Major record
labels are determined to see massive UK retailer HMV survive its current, admittedly dire financial predicament. The company
last week hired an accountancy firm to assess the best way of selling off its
assets — which include 239 physical stores. But powerful players in the music
industry (including Universal Music, Warner Music, and Sony) are reportedly
willing to offer potential buyers substantial credit incentives and discounted
CDs / DVDs if it means keeping HMV in business on the UK high streets.
Why the sudden
generosity? HMV's demise would be yet another unwelcome blow to industry
profits: the collapse of another storied retailer would further shift music and
video sales to the internet, a world of cutthroat competition where Amazon and
Apple dominate mindshare thanks to basement-level pricing. Those prices prove
popular with shoppers, but less so with labels and studios that still long for
the days when consumers swarmed brick-and-mortar CD shops. There are reportedly
over 50 suitors vying to take over HMV, so it seems all hope isn't lost just
yet. [TheVerge]
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