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Title: Lecture 8 Understanding Markets and Industry Changes


1
Lecture 8Understanding Markets and Industry
Changes
2
Lecture 8 Summary of main points
  • A market has a product, geographic, and time
    dimension. Define the market before using
    supplydemand analysis.
  • Market demand describes buyer behavior market
    supply describes seller behavior in a competitive
    market.
  • If price changes, quantity demanded increases or
    decreases (represented by a movement along the
    demand curve).
  • If a factor other than price (like income)
    changes, we say that demand curve increases or
    decreases (a shift of demand curve).

3
Lecture 8 Summary (cont.)
  • Supply curves describe the behavior of sellers
    and tell you how much will be sold at a given
    price.
  • Market equilibrium is the price at which quantity
    supplied equals quantity demanded. If price is
    above the equilibrium price, there are too many
    sellers, forcing price down, and vice versa.
  • Currency depreciation in a country increases
    demand for exports (supply to another country)
    and decreases demand for imports (demand for
    another countrys products).
  • Prices are a primary way that market participants
    communicate with one another.
  • Making a market is costly, and competition
    between market makers forces the bidask spread
    down to the costs of making a market. If the
    costs of making a market are large, then the
    equilibrium price may be better viewed as a
    spread rather than a single price.

4
Anecdote Y2K and generator sales
  • From 1990-98, sales of portable generators grew
    2 yearly.
  • In 1999, public anticipation of Y2K power outages
    increased demand for generators.
  • Walters, Rosenberg and Matthews invested to
    increase capacity in anticipation of this demand
    growth they vertically integrated their company
    to increase capacity and reduce variable costs.
  • Demand grew as expected - Industry shipments
    increased by 87. Prices also increased by an
    average of 21.
  • Discussion What will happen next? Why?

5
Which industry or market?
  • Every industry or market has a time, product, and
    geographic dimension.
  • For example The yearly market for portable
    generators in the U.S.
  • Time annual
  • Product portable generators
  • Geography US
  • When analyzing a problem, or investment
    opportunity, it helps to first define the time,
    product and geographic dimensions of the market
    in question.

6
Shifts in the demand curve
  • Movement along the demand curve indicates the
    quantity demanded increased.
  • Shifts in demand curve can occur for multiple
    reasons
  • Uncontrollable factor affects demand and is out
    of a companys control.
  • Income, weather, interest rates, and prices of
    substitute and complementary products owned by
    other companies.
  • Controllable factor affects demand but can be
    controlled by a company
  • Price, advertising, warranties, product quality,
    distribution speed, service quality, and prices
    of substitute or complementary products also
    owned by the company

7
Anecdote Microsoft
  • In the late 1970s, Microsoft developed DOS, an
    operating system to control IBM computers.
  • The price for DOS depended on the price and
    availability of computers that could run it and
    the applications that ran under it as well as the
    price of DOS itself.
  • To increase demand for DOS Microsoft
  • Licensed its operating system to other computer
    manufacturers
  • Developed its own versions of complimentary
    products
  • Kept the price of DOS low
  • Discussion How did Microsoft control demand
    using these factors? How did competitors (Apple,
    for example) operate differently?

8
Demand increase
  • At a given price, more quantity demanded

9
Supply curves
  • Definition Supply curves are functions that
    relate the price of a product to the quantity
    supplied by sellers.
  • Discussion Why do supply curves slope upwards?

10
Market equilibrium
  • Definition Market equilibrium is the price at
    which quantity supplied equals quantity demanded.
  • At the equilibrium price, there is no pressure
    for the price to change given the equality of
    quantity demanded and supplied.

11
Market equilibrium (cont.)
  • Proposition In a competitive equilibrium there
    are no unconsummated wealth-creating transactions.

12
Using supply and demand
  • Supply and demand curves can be used to describe
    changes that occur at the industry level

13
Portable generator market 1997-1998
  • 1997- Stable industry sales with intense
    competition (2 avg. sales growth)
  • 1997- Industry anticipates record demand will
    occur in 1999
  • 1998 Massive capital expenses throughout
    industry on vertical integration projects

Portable generator market 1999
  • Demand shift due to fear of power grid failure
    caused by Y2K
  • Supply shift caused by manufacturers eagerness
    to capitalize on record demand for product
  • Manufacturers fail to anticipate reduced demand
    in 2000
  • Sales from 2000 pulled forward into 1999

14
Generator demand shifts graph
15
Using supply and demand (cont.)
  • Discussion over the past decade, the price of
    computers has fallen, while quantity has risen.
    How? Why?

16
Problem commercial paper
  • In September 2008 there was a significant
    increase in prices and decrease in quantity in
    the commercial paper market

17
Commercial paper problem (cont.)
  • In the second week of September the price of the
    loans (interest rate) shot up

18
Commercial paper Question
  • These changes spooked Treasury Secretary Paulson
    and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, and
    they were characterized as a freeze in the
    market for short-term lending, the essential
    grease that facilitates the movement of assets
    to higher-valued uses.
  • What could have accounted for these changes?

19
Commercial paper Answer
  • After a few big bank failures, commercial lenders
    became increasingly worried that borrowers would
    not be able to repay the commercial paper loans.
  • This resulting decrease in supply caused both an
    increase in the price of borrowing (the interest
    rate) and a decline in the amount of lending.

20
Prices convey information
  • Prices are a primary way that market participants
    communicate with one another
  • Buyers signal their willingness to pay, and
    sellers signal their willingness to sell with
    prices
  • Price information especially important in
    financial markets

21
Market makers (cont.)
  • If there were but a single (monopoly) market
    maker, how much would she offer the sellers (the
    bid)?
  • How much would she charge the buyers (the ask)?
  • How many transactions would occur?

22
Market makers
  • Discussion Compute the optimal spread
  • Discussion Competition forces spread down to the
    costs of market making, 2. What is bid-ask
    spread?

23
Competition among market makers
  • On May 26, WSJ LA Times published results of
    Bill Christies research
  • On May 27, spreads collapsed
  • Discussion WHY?

24
Alternate intro anecdote
  • Video enhancement products are state-of-the-art
    graphics systems that capture, analyze, enhance,
    and edit all major video formats without altering
    underlying footage.
  • In 1998, this market consisted of a small number
    of companies, and demand was relatively light due
    to the extremely high price of the technology
    (prices ranged between 45,000 and 80,000)
  • In 2000, Intergraph entered the market at a price
    of 25,000, attempting to quickly capture a major
    share of the market. Intergraph produced a
    product at a substantially lower cost than the
    competition.

25
Alternate into anecdote (cont.)
  • What happened??
  • Entry caused an increase in supply and a strong
    downward pressure on price (average pricing fell
    to around 40,000).
  • A number of firms exited and prices rose back to
    around 45,000.
  • Later, the events of 9/11/01 caused demand to
    spike.
  • What happened??
  • In the short run, average prices shot up.
  • Higher prices eventually attracted more entrants,
    increasing supply. Pricing fell back down to an
    average level of around 30,000.
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