Music Trade Review

Issue: 1941 Vol. 100 N. 2

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, FEBRUARY, 1U1
Four Pages
Page 3
Table 2 .
Ifiiaical Instruments, P a r t s , and Materials
Number, and Value; 1939 and 1937
Production, by Kind,
1937
1939
•\v
^1,15O,§13
,.^£3^|877,9^
111,245
$18,031,038
103,110
519,567,679
,656
$2,380,283
27,370
£3,239,113
29,847
§4,453,840
15,467
52,418,378
46,700
#,451,342
32,385
$4,821,386
8,359
$1,945,703
12,842
$2,583,461
7,230
52,567,684
14,357
55,966,893
451
4232,186
689
^538,648
Pianos:
Total number
Tot£l value.
Upright:
Number
Value
Vertical or console models with conventional action}
Number
Value
Console models, flat top, drop action:
Number
Value
Grand:
Under 5 feet in length:
Number.
Value.
5 feet to 6 feet in length:
Number.
Value.
over 6 feet in length:
Number.
Value..
°1«
e * , r *o7> -""eqti,^*'!*
W
HAT 1940 has in store for
piano men is anybody's
guess. With the European
war continuing, and our
not geting into it, piano production
should hit 130,000. If war is stopped,
we shall be lucky to repeat the 1939
performance. Dealers in boom cities
will have to stand guard over credits,
installment paper, for the flimsy
handling of borderline credits could
react to over-sized repossessions.
Being a political year, influences
beyond dealers' control are liable to
aid or hinder the annual results. The
year will either be a cinch, or will be
full of difficulties requiring extreme
skill and ability.
9
* ' *///***'- -
Jot
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, FEBRUARY, 1W
Sixteenth Census of the
United S t a t e s : l?40
DEPARTMENT OF COlfiffiRCE
BUREAU OF THE CENSUS
(Preliminary r e p o r t )
WASHINGTON
December 1 4 , 1940
I n d u s t r i e s Nos. 2031,
2032, 2033, and 2039
CENSUS OF MANUFACTURES: 1939
Musical I n s t r u m e n t s and P a r t s
1939
1937
Percent of
Increase or
decrease (-)
35
512
$1,111,252
5,311
$6,123,348
38
561
$1,120,504
5,698
$7,062,299
-8.7
-O.8
-6.8
-13.3
$10,124,236
$20,493,110
$10,368,874
$9,766,777
$21,703,055
$11,936,278
3.7
-5.6
-13.1
Pianos Industry
Number of establishments
Salaried personnel 1/
Salaries 1 / 2 /
Wage earners (average for the year) "jjJ
Yteges 2 / 2 /
Cost of materials, supplies, fuel, purchased
electric energy, and contract work 2/
Value of products 2/
Value added by manufacture 4/
(•)
,
THE MUSIG TRADE REVIEW, FEBRUARY, 1940
Ing should be included in-our business
formulo--for 194O. With constant en-
deavor to secure better wholesale
prices, also should go intensive work
to pare costs, as while perhaps it was
indavisable to do this two or three
years ago, it is now believed that there
will be a constantly growing piano
business which should be handled on
the one aim of getting proper factory
profits—a minimum of 10% net.
T
Q&'
HIRTY piano factories doing a
business of roughly $17,000,-
000.00 for 100,000 pianos
should net $17 a piano—and
by net we mean proper depreciation
and all the other accurate charges
based upon rational cost accounting.
We hear too much about $5 per piano
factory profits. Unless it is a case
where the boss draws out $50,000 for
himself, and then leaving $5 per piano,
there seems no sense for mfrs. to be
working for a pittance. Continuance of
the past 5 years of growth of piano
acceptance, on a profit hand-to-mouth
basis, will find our plants inadequate
to handle the business. Without some
extra dough in the kitty to care for
expansion and the improvement of pro-
duction facilities the industry will find
the dealers on the spot to get pianos
to sell.

Download Page 4: PDF File | Image

Download Page 5 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.