Showing posts sorted by relevance for query linear video losses. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query linear video losses. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, January 2, 2023

Which Path for Video Streaming?

It is not yet clear whether video entertainment facing internet disruption will follow the path of the music and print media industries, or somehow can evolve in a way similar to retailing. In other words, will the future video entertainment business be bigger or smaller than the linear business it displaces?


It is conventional wisdom these days that video streaming has failed to replace losses from linear TV subscription declines. In some ways, the comparison is a bit unfair. Streaming is a new business, which means development costs and investments are high, compared to customers and revenue, as generally is true for most new lines of business being created for the first time. 


Linear video subscriptions are a declining line of business, but can be harvested for revenue without undue investments. So we are comparing a declining business with a growing and new line of business. One can harvest revenues from a legacy business. One has to invest to grow a new one. 


Also, in a linear video model, content providers can spend less on delivery infrastructure, as the distributor takes care of that. In a streaming model, the delivery infrastructure has to be built. 


In the linear model, content provider marketing costs are lower, as the distributor takes primary charge of that function and absorbs the cost. In a direct-to-customer streaming model, the content provider has to spend more on marketing and sales. 


There are other differences as well. Customer churn--which increases operating costs--for streaming services is higher than for linear TV services. One big reason is that customers can binge watch a hot new series and then churn off once they are finished. 


Also, a linear video package is itself a bundle, with economy of scope advantages. Most buyers are aware that buying in bulk correlates with lower cost per unit. Unbundling content eliminates much of that advantage. To be sure, any single streaming service remains a bundle of content. 


If you think about one of the main complaints about linear TV, which is that customers pay for products they do not use, you get the idea. The linear bundle increases profits for the whole ecosystem because customers are forced to buy products they do not want, do not use, do not value. 


The economic argument is quite similar to that the industry debated a couple of decades ago: whether unbundled, a la carte network access would at least be revenue neutral compared to the existing cable TV bundle. A la carte sales models imply lower ad revenues, lower subscriber counts and therefore lower subscription revenues. 


In principle, ability to buy content “by the piece or by the episode”  allows customers to buy only what they want. And consumers resonate with that idea. The issue is whether content suppliers can afford to grant access at sustainable prices. Consumers almost always value a bit of content less highly than the content owners selling it. 


Most consumers already have discovered they need more than one streaming service to satisfy their needs. Ironically, that defeats the purported value of “lower prices” for any single streaming service. 


But content scope never is as great as with a linear package, which delivers many networks. Each streaming service is, in essence, a single network. Today, most content providers make most of their money selling content rights to cable TV providers. As that revenue stream shrinks, it is poised to shrink faster than streaming revenues can replace the losses.


source: MoffettNathanson


Of course, the linear video model has gotten more precarious for lots of reasons beyond the existence of video streaming alternatives. As content prices have kept climbing, it was inevitable that the cable TV bundle would reach a level where the value-cost relationship would be seen as unfavorable by a growing number of consumers.


Unbundling video content access almost inevitably leads to higher costs per unit, for suppliers and consumers. It is possible a smaller industry therefore results, as less-popular networks get squeezed out. 


Of course, under some circumstances, unbundling also might allow some niche content to thrive. As has become the case in the music industry, where consumers now buy “songs” a la carte rather than “albums” (a bundle), some niche formats might find a way to survive. 


But that survival also likely will hinge on creation of new revenue and monetization mechanisms, as most bands now make their money from concerts, not selling pre-recorded music. 


For programming “networks” (streaming services as well as broadcast TV or cable networks), survival might require expanded business models where the networks themselves are not required to generate high profits, but enable some other revenue model to to flourish. One thinks of Amazon Prime, where the revenue comes from memberships and higher e-commerce transaction volumes. 


Streaming has not, so far, proven able to replace lost linear video losses. Whether that always will be the case is the issue. 


E-commerce arguably has not led to a smaller retail industry, as much as it has reshaped the fortunes of legacy suppliers. But most would likely agree that newspaper/magazine (print) industry revenues are lower than before the online disruption.


The music industry might arguably also be smaller than before online music distribution. Whether video content follows the path of print media and music, or the pattern of retailing, is not yet clear.

Monday, December 4, 2017

How Fast Will Linear Video Decline?

The conventional wisdom now is that over the top (online) video services are displacing linear video services. According to the latest forecast from The Diffusion Group, the conventional wisdom is correct.

Take rates (household penetration) of linear video services will decline from 85 percent of U.S. households in 2017 to 79 percent in 2030, according to TDG. But other TDG metrics suggest faster declines.

