Inside Redbox is the #1 "Unofficial" Redbox Online Community for Redbox Codes, News and more. Inside Redbox is not affiliated with Redbox Automated Retail, LLC.

DVD Price Wars 2009

price warThere’s a new war being waged for DVD retail dollars, and the winners are consumers looking for a home entertainment bargain. In the last few days, three of the largest DVD retailers in the industry have gotten into one of the most heated online pricing battles in recent memory.

Last Thursday, Walmart’s website slashed the prices of ten of the most anticipated DVD releases of the year–including Star Trek, Angels & Demons and Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince–to $10. Within hours, Amazon and Target matched the prices on their own sites, which has since prompted Walmart to further lower its prices on the titles to $9.98.

Walmart.com spokesman Ravi Jariwala, whose company has vowed to become the low-cost leader in online retail, says Walmart is not ruling out further price drops:

“We remain committed to offering our customers the lowest prices online at Walmart.com, and will continue to adjust our pricing accordingly on these movie titles,”

According to the Los Angeles Times, the wholesale rate paid by the three retailers for the discounted DVDs remains unchanged at about $18. This means that while the retailers will take a major hit on each DVD sold, the studios will maintain the same profit margin on each disc. This is a welcome proposition for movie studios, as a DVD sale is much more profitable for them than a rental and this loss-leading price war is sure to boost the flagging DVD sell-through market.

In a year that has seen Redbox arouse the studios’ wrath with its rapid growth and alleged destabilization of the rental market, studio heads are no doubt applauding Walmart, Target and Amazon’s actions and hoping that DVD sales will swell their coffers once again this quarter.

Will such cut-rate pricing get you to purchase more DVDs, Insiders? Does a pricing battle of this magnitude so early in the holiday season make you wonder what else is in store? Leave your thoughts in the comments.

[via The Wall Street Journal and the L.A. Times]

16 Responses to “DVD Price Wars 2009”

  1. Member [Join Now]
    Mark [rb123456789]

    If the studios and the anti-Redbox people on this site are consistent, then instead of praising Walmart they will be attacking them. New recent hit DVDs for $10 has to be seen as be a huge devaluation of the DVD product.

  2. Visitor [Join Now]
    The [visitor]

    The movies suck so bad lately there aren’t any worth even $1.

  3. Member [Join Now]
    starman15317

    dvds need to be much cheaper. the other day i bought the new phantasm II dvd for $20 and the only special feature is the trailer!

  4. Visitor [Join Now]
    John Small [visitor]

    As a promo, this is fine. If the retailers want to lose money in the hopes of attracting customers, so be it.

    If they want to do this long term then it is a destructive thing and I think you will see the studios stepping in.

    • Visitor [Join Now]
      12345678 [visitor]

      The studios stepping in to stop WALMART? Get real John Small. Unfortunately for them they placed their preverbial balls in WalMarts vicegrip a LONG time ago and all big blue has to do is squeeze a little bit and they get whatever they want. Unless big blue starts losing market share that will never change.

      They wont say boo to walmart….
      I just read a story where at a conference they all agreed that the economy has led to the downturn in sales…not a friggin PEEP about redbox! HAHA
      We know redbox hurts you as an independent video store owner but I think the big boys are going to run out of ammo sooner than later against our red pal here.

  5. Visitor [Join Now]
    Joe Schmuck [visitor]

    But they WON’T be attracting customers to the stores.

    THIS PRICING IS FOR ON-LINE PRE-ORDERS, ONLY !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Once the street date arrives, the pricing will be higher.

  6. Visitor [Join Now]
    Johnny Blaze [visitor]

    I will buy blu-rays for $10, not DVDs

  7. Visitor [Join Now]
    jamie foxx [visitor]

    hollyshit you guys are bunch of facial

  8. Member [Join Now]
    clinty1980

    I checked and am pretty sure this is a bare bones dvd i.e. only the movie, no extras. To me it is a fair price at $10 but it is not really a great deal either in my opinion when you can rent it for cheaper if all you want to do is see the movie. Also I don’t really think it is a price war when Walmart lists the dvds at $10 in the beginning and then goes to $9.98 to undercut amazon and target. Wow a whole 2 pennies saved yippie! I don’t know where I will spend all that cash.

  9. Member [Join Now]
    amtj03

    First that is a lie, stores pay about $3-9 for a dvd, then they mark it up 200-300% that where you pay about $17-22 for it. The $9.98 dvds are just the movie, no added features, and probably just the theatrical version. Walmart makes it rep by selling cheap quality for cheap prices. Amazon is a online monster, they have to compare with the lowest prices to make the sales. As far as target goes to cut loses they started doing complete prices matches. So loyal customers can pay what the other store has it on sale for, without going to that store. After the first week the prices go way back up, but it is a good plan. Sell a bunch of cheep dvds the first week to offset the decline the second week.

    • Visitor [Join Now]
      Mike [visitor]

      I need to find your supplier that is selling movies for $3-$9 for a new release.

      • Visitor [Join Now]
        John Small [visitor]

        He doesn’t exist because amtj03 does not know what he is talking about.

        • Visitor [Join Now]
          amtj03 [visitor]

          Actually I am a woman, and yes I do know what I am talking about. I use to work for a large chain retailer and when I order movies in bulk(all, not just new releases) the price was $3-9. Now this was a few years ago and hey this could have changed. I just find it hard to believe that studios would sell there dvds to stores for $18 and the stores would buy them and put them on sale for $16 or less and at regular price $20. If they do this the stores would not make sh*t selling them, so I doubt they would even buy them. These dvds cost less then $1 to make and the talent and studio have been paid from the box office. So the dvd is just profit, retailers dont like to waste money on merchandise they are going to lose money on.

  10. Member [Join Now]
    Alan Smithee [8traxrule]

    That’s not much compared to the online price wars of 1998- there was one now-long-gone website that had a special on 3 DVDs for $1 plus shipping! The sad thing was I was so poor after buying my new home theater equipment that I couldn’t afford to charge the amount to my credit card at the time.

    I’d be more excited about these deals if Blu-Ray didn’t exist.

  11. Visitor [Join Now]
    usafsam [visitor]

    I think it is great. I took full advantage of the WalMart deal of $9.98 and got some of those long awaited DVDs coming to my house as well as the gifting option for far away relatives and I don’t pay any shipping or have to gift wrap. Now that is a welcome plus these days.

  12. Visitor [Join Now]
    yeah [visitor]

    A company being a monopoly is illegal. That is fact. So why is Wal-junk exempt? REDBOX sadly is not a big company. Now what does Wal-junk do to the little guys? Yeah and they’re proud of it. Even if REDBOX has to increase prices at some point, who could blame them? REDBOX dedicated!