We model railroaders of the OGR Forum have discussed this subject ad infinitum and I cannot promise that I am adding anything new here, but I will attempt to do so. We all know the train market has been evolving over the past five years or so becoming soaked with trains from various manufacturers. We all know, also, things cannot continue this way withut significant changes in the market be they rapid or evolutionary. It is very difficult to define those periods of time. As a retired economist and avid hobbyist, I follow the economic sie of the hobby with great interest. It seems to me, some manufacturers are well positioned for change. More than some others, I would add.
I just began reading my copy of Model Railroad News. That periodical focuses primarily on HO and N scale trains. It is fascinating, however, to look for spillover and residual impact on the O scale market and the O Gauge/O Scale size market. We would include Hi Rail and 3 rail O scale, too. I have been following the evolution of MTH trains with great interest because I feel MTH has such a good handle on the pulse of the market. I just read an ad from MTH touting their HO trains in a full page spread in Model Railroad News. I feel the ad is significant for several reasons. I don't see many MTH full page ads for its O scale product any more. Perhaps in Europe they are using their advertising dollars in full page spreads for their European line of trains. The full page MTH HO ad showed their DCC capability and their remote couplers. The ad was right next to a very intensive review of one of MTH's new HO locomotives and the ad was glowing in its praise. I have the feeling, purely anecdotal, that MTH is making siginificant inroads in an HO market already ripe with other manufacturers. It seems Mike really knows how to do this well. I laughingly say it is MTHO trains now because they seem to be very successful there. I also feel the O guage/scale market in Europe is ripe for MTH as that market is/was primarily dominated by Markin trains, providing an expensive alternative. The proliferation of European style trains (MTHE LOL) seems to reflect their astute evaluation of the market.
When I examine the above strategies coupled with recent developments with other manufacturers like Lionel and Atlas O and the prices trains seem to be fetching on Ebay, it seems to me we have "topped out" in this market and are beginning a descent that may be a bit uncomfortable for some. I saw something very similar in the sports card market and decided to dump my cards before the bottom fell out. Much of the bottom did fall out there. Only the cards primarily from the period before 1970 seemed to hold their value. Today, highly specialized cards with autographs or game used pieces seem to be attracting the big dollars.
It seems to me Lionel is cutting back on some key features to keep their premium locomotives at a certain price point. It also seems that some of the decisions in the past year with regard to locomotive types and production quantities have ended up with many locos being blown out. MTH has been very careful, too with their American type production and Atlas O has been even more limited in introducing more, and new locomotives.
Prices on the OGR Forum for resale locos and prices on Ebay for locos produced in the last decade or so are considerably lower, with some few exceptions, and some modelers, myself included, have reached a saturation point.
All of these indicators say to me that the hobby is likely to go through some considerable changes in the next five years and I would like to position myself appropriately with fewer locomotives I do not use, both in boxes and on the shelf. I feel the longer I hold them for possible resale, the less I will realize. I know that some of these items no longer hold as much of a fascination and, coupled with the goal of being more realistic about what I want to operate, a paring down is a good idea.
From now on, a locomotive will have to be ultra detailed and have the features I want or I will pass. Let's see if I can keep to this plan. I think I can said the little engine that could.