A sign of the times with convenient streaming and digital downloads. CDs and eventually DVDs will no longer be sold. No doubt Bluray and 4k discs will follow. Interesting that LPs will still be carried at Best Buy after the July Music CD removal; the music records have been merchandised with turntables at most store locations for over a year.
Just as music digital download and piracy is killing the Music CD, will the "cut the cable" Netflix, Hulu and Amazon video streaming sites hasten the wipe out of disc owned movie titles?
Best Buy - Target - Walmart Exclusives Lost
Best Buy, Target and Walmart for certain premium new titles have their own exclusives for Music CDs offering extra tracks and Video Discs having extra footage and sometimes a bonus book. These too will go away as the Digital only option kills owning titles.
Bill Board on Feb 2, 2018 wrote: https://www.billboard.com/articles/busi ... -only-when
Best Buy to Pull CDs, Target Threatens to Pay Labels for CDs Only When Customers Buy Them
Even though digital is on the upswing, physical is still performing relatively well on a global basis -- if not in the U.S. market, where CD sales were down 18.5 percent last year. But things are about to get worse here, if some of the noise coming out of the big-box retailers comes to fruition. Best Buy has just told music suppliers that it will pull CDs from its stores come July 1. At one point, Best Buy was the most powerful music merchandiser in the U.S., but nowadays it's a shadow of its former self, with a reduced and shoddy offering of CDs. Sources suggest that the company's CD business is nowadays only generating about $40 million annually. While it says it's planning to pull out CDs, Best Buy will continue to carry vinyl for the next two years, keeping a commitment it made to vendors. The vinyl will now be merchandised with the turntables, sources suggest.
Meanwhile, sources say that Target has demanded to music suppliers that it wants to be sold on what amounts to a consignment basis. Currently, Target takes the inventory risk by agreeing to pay for any goods it is shipped within 60 days, and must pay to ship back unsold CDs for credit. With consignment, the inventory risk shifts back to the labels.
According to those sources, Target gave the ultimatum to both music and video suppliers in the fourth quarter of last year that it wants to switch to scanned-based trading, with a target date of Feb. 1. But while it is proceeding to push DVD vendors to switch to scan-based trading terms (i.e. the chain would pay for DVDs after they are sold or scanned while being rung up at the register), it has moved the deadline back to music suppliers to either April 1 or May 1. So far, music manufacturers are not sure what they are going to do, but sources within the various camps say that at least one major is leaning no, while the other two majors are undecided. If the majors don't play ball and give in to the new sale terms, it could considerably hasten the phase down of the CD format.
Target has greatly reduced its music presence over the years. Once upon a time carried as many as 800 music titles, and nowadays seems to carry less than 100 titles in most stores. Yet, it can still be a powerful force on big titles. For example, the chain moved over 500,000 CDs of Taylor Swift's Reputation album. Music manufacturers suggest they are waiting to see what happens with DVDs. If the studios don't give into Target's demands, will Target pull DVDs from the store? How that plays out will likely influence what happens in music, sources suggest.