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News
Global DVD Market Continues to Expand and Mature
Rapidly, According to IDC (27/10/2003)
DVD players are one of the most successful consumer
electronics products of all time, and the DVD market has seen unprecedented
growth since their debut in 1997. Largely driven by rapidly falling
component prices, DVD playback has been integrated into a wide array
of consumer electronics devices. According to a new report from
IDC, this trend will continue with DVD recording functionality during
the 2002 to 2007 forecast period. DVD recording will be a fundamental
driver of the DVD market as the average selling price of DVD recorders
falls from $699 in 2002 to $126 in 2007, and dual playback and recording
functionality quickly become the default feature set of DVD players,
just as they have been for VCRs.
"The DVD market will continue to exhibit
strong growth through 2006, driven by falling costs, diverse form
factors, and widespread adoption of DVD recorders by consumers,"
said Susan Kevorkian, senior analyst with IDC's Consumer Devices
and Technologies program. "However, the market will not sustain
this kind of growth indefinitely. In 2007, IDC expects total DVD
player unit shipments to decline modestly for the first time due
to growing saturation worldwide."
According to IDC's market forecast, worldwide
shipments of DVD recorder decks will surpass DVD play-only decks
in 2007, with DVD recorder deck revenues surging ahead of play-only
deck revenues in 2005. As prices fall, DVD recording functionality
will also be integrated into more and more device form factors,
including combo DVD players and home theater in-a-box (HTiB) with
DVD. Although the growth prospects for specific categories will
vary, IDC expects worldwide unit shipments of recorder decks to
grow at a 126% compound annual growth rate during the forecast period.
Other market accelerators through 2006 will
include the integration of innovative features sets, such as hard
drive-based digital video recording (DVR), DVD-Audio and SACD support,
and home networking technology. While the market for high definition
(HD) DVD recording devices is also expected to grow modestly both
worldwide and in the U.S. during the forecast period, a number of
barriers to widespread adoption must be overcome.
"Retail prices are falling rapidly across
every DVD player category," Kevorkian added. "To succeed in this
environment and insulate revenues, consumer electronics manufacturers
must differentiate their products by offering unique features sets
and form factors while promoting fair use of content by consumers."
The IDC study, Worldwide and U.S. DVD Player
Forecast and Analysis, 2002- 2007: Video and Beyond (IDC #30105),
provides a forecast and analysis of the worldwide and U.S. DVD markets.
It also reviews recent market trends and consumer survey data from
IDC's annual Consumer Devices and Technologies Survey. Market categories
covered in the report include DVD play-only decks, recorder decks,
portable, combination, home theater in-a-box with DVD, DVD shelf
systems, and automotive DVD devices. This forecast also breaks out
DVD recorders by other form factors, namely combo and HTiB, as well
as high definition DVD players. The report also includes unit shipments
and revenue for DVD-enabled videogame consoles, but does not consider
PC DVD drives.
www.idc.com
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