Why is There Not More Consolidation in Audio?


I’m new here and know I have a lot to learn about various equipment, but it strikes me that there is an almost unlimited amount of options in audiophile-level products.  This is not just in models offered by a given manufacturer but also in the number of manufacturers.

When I look at most product lines, there were once many companies that produced the items, but over time some became financially insolvent and closed, or they were bought up by better-positioned competitors.  This was true with beer.  This was true for soft drinks.  This was true with automobiles.  This was true with gems and jewelry.  This has been true with all sorts of food manufacturers.  We had many more options before and now we have few options.  

I know that some audiophile brands have gone by the wayside. There are references here to, “If you can find one of the old __________, they were pretty good.” And a bit of research shows me that the manufacturer went out of business and/or was absorbed by a competitor.  Still, choices abound.

My questions are:  Why hasn’t consolidation happened more with high-end audio?  Do you think the choices will remain plentiful or will a few manufacturers come to dominate the market and squeeze out weaker competitors?  Is there something about the audiophile customer, or the audiophile market, that makes it likely that more options are sought rather than fewer options (e.g., each person seeking a unique collection of equipment rather than to own the same equipment as others)?
bob540
High End Audio has, in my mind, always been seeded by the DIYer. The innovator. The team in a garage with an idea and a passion.

Also, they are emotional and financial masochists who will continue to brave the HE market regardless of outcome.
I believe jond basically covered it.

Consolidation happens when larger companies see profit in buying smaller companies or to eliminate competition. This is such a tiny niche market there's really not much of a point except for a few bigger brands. 

HE exists for the same reason (or rationale) that fine wine, watches, cars, residences, clothing, and all the other trappings of 'taste' or just sheer "... I've got the $ to indulge myself upon 'X'..."

There is a point where true 'performance' and the means and (perhaps unconscious desire) to impress oneself or others....

Now, I'm not a 'shrink', nor do I claim to be one.

All I'm involved with is making myself Happy.

What and how 'others' are up to and about is their business. *G*

As for 'what happens' with the current uproar....my jury is still Out.

I'll CMA for the time being; suggest you do the same.

Don't believe everything you hear or read for the moment.

Keep your head, let others lose theirs...;)
Some very good responses.  Since posing these questions, I happened upon a site that lists now-defunct electronics companies. There are many more than I realized, and few that I ever knew about.  So, as others said, the history of audio businesses is extensive.  I had thought this proliferation was a more recent trend, but it goes back quite a ways.  I will probably get around to visiting some high-end audio/video showrooms, where I will likely “discover” more names I didn’t know about.  Seems like an area of interest for those with capability for encyclopedic knowledge.
$1000. That's "high-end audio" to most people. There has been and will be consolidation in the consumer audio market. As you go up in price, naturally things become boutique. 

(There's an elephant in the room with expensive gear. Unique to this niche, this subset of the audio industry is an uncontrollable element, THE ROOM.)