. If the eBooks are available day-and-date with print versions and in unlimited quantities, while the print versions are often out of stock, it would provide more incentive for readers to move to eBooks.

Amazon could also play one publisher against the other, offering more promotional support and even co-op funds to help pay for newspaper, magazine and television advertising, in return for more pricing flexibility. Those publishers who cooperate would increase their revenues and/or decrease their costs, and would put pressure on other publishers to fall in line.

Finally, I expect Amazon to get even more aggressive in pursuing electronic rights from established authors. Many established authors or their estates have contracts with publishers that predate the eBook era, so they retain their eBook rights. There is a strong body of legal precedents and settlements that favor the authors and estates in cases where their print publishers claimed eBook rights that they had not specifically been granted. Amazon can price these titles at $9.99 or less and still offer extremely attractive financial deals to authors.

In short, the $9.99 eBook is far from dead, and Amazon still has many ways to prevail in the long term. 

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]