While video game sales break new records all across the world,
video game stocks have seen better days.
American publishers Activision, Electronic Arts, Take Two and
THQ have all seen their stocks dramatically fall over the
year. The latter has had the worst hit, sinking 86% in a year
while others have been cut by over half their peak values in
2008. Many analysts and investors see the rise of Nintendo as
being the main culprit. Nintendo's Wii and DS have seen
dramatic sales and persistent shortages due to demand. You
would think that would mean for an expensive Nintendo stock?
Wrong.
Nintendo just dropped another 6.5% on the Tokyo Stock Exchange
to 30,200 yen in overnight trading. In the beginning of 2008
it went to as high as 64,500. Perhaps this is due to the fact
that sales of Japanese video games are not performing as well as
they are in the United States. The Japanese may therefore be having
a difficult time believing that with America's economic turmoil,
Nintendo games will continue to perform well. Indeed, trade
volume of Nintendo stock in Japan is consistently low in the
world's second largest economy, while Nintendo's ADR in the United
States trades at similar volume relative to value, suggesting that
there is actually more interest to trade Nintendo in the United
States.
That kind of a statistic is problematic, given that America's
Nintendo ADR will tend to follow the Japanese stock performance,
not the other way around. Japanese video game publishers like
Capcom and Square Enix Holdings, Inc. have also seen dramatic cuts
in their stock prices, due in large part to Nintendo's rising
market share in the United States. Nintendo's main problem
has been the change in currencies. However, it is hard to
imagine Nintendo stock doing any worse with American sales
continuing to be as strong as they are right now. According
to NPD, Nintendo's software took five out of the top ten positions
in December 2008. Nintendo DS doubled Microsoft's Xbox 360
sales and Nintendo's Wii doubled Sony's PSP sales.
Somebody tell that to Japanese investors, who apparently see
difficult days ahead for Nintendo.