More publishers fail as e-books rise

Amazon's Kindle Voyage (left) and Kindle Fire HDX 8.9.

Amazon's Kindle Voyage (left) and Kindle Fire HDX 8.9.

Published Nov 30, 2015

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London - Readers shunning physical books for digital ones contributed to a 58 percent jump in the number of publishers failing, research has revealed.

In the year to 30 June, 128 publishers in the UK went out of business, according to the accountancy firm Moore Stephens. The prior year there were 81 insolvencies.

A rise in popularity of e-readers such as the Kindle has fuelled the increase, said Moore Stephens.

The firm added that smaller publishers that have been slow to adapt and make their products available as e-books have seen sales fall.

Parts of the industry that have typically enjoyed higher margins, such as academic publishing, have also endured a tougher sales market.

Meanwhile smaller companies are feeling the strain of having to offer discounts to compete with larger online rivals.

David Elliott, restructuring and insolvency partner at Moore Stephens, said: “The fall in the value of sales for physical books is larger than the growth of e-books, and this is a worrying trend for publishers that are still dependent on paper for their profits.”

Digital continues to grow, with UK e-book revenues climbing 11 percent to £563m in 2014.

But data from the Publishers' Association show sales of physical books fell 5 percent to £2.7bn.

THE INDEPENDENT

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