Nintendo Puts Business In Brazil On Hiatus
jones_supa writes: Nintendo has announced that it will end distribution of its consoles and games in Brazil. In a statement, Nintendo attributed the move to high import duties, which makes doing feasible business difficult. The company could avoid those duties with a local manufacturing operation, but has chosen not to establish one, presumably for the costs involved. In a statement e-mailed to Polygon, Nintendo of America said that the company's distributor for Latin America would no longer send products to Brazil, but it would continue to distribute Nintendo goods to other parts of South America. Nintendo will also keep monitoring the evolution of the business environment in Brazil and evaluate how to best serve Brazilian customers in the future.
Environment for electronics and just about anything else. http://www.insidesources.com/c... . The problem is this doesn't serve them well. Trying to recreate the rest of the worlds industries internally just insures they have many second rate products, or have to pay hefty premiums for the tools they need to get things done. Really surprising after all these years they haven't tried to emulate more successful models, ala Japan, Singapore or Taiwan and encourage their industries to pursue ventures where they can have a competitive advantage.
Must suck to have just received a new Nintendo for the holidays, then have Nintendo cut you off from the supply of new games.
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
evaluate how to best serve Brazilian customers in the future.
Only they won't have any brazilian customers, they will cede the whole market to microsoft and sony... Any existing customers they did have will be angered as they're now unable to buy any games, and will end up going to a competitor and/or modding their console to play pirated games.
http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
Q: Why is starting a comment in the Subject: line incredibly irritating?
Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
The company could avoid those duties with a local manufacturing operation, but has chosen not to establish one, presumably for the costs involved.
No, it's for the chaos involved. Brazil is ridiculous. People get kidnapped off the streets for a paltry few hundred dollars' ransom. I wouldn't open a factory there if it were guaranteed to spontaneously generate gold nuggets. It's not like it's that big a market anyway, their economy is terribly, horribly uneven.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
In a statement e-mailed to Polygon, Nintendo of America said that the company's distributor for Latin America would no longer send products to Brazil, but it would continue to distribute Nintendo goods to other parts of South America.
So in other words, Nintendo's legitimate subsidiary cannot compete with gray-market smugglers who evade the tariff to bring in consoles and games from the neighboring countries.
So they're just going to pull out and let the smugglers be their de-facto distribution channel.
This means that the policy is working up to a point, but it doesn't mean that it's a good thing,
Got them moderator blues I blieve I walk out the do', With these mod-points I been gettin', I 'most never post no mo'
Some people are on a crusade against using the word "steal" to refer to copyright infringement, patent infringement, or trademark infringement. Larceny, copyright infringement, patent infringement, and trademark infringement are defined in separate areas of law, and they aren't even crimes under the same circumstances. A judge agreed that the term "theft" misleads jurors.
Region locking isn't always about differential pricing. It could also be about the publisher of an adaptation respecting the rights of an upstream author. For example, a video game adaptation of a novel whose author died between 50 and 70 years ago is legal in Canada but not in the European Union because copyright terms differ. So is a film that uses a piece of music whose author died between 50 and 70 years ago. Or an upstream author or publisher may have already sold exclusive rights in other regions to other publishers who specialize in the tastes of a particular region, which is why Jump Super Stars didn't make it to North America and why Netflix is in so few countries.
I am working for a small (65 employees) company in Europe that serves customers with locations around the world. Of those locations that we have to deal with, Brazil is the worst nightmare.
Money (taxes, customs duties) is a solvable problem: it just costs the customer more. But getting definitive answers about the process, reliable delivery schedules or any kind of planning dependability is extremely hard. Due to the bureaucratic overhead, nobody there wants to deal with it.
I would rather skip the business than ruining our reputation through uncontrollable external influence.
Brazil has a longstanding special relationship with Japan. For generations, Japanese have treated Brazil as a frontier for settlement, with a long list of accompanying trade deals. Having a comeant the size of Nintendo pull out is a major blow to the old relationship.
Producing them there doesn't mean that they're producing them there profitably. Obviously the goal is to produce them profitably or for the entire business surrounding the devices to be profitable (ie, paid software making up a slight loss on the initial device) but that doesn't mean that they've actually achieved profitability.
It's kind of interesting, the various free-trade zones in the Americas. Part of the reason that Mexico is so popular is that it sits in at least two zones, the NAFTA one and the Latin American one, so that qualifying products can be sold all of the way from Ellesmere Island to Tierra Del Fuego without facing hefty tariffs. That's why so many automakers set up shop in northern Mexico, it's a very short distance to ship new cars to the United States as the largest market and up to Canada, but inexpensive to sell them all of the South American countries too.
I'm a little surprised that Brazil's tariff policy on electronics exists given their participation in their free-trade zone.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
This has nothing to do with the relations between Brazil and Japan and everything to do with the fact that Nintendo is dying. This company has shown time and again that all they can do is release tired useless gimmick after tired useless gimmick and pass that off as "innovation". They release the same games every single year with absolutely no change and force their customers to pay a massive premium. The Wii was a massive joke, except no one laughed. Their 3DS handheld has less power than the original PlayStation Portable and costs 3 times as much and has no games. The Wii U has less power than the original XBOX much less the 360. Don't get me started on that abomination of a controller that weighs as much as a cinder-block, has a range of about 1 foot, and a battery life measured in minutes and not hours.
Nintendo is the corporate equivalent of the walking dead. I doubt they will even be around in five years. Even their own shareholders can't stand them. They would just be better selling off all their IP to a company that knows how to actually produce something, like Disney. Then Miyamoto and Iwata should do the world a favor and commit sepuku to atone for the massive failures they have inflicted on the game industry.
Ooo, this should be fun. I'mma go ahead and debunk basically everything you've just said that can be proven with numbers.
The Wii was a massive joke.: FALSE. The Wii has sold over 100 million units, and about 9 times as much software (so, about 9 games per console. Not bad!)
The 3DS handheld has less power than the original Playstation Portable and costs 3 times as much and has no games: FALSE. The 3DS runs an ARM11 Dual-core at 268 Mhz compared to the PSP's CPU held back to 222MHz. The only way it's more powerful is through mods/hacking. In addition, the 3DS has had over 186 million software units sold, compared to psp's 5.2 million. In addition, the PSP retailed for $199. The 3DS retailed for $249, and later went down to $149. So, no, not three times more.
The Wii U has less power than the original XBOX much less the 360: FALSE.The WII U is lcocked at 1.24 GHz, compared to the original Xbox's 733Mhz. Now, the Wii U does have a slower clock than the 360, but has more memory and a higher GPU clock. Raw CPU power will only get you so far, and the Wii U is more than capable of out-shining the 360.
Controller weighs as much as a cinder-block, has a range of 1 foot and battery life measured in minutes, not hours.: FALSE. The Wii U gamepad weighs about 1.1 pounds. Cinder blocks, on the other hand, usually come in at 30 to 35 pounds. The range goes up to 27.5 feet, but typically works best up to 15. The Battery life CAN be measured in minutes, but only if you consider that 180 to 300 minutes a better way of saying it than 3 to 5 hours.
Nintendo is the corporate equivalent of the walking dead. I doubt they'll even be around in five years.: FALSE. Nintendo has enough money saved up to last 52 years, assuming an annual deficit of 250 million. That seems unlikely given that they had a profit of over