Target joins in price war on expected best sellers

Target
Minneapolis-based mega-retailer Target said Monday that it will offer some of this season's most anticipated book titles at $8.99, in line with recent moves by Walmart.com and Amazon.com.
Nikki Tundel

Target Corp. has thrown itself into a heated price war on books expected to be top sellers.

The Minneapolis-based discounter said Monday that it will offer some of this season's most anticipated book titles at $8.99, in line with recent moves by Walmart.com and Amazon.com.

Target says the price applies to pre-orders on Target.com of such books as "Breathless" by Dean Koontz, "Ford Country" by James Patterson and "Under the Dome" by Stephen King.

The book battle started Thursday, when Wal-Mart Stores Inc. said its Web site, walmart.com, would charge just $10, with free shipping, for such upcoming hardcover releases as Sarah Palin's "Going Rogue" and John Grisham's "Ford County," 60 percent or more off the regular cost.

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Amazon.com, the largest online book seller, then matched the prices. The fight became even fiercer when the two competitors lowered the prices even further to $9 by Friday.

A check online Monday afternoon of several of the titles revealed that Target.com, Amazon and Walmart.com have similar prices. Walmart.com and Target.com are selling "Under the Dome" and "Breathless" at $8.99, a penny less than Amazon.com.

Wal-Mart has built its strategy on using its size and massive buying power to undercut rivals. But it sells enough products in enough categories to make up for any losses on individual items it uses to pull people into the stores or onto its Web site.

All three sellers are almost certainly taking a loss on the sales of these books in order to bring in customers. Retailers usually pay just more than half of a book's cover price.

But the price war, occurring as the critical holiday shopping season gets under way, is bad news for independent bookstores, as well as the large chain bookstores Borders Group Inc. and Barnes & Noble Inc. These chains have seen their sales and profits squeezed by discounting and a decline in their music business.

Analysts also note that the price wars also don't bode well for the overall book industry, which may likely cut authors' advances and editors' salaries.

"I don't see an end in sight," said Michael Norris, a senior analyst with Simba Information. "There is going to be a longer-term cost to cheap books. This book war drives out chain stores and independent bookstores." He noted that Amazon.com, Target and Walmart don't "value books" in the same way.

"Bookstores are invested in the future of books, but the others are not," he continued.

Wal-Mart has said that the steep book discounts won't be available in stores.

(Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)