Amazon Higher Royalties Help Kindle

Amazon is now offering authors 70% of the list price of each e-book sold, net of delivery costs.
By Trefis ,

By Trefis

Amazon (AMZN) - Get Report

recently unveiled a higher royalty rate plan for authors and publishers that is designed to stimulate a larger availability of e-books on Amazon and to help drive sales of its Kindle e-reader device.

Below we discuss how the higher royalty rate helps drive Kindle sales and what the impact could be on Amazon's stock.

Amazon is now offering authors 70% of the list price of each e-book sold, net of delivery costs (which typically run about 6 cents for an average book). This is up significantly from the 35% previously offered. The new royalty rate is restricted to e-books priced between $2.99 and $9.99; however, many e-books on Amazon are already priced within this range, and those that are priced higher may adjust their pricing downward as a result of the higher royalties.

Amazon's rationale behind the higher royalty is to keep e-book prices low while letting authors and publishers make more money, which in turn will encourage more authors to publish in the e-book format. The new royalty rate will reduce Amazon's margins on e-book sales but help it to sell more e-books and high-priced Kindle devices.

Amazon can develop a large catalog of e-books that will make it more competitive in the e-reader market. The Kindle already competes with Sony's e-reader and

Barnes & Nobles'

(BKS) - Get Report

Nook.

Apple

(AAPL) - Get Report

recently introduced the

iPad

, which can function as an e-reader and offers similar economics (70% royalty rate) for authors who distribute e-books through Apple's electronic bookstore.

We forecast that Amazon will be able to sell about 2 million Kindles in 2010 and that this will increase to nearly 10 million by the end of the Trefis forecast period. We believe that Amazon's new royalty rate will help it to remain competitive against the iPad and the economics offered to authors by

Apple

.

Trefis

is a financial community structured around trends, forecasts and insights related to some of the most popular stocks in the U.S.

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