Showing posts with label Charts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charts. Show all posts

Monday, 22 July 2013

Off the Charts: New-Car Salesmen Are Lonely in Europe

The European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association reported this week that new-car registrations in the European Union were down 6 percent in June compared with those in the month a year earlier and were running at their slowest pace since 1996.
 
Even in Germany, whose economy has been stronger than those of most of its European brethren, sales were the lowest for any June since the country was unified in 1990.
 
The lone bright spot was Britain, where June sales were up 13 percent from a year earlier. Retail sales in general have been surprisingly strong in Britain in recent months, and, as can be seen from the accompanying charts, in the last 12 months its new-car registrations were 9 percent higher than in the previous 12 months, making it one of only three European countries shown to have posted an increase.
 
At the same time, auto sales have been on the rise in the United States and were higher in the last 12 months than at any time since 2008.
 
New-car sales have long been a reliable economic indicator, one that falls sharply when recessions start and then rises rapidly when economies recover. That is largely because car purchases can often be postponed if buyers are worried, creating pent-up demand when recessions end.
 
In some of the European countries struggling the most, where an end to the recession appears to be far-off, new-car sales have been falling steadily for years as those who absolutely must buy a car choose a used one instead. In some countries, there is an active business importing used cars from more prosperous nations.
The charts show the level of sales in the last 12 months compared with those for the calendar year 2006, before the credit crisis led to the Great Recession. In a handful of countries, sales are higher now, and in the United States the decline is only 5 percent.
 
But in the euro zone as a whole, sales are 28 percent below the 2006 level. In Spain, Greece, Portugal and Ireland, sales are down by at least 50 percent, and in most of those countries there is no sign of recovery. Outside the euro zone, sales in Romania and Hungary are also far below the 2006 level.
 
In the early days of the credit crisis, new-car sales held up better in Europe than in the United States, and more generous “cash for clunkers” incentives ignited a rebound in 2010. But since then, weakening European economies have led to new declines that show no sign of ending.
 
One of the sharpest declines is in the Netherlands, which has fallen into a new recession amid rising unemployment and falling consumer confidence. June new-car registrations were less than half the level of the previous June, and sales in the last 12 months are down nearly a third compared with those in the period a year earlier.
 
The charts reflect sales of passenger cars only, excluding sales of light trucks, a category that includes sport utility vehicles and minivans, vehicles that are less likely to be used for business in the United States than in Europe. If those vehicles were included, the performance of both the European and American markets would appear to be a little worse, but the trends would be similar. 

Thursday, 4 July 2013

Halle Berry's 'The Call' Makes Strong Debut on Home Entertainment Charts


Sony Pictures Home Entertainment nabbed two of the three No. 1 home video chart positions the week ending June 30 with The Call, a crime thriller starring Halle Berry as a 911 dispatcher rattled by a bad call who seeks redemption in trying to save the life of a kidnapped teenage girl.

The film earned $51.9 million in U.S. theaters and debuted at No. 1 on both the Nielsen VideoScan First Alert sales chart, which tracks overall discs sales, DVD and Blu-ray Disc combined, and Home Media Magazine’s rental chart.

But with DVD accounting for 74 percent of unit sales, it’s no surprise that The Call could only muster a No. 3 debut on Nielsen’s dedicated Blu-ray Disc sales chart, behind top-ranked Jack the Giant Slayer, from Warner Bros., and Oz the Great and Powerful, from Walt Disney. Both films occupied the same position on the Blu-ray Disc chart the previous week, when Jack debuted at No. 1 on both sales charts.

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On the latest First Alert chart, Jack slipped a notch to No. 2, bumping Oz the Great and Powerful to No. 3.

The No. 4 spot on First Alert (and the No. 5 spot on the Blu-ray Disc chart) went to Despicable Me, from Universal Studios, which rose from No. 12 the previous week based on soaring consumer interest in the Fourth of July weekend theatrical opening of Despicable Me 2.

Warner’s The Incredible Burt Wonderstone, about a comedy rivalry between old- and new-school Las Vegas magicians, debuted at No. 6 on First Alert and No. 4 on the Blu-ray Disc sales chart. The film was panned by critics and earned a meager $22.5 million in theaters despite starring roles by comic heavyweights Steve Carell, Steve Buscemi and Jim Carrey. The film’s video performance was undoubtedly helped by media coverage of the death of actor James Gandolfini, best known as television’s Tony Soprano, who plays a supporting role in the film.

The only other new release to make it into the top 10 on the overall disc sales chart was a Walmart exclusive called Illumination 7 Mini Movie Collection, a DVD-only collection of animated shorts based on three Universal Studios animated movies (Despicable Me, The Lorax and Hop) released to promote the theatrical release of Despicable Me 2.

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On Home Media Magazine’s video rental chart for the week, The Call was followed by a trio of third-weekers: Oz the Great and Powerful at No. 2, Lionsgate’s Snitch at No. 3, and Paramount’s Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters at No. 4.

The No. 5 spot went to the Universal Studios thriller Side Effects, which was No. 1 last week, when it came off its 28-day holdback from select rental outlets.