Some might argue the rate of change now modeled by most observers actually understates the degree of change. Up to this point, forecasters have (correctly) called for modest but steady declines in linear video take rates.

But some might note that market changes caused by new technology tend to follow a rather predictable “S” curve, where initial changes are quite modest, followed by fast changes when an inflection point is reached.

That means linear projections are proven wrong, as the rate of change actually becomes non-linear, usually after about 10 percent adoption of the new technology. That actually already has happened, in the U.S. market, in terms of adoption of OTT video services.

There are at least 187 million OTT video accounts in service, compared to roughly 93 percent household penetration of linear video.  So, counting by accounts, OTT video adoption is far beyond 10 percent, well over 100 percent adoption of households, as there are perhaps 126 million U.S. households.

As with mobile subscriber identity modules, some people might use more than one SIM. Some households have multiple subscriptions.


Up to this point, OTT has been a substitute for linear video, but not a complete substitute, as often happens early in the adoption cycle of new technology products. Over time, the new technology platform becomes more robust, eventually becoming a fully-fledged substitute for the legacy technology.

TDG predicts that, by 2030, roughly 30 million U.S. households--representing 26 percent of all U.S. households--will live without a linear service of any type.

So legacy video penetration will fall from 81 percent of U.S. households in 2017 to 60 percent in 2030, down 26 percent.

That estimate includes losses of traditional services to over the top services that stream “live content in real time,” as well as using the on-demand format favored by Netflix, Amazon Prime and others.

So, using that set of definitions, legacy linear video might drop substantially between now and 2030. That is just one reason why some find U.S. Department of Justice concerns about excessive potential market power if AT&T buys Time Warner to be somewhat odd.

The linear video market itself already is changing in ways that make "dominance" a problem that goes away as the market itself goes away. And even the new OTT market features average revenue per account perhaps seven to eight times cheaper than the linear product OTT replaces.

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Dish Network Will Play a Role in Rearranging U.S. Mobile and Video Market Share

source: Bruck Kushnick
Facing important decisions about potential consolidation in both video entertainment  and mobile industry segments, Federal Communications Commission decisions, along with Department of Justice antitrust reviews, could trigger other cross-industry consolidation as well.

The immediate issues include the Comcast acquisition of Time Warner Cable, the possible, though unlikely Sprint acquisition of T-Mobile US and a potential merger between DirecTV and Dish Network.

Also in the background are upcoming auctions of former TV broadcast spectrum that likely will limit potential gains by AT&T and Verizon, while favoring Sprint and T-Mobile US.

All those intramodal changes could also trigger intermodal activity, though. Dish Network has been amassing spectrum suitable for building a mobile business based on fourth generation Long Term Evolution.

source: Bruck Kushnick
Dish faces an FCC deadline for beginning and finishing construction of that network, in order to keep its licenses. So there has been logical speculation about a deal with Sprint, for example, to expedite the actual network activation process.

But there are other possibilities as well. Both AT&T and Verizon face some limits on how big their existing linear video services business can grow. And some would question the long term value as well.

Dish Network CEO Charlie Ergen sees a dwindling future for satellite-based video service, and also for fixed network delivered linear video entertainment, as demand shifts to over the top and on-demand delivery.

“In my opinion, the video business for a monthly subscription of $80 to $100 a month is a mature business,” Ergen has said. “We’re losing a whole generation of individuals who aren’t going to buy into that model because they only want one particular show or they want to watch the show wherever they can or they want to watch it on their schedule and so that generation is not signing up to satellite or cable or phone video today.”

“At some point in time, the video business, as we know it today, will change dramatically enough that the current business will go from a mature business to a declining business,” Ergen has candidly said. “Hopefully, we’ll make up for that and in an over-the-top business or a wireless business or other businesses that make sense.”

That, many would argue, explains Dish Network’s effort to buy Clearwire and Sprint, purchases of satellite spectrum that can be repurposed to support terrestrial LTE and H block spectrum purchases.

Though initially some speculated that Ergen was buying all that spectrum, and talking about mobile networks, only to entice a buyer for all of Dish Network, Ergen now arguably is quite serious about shifting his business model.

For AT&T or Verizon, a shrinking fixed network linear video business could make a mobile-centric, over the top and on-demand video service much more attractive, positioning either carrier in a growing revenue segment that would become the successor to the linear video business.

Such a business also would be national in scope, where each carrier now has a limited geographic footprint. Also, should Google Fiber continue to scale its business, AT&T or Verizon would gain some revenue to offset possible losses in the fixed network and video services business.

If the Federal Communications Commission limits bidding on spectrum in upcoming auctions of former TV broadcast spectrum, limiting the amount of spectrum AT&T and Verizon can acquire, there are certain to be correlated actions by Verizon or AT&T.

