Industry Analysis Lecture Notes
Industry Analysis Lecture Notes
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Warren Buffett: When a management with a reputation for brilliance tackles a business with a reputation for poor fundamental economics, it is the reputation of the business that remains intact.
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A firms profits depend on its industry and its position within its industry.
INDUSTRY PROFITS Industries differ in their average profitability Some differences stem from risk or business cycle fluctuations A significant portion of the variation, however, derives from the fundamental differences in the economic characteristics of different industries To help understand and explain these differences, we will develop a framework to conduct an industry-level analysis - specifically, The Five Forces FIRM-LEVEL PROFITS Firms that face the same basic economic characteristics can nevertheless vary considerably in regards to their profit margins This variation can be explained by differences in firms strategic choices In later sessions, we will develop a framework to analyze firm-level variation in 29 profits - notably, competitive advantage
What is an industry?
Collection of firms whose products (or services) are perfect or near perfect substitutes In practice: Anyone who produces a substitute product is a competitor. Two products tend to be close substitutes when: they have similar performance characteristics they have similar occasion for use they are sold in the same geographic area
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Performance Characteristics
Performance characteristics describe what the product does to the customer Example from automobiles
Seating capacity Curb appeal Power and handling Reliability
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Geographic Area
Identical products in two different geographic markets will not be substitutes due to transportation costs Bulky products like cement cannot be transported over long distances to benefit from geographic price difference
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Px / Px If yx is positive, consumers purchase more of Y when the price of X increases. Goods X and Y would then be close substitutes. Firms selling these goods would be in the same industry. Example: % change in demand for Dells Alienware caused by a 1% increase in the price of Apple MacBook. If high and positive, then Alienware and MacBook are close substitutes. Dell and Apple are competitors in the same industry. Example: % change in demand for eReaders caused by a 1% increase in the price of laptops. If positive, then eReaders and laptops are substitute products. Are firms selling these products in the same industry? Or are firms selling eReaders in a different industry than firms selling laptops, and thus we should rather 36 consider firms selling eReaders in the Force of Substitutes?
yx
Q y / Q y
Empirical Approaches to Competitor Identification Firms in the same Standard Industrial Classification Products and services are identified by a seven digit code Each digit represents a finer degree of classification
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Industry Boundaries
Challenges of industry definition industries evolve structure and firms change over time at what level of aggregation? e.g., beer vs. craft beer segment domestic vs. global? an industry may split into strategic groups
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Prices Charged
United Airlines
U.S. Airways
Low Low
Routes Serviced
High
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Industries are often described by the degree of market concentration Monopoly is one extreme with the highest concentration - one seller Perfect competition is the other extreme with innumerable sellers
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Perfect Competition
Many sellers who sell a homogenous good Many well informed buyers Consumers can costlessly shop around Sellers can enter and exit costlessly Each firm faces infinitely elastic demand
Complementors
Government?
to determine: 1) (for incumbents) how to compete 2) (for entrants) if this is an attractive industry to enter, and how
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Business B
B1 = 60% B2 = 30% B3 = 10% Bigger players are less likely to lower prices and go after B3. B3 can aim for being a niche player with potentially high profits.
In an industry with many sellers: Small players will be tempted to lower prices in order to gain market share. If all think the same (and they will because collusive agreements are less likely) then 49 price competition is more likely to be intense in industry A than B.
Homogeneous Products
There are three sources of increased revenue when price is lowered
Customers buying more New customers buying Customers switching from the competitors
Excess Capacity
If industry has excess capacity, then in the long run, prices fall below average cost
Some firms may choose to exit rather than sustain long-run economic losses
However, if exit is not an option (because capacity is industry specific- that is, it can only be used to produce in this industry) then excess capacity and losses (caused by prices being below average costs) will persist for a while Firms with excess capacity might be under pressure to boost sales and often can rapidly expand output to steal business from rivals, leading to price competition Example: During economic downturns, the airlines have substantial excess capacity on many routes. Because consumers perceive airlines as selling undifferentiated products, each airline can fill empty seats by undercutting rivals prices and stealing their 51 customers.
Economics As entry occurs, Q and/or P decline (or C rises) which decreases = (P-C)*Q Examples Easy Entry: Restaurants Difficult entry: Auditing/accounting; Commercial Aircraft Manufacturing
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Diseconomies of Scale- Examples: Physical limits to efficient size Managerial diseconomies Worker motivation
Cost per unit of output
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The cost per unit of output declines by a constant % (typically 5-30%) each time cumulative output doubles
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Force 3: Substitutes are analogous to entry, but with a different product instead of a different producer.
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Force 3: Substitutes are analogous to entry, but with a different product instead of a different producer.
Economics Substitutes affect the slope of an industrys demand curve The existence of good substitutes for an industrys product implies a flat/elastic demand curve, which results in a lower market price, which decreases Examples Industrieswithgoodsubstitutes:Departmentstoresfaced bycategorykillers Industrieswithpoorsubstitutes:Disposablediapers 57
Force 4: Supplier power is the ability of suppliers to extract profits by obtaining high prices Characteristics ofthemarketthatthreatenprofits throughsupplierpower
Relativelyfewsuppliers Inputsaredifficulttosubstitute Firmsmakespecificinvestmentsinordertouse inputspurchasedfromsupplier Supplierhasabilitytointegrateforward Note:Evenifaninputisvitalforproduction,supplier powerwillnotnecessarilybehighinanindustry
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Force 4: Supplier power is the ability of suppliers to extract profits by obtaining high prices Economics
Supplierpowerresultsinhighinputcostsforfirms, increasingC, whichdecreases =(PC)*Q
Examples
Highsupplierpower:Automotivefirmsfacehigh supplierpowerfromunionizedworkers Highsupplierpower:PCmanufacturersfacehigh supplierspowerfromMicrosoftandIntel Lowsupplierpower:Cigarettemanufacturersface lowsupplierpowerfromtobaccofarmers 59
Force 5: Buyer power is the ability of buyers to extract profits by obtaining low prices
Characteristics ofthemarketthatthreatenprofits throughbuyerpower
Relativelyfewbuyers,eachaccountingforalarge fractionofsales Firmsmustmakespecificinvestmentsinordertoserve theneedsofbuyers Buyershavetheabilitytointegratebackwardsinto supplyingtheirowninputs Note:Buyerpowerisrelatedtorivalrywithcompetitors; lumpysales,lowswitchingcost,etc.tendtoincrease buyerpower.
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Force 5: Buyer power is the ability of buyers to extract profits by obtaining low prices Economics
Buyerpowerresultsinlowpricesforfirms, decreasingP,whichdecreases =(PC)*Q
Examples
Highbuyerpower:Procter&Gamblefacehigh buyerpowerwhensellingtoWalMart Lowbuyerpower:CableTVprovidersfacelowbuyer powerwhenprovidingcableservicetolocal 61 customers(households)
demand
time
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Examples
Computer Manufacturers & Software Makers
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Force
Entry Substitutes Supplier Power Buyer Power Rivalry
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