Next-Gen Shift Costing Sony and Microsoft
The shift to the next generation of consoles is costing their parent corporations dearly. GameDailyBiz has an article up claiming that the gaming division at Sony may lose almost $900 million this year, thanks to rollout costs for the PS3. The 360, already in the marketplace, is looking pretty solid. However, in among increased Microsoft revenue announcements (up 13% for the quarter over last year) and a healthy number of shipped systems by the end of June (almost 5.5 million) is a hard statistic. From the Gamastura article: "As for specifics on the Xbox 360 and Xbox's financials, the company's Home and Entertainment division, which includes the Microsoft Xbox video game console system, PC games, the Home Products Division, and TV platform products for the interactive television industry, lost $388 million for the quarter on $1.06 billion in revenue, a sharp increase from the $175 million loss the previous year." A reminder that these systems may be successful, but they're costing to get out there.
The consoles they're selling are merely part of the infrastrucutre of their new online gaming plans.
perpetually dwelling in the -1 pits
Well, shit, there's your problem.
there is no need to sign your posts. this isn't usenet. your username is right there above your post. stop it.
Where have I heard this before?
Sony will be losing money maybe for a few months on the ps3, then like its' ancestors, they'll break even and be rolling in cash.
sig?
Meanwhile at the big N, they have decided to put out a cheap system that most people will be able to afford, and forego all the expesive research and recalls associated with the leading edge technology the other guys are using. Also, their marketing campaign consists of not telling anything to anyone, and only release details about the system that will make people think about the yet to be released system all day. The shroud of mystery surrounding the Revo/Wii is better than any of Sony's/MS's proclamations that they have the fastest processors in existence.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
It is such a pity that I have decided to run to buy all their consoles. Poor Sony.. they lose all their money.. ;(
So, you mean to tell me that it costs money to produce a good before you are able to start selling it? I thought it was free.
The stockholders are getting impatient. Microsoft stock has been flat for five years now. It's definitely not a growth company any more. Trying to grow into the entertainment sector has been a financial disaster. Microsoft is a high-margin company trying to grow in a low-margin area, and that almost never works.
Wii love profit.
Does anyone know who was the first console manufacturer that decided to initially sell its console at a loss? I know that it wasn't always the case. I don't believe the NES, SNES or SMS were sold at a loss.
Would be curious to find out!
This little piggy is in the market, (Microsoft)
this little piggy has yet to come, (Sony)
this little piggy only had some things, (N-Gage)
this little piggy had none, (Phantom)
and this little piggy when "Wii Wii Wii" all the way to the bank! (Nintendo)
Okay, so I need to work on my rhyming.
Microsoft is sitting on a mutli multi billion dollar war chest. They don't call it a war chest for nothing. They are prepared to lose another billion on the xbox 360 (like most accounts say they did with Xbox) and from all the financials to date it looks like they'll be no where close to losing that as sales are continuing at a healthy pace. Do you honestly think the "3 versions to get it right" myth is a complete falsehood? MS is in this game for keeps. The 360 is a healthy, fully supported platform with tons of developer support. MS wants to be in the living room, they NEED to be in the living room so they can sell you a MS Media Center PC to be in the office that can beam all that MS DRM'd WMA content you bought down to your MS Entertainment Center. This is a long term growth strategy into a still emerging market. All the pieces are coming into play (for-pay downloadable TV shows, music, movies), and MS wants a piece of the action. They want to be the bridge between content providers and your television, and if it takes losing a billion on some games to get there they are going to do it.
Dvorak? Is that you?
Or maybe Microsoft's stock has been flat for 5 years because they haven't released a major OS in... 5 years.
I dunno, do you see a pattern maybe? Just a bit? Core buisness? Yes.. hmm.. yes..
I was in Best Buy a couple of days ago, and it's clear that Microsoft is spending enormous amounts of money to buy shelf space and display areas in major retailers. Custom plexiglass display stands, special silver and white shelving, prime end-of-row positioning, big display TVs, couches, posters on the windows, the works.
I didn't see anyone actually buying anything 360 related, though. Everyone was browsing the PS2, PSP and Nintendo handheld areas.
GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
Simple fact is, shops are going to be flooded when Wii starts hitting the shelves
At some point the stock holders are going to want the X-Box division to actually turn a profit, not just increase gross revenue. It can't just bleed money forever, and right now its not just bleeding, its gushing money. So the question is, does Microsoft actually have any plans to make any money on the X-Box? It seems they don't.
