Will Barnes & Noble’s New Chapter Have a Happy Ending?
Will Barnes & Noble’s New Chapter Have a Happy Ending? · The Fiscal Times

It could just be too little too late.

Barnes & Noble’s said this week that it would separate its bricks-and-mortar bookselling business from its Nook division, the costly attempt to compete with Amazon.com as a vendor of e-books and e-reading devices. The e-reader business, along with the college bookstore operations, will be spun off as NOOK Media by the end of March 2015.

The idea has been hovering for a long time. In rejecting it less than a year ago, Barnes & Noble execs said some kind of split had been pondered for 18 months by that point. Certainly, the company’s chairman, Leonard Riggio, had publicly voiced his interest in taking private the traditional bookstore division, leaving investors with the proceeds of that transaction and the Nook business.

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Instead, last summer Barnes & Noble did an about-face and opted to focus on managing both divisions, trying to boost profits and cut costs by, among other things, outsourcing production of the Nook devices.

Now, Riggio – Barnes & Noble’s single largest shareholder – and the rest of the company’s board have done another 180-degree turn. This dithering could have cost investors dearly, as rivals have kept nibbling away at Nook’s market share and the division’s losses have continued to mount.

Of course, Nook did manage to grab some market share from Amazon, the first mover in the e-reader space. When Barnes & Noble’s device arrived on the scene, the Kindle was pretty much the only game in town, and so the Nook was an alternative for anyone who didn’t want to be sucked into Amazon’s sphere of influence.

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But while Amazon’s market share has been eroded – it only owns slightly more than half the market today (depending on who’s doing the counting, and whether they include tablet devices as well as e-readers) compared to 100 percent back in early 2008 – the Kindle still dominates the landscape. The Nook is clearly now an “also ran.” As recently as 2012, when the company was contemplating that spinoff, its market share hovered around 25 percent to 30 percent. Today, some sources suggest the figure may be closer to 13 percent.

The financial picture for the Nook business has steadily deteriorated, too. Back in the fourth quarter of 2011, Nook generated revenues of $183 million. In the fourth quarter of 2012, those were $164 million. By the fourth quarter of last year, $112.1 million. And in the just-reported fourth quarter of the 2014 fiscal year, a measly $87.1 million.