Why Are Duopolies So Competitive?
by Geoff Gannon
Published on this site: February 1st, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

A duopoly is a situation in which two firms control nearly
all of the market for a product or service.
Duopolies can be surprisingly competitive. If you remember
that the price of a product or service is determined solely
by the highest losing bid price and the lowest losing ask
price, you'll realize why a duopoly can be so competitive.
A large number of inefficient competitors will have almost
no affect on prices in the long run unless someone (either a government or a group
of idiotic investors) is willing to continually finance unprofitable
operations in an unprofitable industry (think airlines).
Of course, there is always the fear of a price fixing scheme
in a duopoly. Generally, however, that fear is unfounded.
Human nature suggests a price fixing scheme is far more likely
to occur in an oligopoly than a duopoly. Humans weight the
fear of loss far more heavily than the greed of gain when
making calculations about the future. In a duopoly, mistrust
increases the fear of loss inherent to any price fixing scheme
(namely, the other guy will stab you in the back). In an oligopoly,
the diffusion of power and the lack of excess capacity at
any one firm makes price fixing very attractive. Price fixing
in an oligopoly is a much safer bet than price fixing in a
duopoly.
There are, of course, other reasons why a duopoly is very
unlikely to result in a price fixing scheme. In addition to
a healthy does of fear, there is an often unhealthy does of
hate in duopolies. There is always just one scapegoat in a
duopoly. Hatred is a personal emotion; if spread over too
many objects it tends to wane away. Finally, there's the simple
fact that both competitors in a duopoly are likely really
big, really agile, really cutthroat players. The process leading
up to a duopoly tends to be a sort of wolfing run, in which
two pups are separated from the runts.
Having said all that, price fixing is possible in a duopoly.
Some duopolies are not the result of competition but of nationalization
and privatization, although this is relatively rare since
a nationalized monopoly won't often result in a lasting duopoly
(it will either remain a monopoly once privatized or get crushed
by new, private competitors).
Finally, a price fixing scheme always makes more sense in
a commodity business. After all, any product differentiation
limits the degree to which general demand is applicable to
specific competitors' products. For example, Coke and Pepsi
are highly differentiated products, at least when purchased
in their specific packaging (physical differences or similarities are immaterial
here; it is only the buyer's belief that matters). I drink
Pepsi, and I can assure you (however irrational it sounds)
that no drop in the price of Coke would be sufficient to get
me to stop buying Pepsi. There is almost no other tangible
good about which I could say the same. So, clearly Coke and Pepsi are differentiated products,
and there's very little chance of an effective price fixing
scheme between them.

Geoff Gannon is a full time investment writer. He writes
a (print) quarterly investment newsletter and a daily value
investing blog. He also produces a twice weekly (half hour)
value investing podcast at: http://www.gannononinvesting.com

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