View Full Version : Why the sudden price change 500 more


Corey Hill
December 18th, 2008, 04:43 PM
i was just looking at b&h and i noticed the xh-a1s are 500.00 more than yesterday.. i was just thinking of getting it to.. guess im sticking with the a1 and letus : - I

does anyone know the reason for this?

Chris Soucy
December 18th, 2008, 04:56 PM
http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/digital-video-industry-news/137664-pro-sony-pana-price-hikes-nz-soon.html

The US is not immune.


CS

Roger Lee
December 18th, 2008, 05:06 PM
i was just looking at b&h and i noticed the xh-a1s are 500.00 more than yesterday.. i was just thinking of getting it to.. guess im sticking with the a1 and letus : - I

does anyone know the reason for this?

Not sure what I am missing here. XH A1s same price as usual?

Canon | XH-A1s 3CCD HDV Camcorder | 3238B001 | B&H Photo Video (http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/589903-REG/Canon_3238B001_XH_A1s_3CCD_HDV_Camcorder.html)

XH A1 at around $3K. Wish I could have paid that a year ago.

:)

Boyd Ostroff
December 18th, 2008, 05:14 PM
The strong yen is hurting the Japanese electronics industry and some companies are raising prices. Not sure about Canon, but I saw a story about Sony raising prices recently.

Dollar falls to 13-year low against yen: Financial News - Yahoo! Finance (http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/081212/as_japan_dollar.html?.v=11)

The dollar's fall to as low as 88.12 yen -- the lowest since August 1995 -- puts additional pressure on Japan's exporters, whose overseas earnings shrink as the dollar weakens against the yen.

Robert Bec
December 18th, 2008, 06:13 PM
Canon will be raising prices by 10 to 15 percent

Tripp Woelfel
December 19th, 2008, 04:41 AM
Canon will be raising prices by 10 to 15 percent

Interesting. I haven't seen anything from Canon indicating that, but some price reaction is to be expected given the Yen's strength against major world currencies.

On the other hand, global currency valuations have been in a spastic state of flux since the world's economy started to crater. Since last August, the US$ went from about 110 Yen down to about 89 at the close yesterday. The Euro and the Pound Sterling are trying to equalize. The currency markets are reacting to a bunch of things, including each government's moves to prop up their economies. For example, the US$ fell to near 87 around the recent US "Fed" move.

I say this because there is so much volatility in so many segments of the world's economies, including the currency markets, it would be quite hard to forecast where prices might be for any products even as little as three months out. A price increase of 15% for Canon products would be a stunner in this context.

James R. Leong
December 19th, 2008, 06:23 AM
Another factor. The collapse of the container shipping industry means containers of goods are piling up in Asia. Fewer goods means higher prices.

This report was on CBC News a couple weeks ago.

YouTube - Shipping Sinking (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=boy3URLyeDU)

Boyd Ostroff
December 19th, 2008, 10:08 AM
Yeah, it's very hard to know where things are heading. With the terrible economy, people just aren't buying much. That might drive prices lower. OTOH, it might also cause the supply of electronics stuff to dwindle because retailers don't want products piling up in their stock rooms.

But if you're working, and if you can afford a new camera then you should be happy. :-)

Tripp Woelfel
December 19th, 2008, 05:52 PM
Another factor. The collapse of the container shipping industry means containers of goods are piling up in Asia.


We're all living under that old Chinese curse, "may you live in interesting times". Things are so interesting that this situation has turned around, according to a report on CNBC yesterday (Thursday). Now, that could change on Monday.

Fewer goods means higher prices.
True, if demand remains the same. A similar drop in buyers mitigates the pricing pressure. That's a possibility in market.

If anyone says they know what's going to happen in the economy tomorrow, next week, or next month, they're lying. Even the really smart guys are throwing out nothing but SWAGs.

Stephen King
December 27th, 2008, 10:56 PM
very strange indeed:

On this B&H webpage, the cam is $3999

Canon | XH-A1s 3CCD HDV Camcorder | 3238B001 | B&H Photo Video (http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/589903-REG/Canon_3238B001_XH_A1s_3CCD_HDV_Camcorder.html)

BUT on this B&H webpage, the same cam appears to be $2999 (thousand bucks less) !

Canon | XH-A1 3CCD HDV Camcorder | 1191B001 | B&H Photo Video (http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/447098-REG/Canon_1191B001_XH_A1_3CCD_HDV_Camcorder.html)

what's the difference?

Jack Walker
December 28th, 2008, 02:17 AM
very strange indeed:

On this B&H webpage, the cam is $3999

Canon | XH-A1s 3CCD HDV Camcorder | 3238B001 | B&H Photo Video (http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/589903-REG/Canon_3238B001_XH_A1s_3CCD_HDV_Camcorder.html)

BUT on this B&H webpage, the same cam appears to be $2999 (thousand bucks less) !

Canon | XH-A1 3CCD HDV Camcorder | 1191B001 | B&H Photo Video (http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/447098-REG/Canon_1191B001_XH_A1_3CCD_HDV_Camcorder.html)

what's the difference?

These are two different Cameras, the original release and the updated release:

XH-A1 (original) $2,999.

XH-A1s (with the "s" at the end, the updated model, just released) $3,999.

There are extensive discussions about here on the differences and the value of the new features in any given situation.

If I were buying now, I would buy the new "s" model and pay the extra. However, the picture is the same on both.

With the new model out, the original is a good deal for a "B" cam, and there might be some really good deals on used original models that would be great for a "B" and a "C" cam.

(I am not upgrading my XH-A1, because I also have a JVC-110, and I am very interested in the new JVC small camera that is supposed to be available or be near to be available about NAB time. Incidentally, I understand that the target price for this camera is also $4,000.)