Universal Studios Competition
Now Viewing Universal Studios's competition in: Motion Picture Production and Distribution (primary)
Recent Developments
NY Proposes Stiffer Law to Fight High Piracy Rate - New York's Attorney General (AG) has proposed stiffer legislation to fight the illegal copying, distribution, and sale of copyrighted movies and live productions. The state's proposed Piracy Protection Act elevates infractions to a Class A misdemeanor and repeated offenses to a felony. Research indicates that over 50 percent of illegally recorded movies are filmed in New York, according to the AG's office.
US Movie Production Employment, Wages Decline - Movie production employment and wages decreased during first quarter 2008 compared to a year ago. US employment in motion picture and video production fell 1.9 percent in March 2008 from year-earlier levels and wages declined 4.5 percent. In contrast, average annual employment rose 0.3 percent in 2007 and wages increased 3.3 percent.
Asia-Pacific Region Investigates Over 36,000 Movie Piracy Cases - </strong>The international Motion Picture Association (MPA) cites a study that finds that its member studios lost $6.1 billion in 2005 due to illegal movie piracy. About 21 percent of the losses were the result of piracy in the US, and just less than 20 percent were from piracy in the Asia-Pacific region. MPA reports that its Asia-Pacific region investigated over 36,200 cases that resulted in over 10,000 legal actions in 2007.
Competitive Landscape
Consumer spending drives demand. The profitability of individual companies depends on creativity, marketing, and distribution. Large companies often have the advantages of long-term contracts with key actors and directors, a permanent staff of technical employees, and wide distribution networks. Small companies can compete successfully by creating marketable movies, often for niche audiences, on low budgets. Although production work is labor-intensive, the value of the product results in high average annual industry revenue of $300,000 per employee.
Full Industry Overview For Motion Picture Production and Distribution
Motion Picture Production and Distribution Industry Forecast
from Hoover's/D&B subsidiary First Research
The output of US motion pictures and videos is forecast to grow at an annual compounded rate of 5.2 percent between 2007 and 2012.
Motion Picture, Video Growth Uneven
First Research forecasts are based on INFORUM forecasts that are licensed from the Interindustry Economic Research Fund, Inc. (IERF) in College Park, MD. INFORUM's "interindustry-macro" approach to modeling the economy captures the links between industries and the aggregate economy.

First Research Opportunity Rating
The First Research Opportunity Rating is First Research's estimate of industry performance vs. industry risk over the next 12 to 24 months.

- Demand: Tied to consumer income
- High costs, uncertain revenue
- Risk: Slowing economy limits spending on non-essentials
Industries Where Universal Studios Competes
- Media
- Film & Video
- Motion Picture Production & Distribution (primary)
- Film & Video
- Leisure
- Entertainment
- Amusement Parks, Arcades & Attractions
- Entertainment




