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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, October 18, 2009

Walmart challenges Amazon.com online


By Ashley M. Heher
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

The sale price for the top 10 books from Walmart online. An online book special offered by Walmart is turning into a price war with Amazon.com.

Associated Press

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CHICAGO — Taking a page from its original playbook, Walmart has launched a full-fledged price war with Amazon.com Inc. and a nation of book retailers, lowering online prices on certain highly anticipated hardback titles to $9.

The volley of discounts, which began Thursday when the retailer listed prices for some upcoming hardcover releases such as Dean Koontz's "Breathless" and Stephen King's "Under the Dome" at $10, was answered with a similar price cut by Amazon, the largest online bookseller. Then the two competitors lowered the prices even further to $9.

The book discounts, the latest in a series of aggressive online maneuvers by the world's largest retailer, could position the company to do to the online marketplace what Walmart stores did to local merchants decades ago.

"While it's the largest retailer in the United States, it's not the dominant online retailer in the United States," said Albert Greco, professor of marketing at New York City's Fordham University. "And this appears to be an attempt to increase its position in the online space."

The price war also is foreboding news to the large chain bookstores Borders Group Inc. and Barnes & Noble Inc., which have been squeezed by Amazon.com's discounting and a decline in their music business.

In the past seven weeks, Bentonville, Ark.-based Walmart has racheted up the competition in several retail arenas, beginning with an Amazon.com-like announcement in late August that it would allow outside retailers to sell nearly 1 million items — from baby products to sports memorabilia — through its http://www.Walmart.com site" target="_blank">Walmart.com.

Next came news that the low-price specialist would fill 90-day supplies of some 300 generic prescriptions by mail for as little as $10 and was launching its own cell phone plan.

And just last week, the company said it would begin selling health and beauty products online.

But it was the announcement about books — the base from which Seattle-based Amazon.com built itself into a powerhouse — that created the biggest stir.

The discounts, which also include Sarah Palin's "Going Rogue" and John Grisham's "Ford County," are a cut of 60 percent or more from cover prices..

Hardcover releases, which typically have a suggested retail price of at least $25, are generally sold to merchants with a wholesale price that's a 47 percent discount.

That means Grisham's book, priced at $24, costs most retailers about $12.72. It's not clear whether Walmart, which some experts say sells as many as 1,400 titles in stores, might have negotiated a better price than that.

The company said the $9 prices won't be available in stores.

Walmart.com spokeswoman Amy Lester said its latest efforts to beef up its online discounts are part of the company's overall strategy to sell products at the lowest prices.

Walmart has built its strategy on using its size and massive buying power to undercut competitors. But it sells enough products in enough categories to make up any losses on individual items it uses to bring people into its stores.

Walmart is also cutting prices in half for 200 current best-sellers, including Dan Brown's "The Lost Symbol" and Kathryn Stockett's "The Help" in the new program called "America's Reading List."