The Federal Communications Commission seems to be interested in crafting auction rules that would ensure that T-Mobile US and Sprint get a reasonable share of the new spectrum.

This is important and valuable to both carriers as the new frequencies will propagate farther than the higher-frequency holdings that anchor both carriers’ present services. Greater propagation means less capital cost for the transmitting network.

But those bidding restrictions also would limit the additional spectrum AT&T or Verizon could acquire.

To be sure, Verizon has said it has no need for more spectrum for additional spectrum. But Verizon already has invested in assets that would allow it to launch a nationwide, mobile-delivered over the top video service. And that would take lots more bandwidth than Verizon presently controls.

Verizon’s public statements notwithstanding, it almost certainly will be needing more spectrum, not so much for its “mobile communications” services, but for potentially key new mobile video entertainment services.

And that is where Dish Network could come into play. Dish owns enough spectrum to be attractive if Verizon or AT&T are serious about a mobile-delivered, over the top and on-demand video entertainment service.

Keep in mind that Verizon’s FiOS footprint is relatively small, compared that of Comcast and the satellite networks, for example.

One might argue that will happen. The traditional argument--for at least a decade--is that neither AT&T nor Verizon can grow the video portion of their triple-play services much more than incrementally, without acquiring more video share now held by the satellite providers.

No matter how effective the telcos are at marketing video services, they are hampered for a couple of reasons.

The cost of upgrading their fixed networks to handle video is a task now made tougher because the financial return from investing in mobile assets now competes for investment funds, is one limitation.

AT&T and Verizon have very good reasons for caution about capital investment in their fixed networks, even if high speed access and video entertainment services have emerged as strategic applications for fixed networks.

The other problem is that both firms are barred from significant growth by acquisition, simply because of their large share of the telco fixed network business. AT&T’s fixed network might pass about 30 million of 115 million or so U.S. homes, and not all those locations are video-capable.

Verizon passes about 27 million homes. And despite new AT&T plans to vastly accelerate upgrading its networks, perhaps half of all lines operated by AT&T and Verizon fixed networks are not yet upgraded to enable video services.

The point is that AT&T and Verizon will be limited in the number of video subscribers they can attract, simply because their footprints are relatively limited, both geographically and in terms of the cost of upgrading rapidly.

source: BTIG Research
Verizon’s video entertainment customer base, for example, is about five million households. DirecTV has about 20 million customers while Comcast, with Time Warner Cable, would have more than 30 million customers. Dish Network has about 14 million customers.

No matter how effective Verizon is at winning video market share where it has fixed network FiOS assets, the fact is that Verizon’s network footprint is too small, relative to the satellite networks, Comcast or AT&T, to grow its business too much further.

AT&T has about 5.5 million video customers as well. One might argue that the only way either AT&T or Verizon gets significantly more video share is by buying one of the satellite providers.

To the extent that national footprint is helpful, as it has become in the mobile business, national scale arguably would be beneficial in the video business, as both DirecTV and Dish Network are able to take advantage of, in terms of marketing and to some extent in terms of appeal to advertisers.

Not only does Ergen expect demand for linear video to decline, geostationary satellite networks are ill-suited for interactive services.

But to the extent that linear video remains a key revenue driver, acquisition of Dish Network and DirecTV subscriber bases are one of the most-logical ways for AT&T and Verizon to gain scale and revenue volume in the linear video business.


Dish also offers Verizon a service organization outside of FiOS areas that could help Verizon deploy additional mobile broadband capacity and support an over the top mobile video service.

And either AT&T or Verizon would have more headroom to acquire additional spectrum from such a secondary transaction if the FCC revises the “spectrum screen” it uses to ensure diversity of spectrum ownership.

Essentially, the FCC limits ownership by any provider to no more than about 33 percent of available spectrum. In recent days, the Commission has not included 2.5-GHz Sprint holdings in the base, for such purposes.

Many believe that will change, automatically giving AT&T and Verizon more leeway to acquire spectrum in secondary markets (by buying firms with rights to spectrum). Dish Network is the firm with the greatest amount of spectrum to be acquired in that manner.

So watch for big intermodal changes in the U.S. mobile and video services business.

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Will LInear Video Follow Voice and DSL Patterns?

Are telco voice and high speed access the future model for what happens to the linear video business model? Some might argue that is reasonable.

It just stands to reason that an eventual shift to video streaming could have negative repercussions for some entertainment video distributors, the model and precedent being the replacement of digital subscriber line accounts with fiber to home or fiber to neighborhood replacement services, and the earlier switch out of fixed voice to mobile voice.

