HSBC - Five Forces Analysis

HSBC - Five Forces Analysis

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Short description of Porter's Five Forces analysis for…

Intensity of Existing Rivalry

Bargaining Power of Suppliers

Inputs have little impact on costs (HSBC) When inputs are not a big component of costs, suppliers of those inputs have less bargaining power....

Threat of Substitutes

Moving bank accounts is burdensome (HSBC) Please edit this page to add a description…
High cost of switching to substitutes (HSBC) Limited number of substitutes means that customers cannot easily switch to other products or...

Bargaining Power of Customers

Product is important to customer (HSBC) When customers cherish particular products they end up paying more for that one product. This...
Large number of customers (HSBC) When there are large numbers of customers, no one customer tends to have bargaining leverage....

Threat of New Competitors

High capital requirements (HSBC) High capital requirements mean a company must spend a lot of money in order to compete in the...
Branches attract deposits (HSBC) Please edit this page to add a description…
Strong distribution network required (HSBC) Weak distribution networks mean goods are more expensive to move around and some goods don’t get to...
High sunk costs limit competition (HSBC) High sunk costs make it difficult for a competitor to enter a new market, because they have to...
Strong brand names are important (HSBC) If strong brands are critical to compete, then new competitors will have to improve their brand...
Industry requires economies of scale (HSBC) Economies of scale help producers to lower their cost by producing the next unit of output at lower...
Customers are loyal to existing brands (HSBC) It takes time and money to build a brand. When companies need to spend resources building a brand,...
Geographic factors limit competition (HSBC) If existing competitors have the best geographical locations, new competitors will have a...
High switching costs for customers (HSBC) High switching costs make it difficult for customers to change which products they normally...
High learning curve (HSBC) When the learning curve is high, new competitors must spend time and money studying the market...
Entry barriers are high (HSBC) When barriers are high, it is more difficult for new competitors to enter the market. High entry...

What is Porter's Five Forces Analysis?

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