For good or ill, Tragically Hip scalpers an example of the market's solution to shortages: Don Pittis - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:29 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
BusinessAnalysis

For good or ill, Tragically Hip scalpers an example of the market's solution to shortages: Don Pittis

Middlemen snatching a markup on Tragically Hip tickets are generating howls of outrage. But as Don Pittis writes, for good or ill, scalpers are a microcosm of the market forces that dictate the value of goods in short supply.

Despite sad circumstances, scalper action on tickets shows the market at work

Free concerts, such as the Tragically Hip performance in London's Trafalgar Square in 2013, prevent middlemen from raising prices, but instead, the advantage of the best viewing locations goes to the people who arrive first. (Reuters)

The howls ofoutrage over Tragically Hip ticket "profiteers" may have a lot to do with the tragic circumstances of the popular band's final concerts.

Lead singer GordDownie's brain cancer makes the markup in ticket pricesfeel like a moral issue. Butlike it or not, the secondary market for Hip tickets is a textbook example of how humans set the price of goods that are in short supply.

While some may wish it wasn't so, the market pricingofgoods from tickets to houses togasoline is an essential part of practically everythingwe do. And the flaws in the system that make this caseseem unfair or inefficient are by no means limited to the business of selling tickets.

Despite its inadequacies, the process of using speculators to setmarket prices is a useful toolinside and outsidethe entertainment business.
In hot real estate markets like Vancouver, the idea that middlemen profit from house price increases can make people more angry than if a homeowner sells for a good price. (Reuters)

"We had our first ever ticket go onStubHubfor our last tour," Tyler Bancroft from the bandSaid the Whale told a CBC Vancouverpanel discussion this week.

The band's $25 ticket sold for $75on the ticket reselling site. Bancroft says the band's reaction was complex.

"There was a moment of'We made it, we have a ticket on StubHub," he said with a chuckle. "I will admit that a small part of me was a little upset because I was thinking we'd undervalued ourselves."

Bought low, sold high

And this is one of the main criticisms of secondary markets. Instead of the profits from the final sale going to the people who made the product, the cash goes to an intermediary who created nothing. Theyjust bought the product low and sold it high.

Bancroft's concern also reflects one of the reasons why secondary markets are so valuable. While the producer may have some idea of how much it costto produce the product, they may not know what people are willing to pay for it.
Speculation can often go wrong, such as the time in the 1970s when Nelson Bunker Hunt and his brother tried to corner the world silver market and lost their family fortune. (Reuters)

The speculator buys the product at the current selling price, and sells itfor what the market will bear. And to be fair, the sellingprice does not always make a profit for the middleman.

In market lore there is the famous case of Nelson Bunker Hunt, who with his brother decided to corner the global silver market, effectively trying to buy enough of the world supply to push the price up. In 1979, the Hunt brothers drove the price from $11 US an ounce to $50.

Their triumph was short-lived. Soon, silver plunged andthe speculating brotherslost a large family fortune.

Short supply?

Speculating on something that is in short supply also depends on the productremainingin short supply. Even with something like silver, whosesupply seems limitedat least in the short term, exceptionally high prices can bring stored reservesto the market.

As we saw in the case of $100 oil, high prices sent investors around the world in search of new sources and soon supplyincreased and prices plunged.

In the case of entertainment, clever marketing can manipulate the feeling of shortage. Cher fans came out in droves to buy tickets to her "The Farewell Tour" in 2002.
The last chance to see an artist can motivate fans to shell out, but as with Cher's "The Farewell Tour" in 2002, it's possible to increase the number of shows and even have repeated farewell performances for more than a decade. (Reuters)

But when demand began to soar for the limited number of performances, Cher's promoters simply increased the number of concerts. And ten years later, Cher was still performing, including her Dressed to Kill Tour in 2014. Some fans may have overpaid.

The same thing could apply to those Tragically Hip tickets. With more concerts added and talk of a televised performance, there is always a possibility that people who bought tickets at the highest prices shelled out too much.

Opaque process

There are lots of ways to keep prices low and fair. There areeven systems devised to make sure that in any bidding process, a share of the markupgoes to the concertproducers.The process of ticket reselling is opaque enough it is hard to be certain when that happens.

At the most basic level, some concerts can be offered with free admission, such as the Hip's performance at London'sTrafalgarSquare in 2013,assuring that fans without thick wallets can also see the show by lining up or arriving early. That's the same distribution system as existed in the former Soviet Union, where goods such as bread and toilet paper were in short supply. Under a first-come, first-served system, the last-comerslose out.
In Venezuela, where there's not enough to go round, people line up at a bakery to buy bread, a first-come, first-served system that can leave late-comers with nothing. (The Associated Press)

Rationing systems can alsoassurewidespread distribution. With ticket sales, the equivalent mightbe to limit the number of sales per address or licence number.

Black market

Of course,rationing notoriously results in black markets where people decide that the value of the product the experience of seeingthe concert, for example is simply not as high as the current price and pass the ticket on to someone who values it more.

There are also systems, as with some airline tickets,that tag a ticket to a photo IDso that the ticket is only good when used by theoriginalbuyer.

That assumes the sellers of products or the promoters of concerts want sales to be completely orderly and fair. From Vancouver condos tonew cellphones to cauliflower, sometimesthe perception that there'snot enough to go around only increases the frenzy to get a piece of the action.

Follow Don on Twitter@don_pittis

More analysisby Don Pittis