Profits are under pressure despite demand growth

Symptom: Profits in the industry have been flat or down for several years while demand has grown.

Implications for the market:

  • The falloff in profits is the result of capacity overexpansion.

    • Contrary to common belief, industry hostility is usually brought on not by demand falloff but by competitor overexpansion.

    • The high profitability enjoyed by the industry in the past was the primary cause of the current hostile situation because high margins encouraged existing competitors to expand capacity and encouraged other firms to enter the industry.

  • A decline in product service or quality may have worsened the situation. Established competitors increase the likelihood of new competitors entering an industry by allowing their products or service to slip in quality while profits were high and easy. It is simpler to attack an industry with slipping products and high prices than to attack an industry suffering only from high prices.

  • This situation promises to get much worse before it gets better. Once competitor expansion has started, prices must get quite low to stop it. Competitors will expand in marginal ways for some time because prices rarely get low enough to discourage this type of expansion.

Recommended Reading
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Analyses:

Perspectives: Conclusions we have reached as a result of our long-term study and observations.