The ENCORE Digital Weekly Magazine is a
CELEBRITYACCESS publication
September 6, 2007 


ADVERTISEMENT
MAIN PAGE
Feature News
Touring News
Awards & Benefits News
Festival News
Agency & Management News
Business News
Technology News
Venue News
Classical News
Artist News
Legal News
Obituaries
Industry Profile
Vital Signs
Artist Snapshot
International News
Net News


ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

INTERNATIONAL NEWS


Japan's Download Market Softens - Is This A Trend?
Posted: September 6, 2007
TOKYO (Hypebot) -- The total number of paid downloads in Japan fell about 2% for the first time last quarter according to PC World. 6.3 million single tracks were downloaded via the net down from 6.9 million in the first quarter of the year. The number of albums downloaded rose to 342k from 333k in the prior quarter. But that was not enough to offset the drop in single track sales.

Downloads of ringtones fell 10% to 54.7 million pulling the entire cell music sector down. Despite an increase in ringback sales and a rise in cell downloads from 23.3 million tracks to 25.5 million, the entire mobile Internet download market shrank 2% form the previous quarter to 104.8 million downloads.

COMMENTARY: The overall decrease from 114.6 million to 111.6 million downloads should not necessarily be seen as a sign of lasting decline.

Japan is a very mature - perhaps even saturated - download marketplace. So this dip may just be part of normal sales fluctuations caused by release schedules and demand for hits from a country of very active and trend driven consumers.

UPDATE: Thanks to alert Hypebot reader Bill S. for pointing out that Billboard has a someone different set of figures and - although it focuses more on just mobile - reaches somewhat different conclusions. Read it here.

© 2001-2008 Gen-Den Corporation. All rights reserved.
CelebrityAccessSM and Gen-DenSM are service marks of Gen-Den Corporation.

** ENCORE readers and those that utilize ENCORE features are bound by the ENCORE NEWSLETTER USE AGREEMENT. If you choose not to be bound by this agreement, please discard the e-mail and notify us of your desire to be removed from future mailings. **