M$ can handle the enormous costs. Sony is barely scraping by right now with the hardware costs of the failed PSP. The PS3 costs and failure will be their undoing. Never underestrimate M$ viciousness, when they smell blood they go for the kill.
Here is an article I wrote last year about the coming decline of Sony marketshare in the game biz, and the resulting overall financial disaster for Sony Corp as a whole.
Oh and in case anyone wants real, comprehensive financial data, here is a chart that shows profits/loss for Nintendo, Sony (game division) and M$ (game division) by quarter for the last 3 years.
MS lost about 1 billion PER year (well they were 100 million or so shy) on the xbox (it may have whittled down a bit in the end) and the xbox360 sales aren't doing any better and actually much much worse in japan.
I'd say they pretty much failed after pissing away the billions.
On the other hand the ps2 has been enormously profitable. Sony always has a massive startup cost for their consoles as they are a hardware company and spend a ton at the very beginning on research and in building factories.
Hmmm... Pie...
Click
Yes, because we all know that the stock market (just like those posting on slashdot) act in a reasonable and intelligent fashion.
... my wallet will thank you in 6 months)
(Ps: I'd like to thank all of the idiots who sold off MS stock today at a 12% discount
I certainly ain't a fanboy, or MS lackey, but I can give credit where credit is due.
Anyway, some things to remember about Microsoft's current strategy and direction:
- as parent poster says, they're sitting on a cash warchest, which is NOT going to be wasted, but rather invested
- the home user desktop is still largely their domain. This means a lot of game/app developers
- DirectX is a very mature and stable platform to develop on
- DirectX for Xbox (whatever MS decides to call it today or in the future, it's still the same to me) and PC will very quickly converge to a common base, thereby making cross-development costs drop
- their purchases of existing gamehouses to add to their own entertainment division continues unabated
- all the metrics they learn from running their own different online services (Live, MSN, ad services, Xbox Live!, etc.) will continue to give them better hints on where the consumer entertainment market is heading
- they're pushing their own formats for video/audio, APIs of all sorts, etc. like crazy (it's basically trying to get the hardware to support their formats, which makes them defacto standards a la DirectX on current video cards)
- they keep rapidly developing and maturing the
.NET platform, and they're quite happy to let Mono keep trundling along (in the end, it doesn't cost them anything to magically support all the *nix platforms then)
Quite frankly, as far as their direction is concerned, it's about going for a high-visibility, high-click-rate market segment.It should go without saying that they want to hold all the keys, and keep the content creators in check. Xbox Live is just the start of the next generation. I've got little doubt that a .NET will eventually make it to Xbox. Maybe not the this or the next generation, but it's getting there.
Like it or not, but Microsoft is using a hardware agnostic approach for the future. They definitely won't be tied to x86 forever, and that's pretty obvious with the current hardware they had developed for the Xbox 360.
It's really now a matter of how well they manage in the execution.
At some point the stock holders are going to want the X-Box division to actually turn a profit, not just increase gross revenue. It can't just bleed money forever, and right now its not just bleeding, its gushing money. So the question is, does Microsoft actually have any plans to make any money on the X-Box? It seems they don't.
It's not unheard of to have a division of your company devoted to loss-leader activities. As long as it's valuable to some higher grand strategy (in this case, moving into the entertainment and content industries and into more and more home appliances, thus ensuring embedded markets for MS software, and perhaps new subscription revenue streams) and management can convince the shareholders to trust them, the Xbox division can simply bleed money. And as a small shareholder since '96 and having seen the votes, I can say that nobody's considering deviating away from the "core team" and its vision any time soon. Oh, and about the flat stock price, people forget the big dividends they paid through most of that time. Not this past year, sad to say...
In any case, I'm sure MS (and its shareholders) would be tickled pink to have the X-Box division turn a profit. But with the amount of money they've got sitting around and with the long-term situation as it is, I don't perceive a real serious concern about its losses.
Given a choice between free speech and free beer, most people will take the beer.
The parent is correct. The key to microsoft being in the console market is simple, Microsoft intends to eventually become the only player in the market. They want to Nintendo and Sony out of the console hardware business, or more aptly the console O/S business. Once they've established control of the consoles, they'll raise prices and use their standard tricks to destroy anyone who threatens their newly-lucrative console monopoly.
