just recieved this forcast from Pellucid Corp, which is a company that provides various services for the golf industry.
www.pellucidcorp.comWHEN PRIVATE GOLFERS GO PUBLIC
As I filled up the family minivan in St. Louis this past weekend at $1.48 a gallon, it reminded me of the sometimes dramatic swings in economics that seem to be happening more frequently these days ranging from gas prices to employment to government. As much as I've complained in the past about the golf industry being slow and somewhat resistant to change, there is some solace in the fact that the golf industry and consumer trends tend to happen in longer, attenuated cycles vs. the increasingly regular boom and bust landscape.
One of these attenuated trends that OTR subscriber Harry Ipema of FORE! Reservations brought to our attention recently is the migration of golfers out of private club memberships and back into the public golf segment. While there have been a number of industry stakeholders discussing the demise of 10-20% of private clubs over the next 5 years, we foresee a less draconian scenario that will be the combination of some number of private clubs failing but a more predominate trend of the more established clubs surviving at roughly 90% of their current membership levels. If this occurs, there will be several meaningful shifts for the industry, public facility operators and equipment manufacturers potentially:
Some number of private facilities will no longer be economically viable in 2009 with the majority converting to public golf facilities as a first line of defense
A meaningful number of current private golfers will convert back into the public golf segment which should produce a customer and rounds windfall for quality public courses in proximity to private clubs
The conversion of private golfers back to the public golf segment may also be accompanied by a significant reduction in equipment spending most likely through deferred durables upgrades
If our crystal ball projection is at least directionally correct, this would suggest that the private golf segment has probably seen its high water mark for the foreseeable future in both total members and number of clubs. For the industry this will mean that yet another layer of economic insulation will be peeled away (that of the relatively guaranteed private club member play frequency and spending level) and we'll have to sharpen our marketing skills to keep them invested and playing in the public arena at their former private-side levels. Like Americans' move from SUVs and trucks amid rising gas prices, we should have a slight time cushion required for a majority of these "defectors" to unwind their memberships and trickle back into the public pipeline. This will give us some buffer to adjust economically on the private club side and gear up on the public facility side to understand and service these former private golfers...