Of course, the console monopoly is just a first step in building a digital home industry controlled exclusively by Microsoft.
And no, it's not paranoia, it's just the best case scenario for Microsoft.
There's a lot of roadblocks that are blocking them from achieving this. One of the roadblocks is the fact that their media pc/extender software is garbage. I attended an industry demo funded my Microsoft and was so unbelievably underwhelmed that I left halfway through. You bought a $300 interface box that could only do one thing... Stream video. I mean what's the point of having a house wide network if you can't run an IM/Mail/Web client on your TV. They also rigged the demonstration by having a second hidden PC stream video to their second television (it was hidden under a drop cloth, behind the "digital living room" couch). Lame.
Fanatically anti-fanatical
The sky is Blue.
Shift happens. Fire it up.
Right, and now with the 360 you don't need the $300 box anymore. They've cannabalized another failing division to sell a game box AND a media extender in one.
When speaking strictly from a console point of view I wouldn't be surprised if Sony had the upperhand in the home console department. WHen you think about the last three years that 1.252 billion includes the money pissed away on the psp as you mentinoed. But 9/10 times the games nintendo has on the top charts in japan are portable titles. I wouln't be surprised if it was the same here in North America.
When you take out the portables i'm sure the numbers will get a lot closer.
But your right from a business standpoint. Nintendo tries to go for the most conservative/cheap route for hardware and still make it up with low cost development games.
Sony on the otherhand is almost always try's to fulfill some crazy grand vision. It's the only way you can justify the 400 million they spent just on R&D for the cell chip. That's not something you'd expect from either Nintendo or MS who would just buy the best (or maybe few grades down ala Nintendo) processor they can put in their console.
Although, Sony's hardware looks like a huge clusterfuck (ps3) it's only slightly more riskier. The EE in the ps2 cost the same to fab (the die size is almost identical) at launch time as the cell and was also quite radical and different from the psx and all other processors around at the time. The dvd was still fairly new 5-6 years ago and high end players cost several hundred dollars. They still pulled it off...
I'm pretty confident they'll pull it off this time too. I hope they don't go crazier in 5-6 years. Every generation they took a bigger and more ambitious risk, if they keep up with this pattern they'd have to spend a crazy amount on the ps4 hardware development and launch.
Hmmm... Pie...
Which console loses the most money.
The reason I ask is I don't think I can afford three consoles. It seems to me I want to buy whichever one loses the most.
Don't I want my console company to lose money? If they are making money it is coming from me. I would much rather have underpriced hardware.
Microsoft was forced to jump into the x box line because it's management had no other ideas of where to successfully expand the business (they have managed to pick quite few losers) and where to make up for the significant and rapidly growing competition from open source in it's business divisions. Microsoft's past success was driven by IBM and Intel and these two companies seem pretty unwilling to create future success stories for microsoft and are much more interested in creating success for themselves.
The media centre with a licence fee for each and every bit of content is dead, the media companies have woken up and decided that the billions of dollars of DRM licence fees is better off in their pockets rather than in microsoft's pockets and the current aim is an open source solution because it provides the most effective means to ensure that no single company gains control of media distribution and that they get cheap, licence free, DRM solution that they can control.
Most of the media owning companies who have a future are now looking to or already heavily into competition with microsoft (MSN) and it is pretty stupid to be feeding money to the competiton rather than cutting off it's air supply, for example they are far better off using and promoting a home branded open office solution rather then picking up a few pennies in microsoft advertising that will just end a creating more costs/competition for themselves.
Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
if you get a chance, could you hit the Saturn wikipedia article and/or the gamefaqs faq and tack on something. Wow, it's hard to imagine someone with that much Saturn knowledge outside of Sega. Did you work on games for it?
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
Sega's already caved in, now only selling coin-ops and games; I suggest the next console from Nintendo will be the company's last. The days of being able to rely on the sale of games consoles and game software to run a business are over - there may never be another SNK/Sega/Atari/Nintendo. I say that's sad.
Great. So here I go, getting a 4-Informative for sitting around licking Ballmer's balls, and what do I get in return?
MSFT down more than 11%Wonderful.
Given a choice between free speech and free beer, most people will take the beer.