In the first switch, fixed line voice customers stopped using fixed voice, and started using mobile instead. Also, the suppliers that got the replacement product revenue often were not the same firms selling the legacy products.

So revenue recipients shifted as the legacy market shrank. But it is a complicated transition.

Where the consumer fixed voice product involved just one or a couple of lines per location (in the days of dial-up Internet access), the advent of mobile voice actually expanded the addressable market to "people, instead of places."

So where a three-person household bought one fixed voice line, it now buys three mobile accounts. "So units sold" grew substantially.

On the other hand, revenue per account arguably is lower for mobile products, compared to fixed products. Where a fixed voice line might cost $50 a month, a mobile account might represent $20 a month, for the voice portion of the service.

But won't linear video distributors also begin to offer OTT alternatives? Yes, Dish Network, for example, already does so. But there is some amount of cannibalization of existing accounts, in addition to net subscriber gains.

We have seen this pattern before, when telcos replaced DSL with fiber connections for Internet access, and earlier when customers switched from dial-up to broadband.

On one hand, a supplier gains a new fiber-based high speed access account. On the other hand, that same supplier also loses a copper-based access account when a customer switches from legacy to optical access service.

PwC’s annual five-year forecast for global entertainment and media shows slower advertising growth rates.


In 2014, PwC predicted advertising would increase 5.5 percent annually over the next five years; now PwC says that rate will slow to just four percent annually through 2019.


In the United States, TV ad spending is growing by just a little more than three percent annually on average, compared to five percent growth rates between 2013 and 2014.


Those dips are happening because OTT services are siphoning off viewers, and ad rates are set by the size of audiences.


That is one example of how the advent of over the top video streaming will act to lower gross revenue and profit margins in the TV business, as has happened in other businesses faced with replacement of legacy products by Internet-enabled products.


Since we are early in the transition from linear to over the top, it is hard to predict the revenue impact on legacy distributors. But it already would be reasonable to argue that Netflix has capped the growth of linear video subscriptions, at the very least, siphoning off growth that otherwise might have gone to pay per view and premium channel spending. In other words, Netflix is a substitute for HBO and Showtime.


Gross revenue might be an issue as well. A Sling TV subscription costs $20 a month. Netflix might cost $8 to $16 a month. A typical basic linear TV subscription easily can run $80 a month. So gross revenue compression is a clear issue for any linear video provider moving to OTT distribution.


And as telcos have found, what one gains can easily be offset by accounts replaced. So far, the displacement in linear video has not proven so large. In 2012, 80 percent of Americans bought subscription linear video. By 2016, 77 percent will do so, PwC forecasts.


But what happens if the mainstream consumer begins to replace linear subscriptions with OTT subscriptions? Perhaps nobody really knows, yet


What percentage of $80 a month accounts drop to $40 a month or are abandoned? Keep in mind that both happened with voice services: a majority of consumers simply stopped buying, switching to mobile voice.

Many consumers pay less because they buy discounted triple play services. If past proves to be precedent, linear video will suffer subscriber losses, gross revenue decline and margin compression. even if some amount of new OTT business is gained.  

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Will Football Win for AT&T?

Will AT&T’s success in entertainment video ultimately hinge on success for NFL Sunday Ticket,  the out-of-market National Football League service? Possibly, especially in the near term.

Longer term, newer formats (over the top, mobile) will develop, and it is unclear how much success in linear video will contribute, though AT&T and many others believe success in linear video will contribute to future success in OTT--and especially mobile--video.

Win or lose, AT&T’s likely gambit will once again prove why unique content assets are so valuable, whether that is original series produced by Netflix or Amazon Prime, or the original series efforts that have for decades been a core part of the strategy for most linear video networks.

In a business where much content is identical on every linear network, unique assets are important. And, win or lose, AT&T is banking on NFL Sunday Ticket to be a huge driver of account growth.

There are other issues, though.

Over the last two quarters, intentionally or not, AT&T has been losing U-verse video accounts while DirecTV accounts have grown.

In the second quarter of 2016, AT&T had net additions of 342,000 DirecTV subs, but net losses of 391,000 U-verse customer accounts served by the fixed network were a drag on net growth.

Some might argue AT&T has to surmount a “digital subscriber line to U-verse” problem it has faced in its consumer Internet access business. AT&T lost 110,000 Internet accounts in the second quarter of 2016, adding 54,000 IP broadband (U-verse) customers, but losing 164,000 DSL (all-copper network) subs.

In other words, as AT&T moves existing customers from one platform to another, it has a zero net gain. Some amount of DirecTV “growth” will have a net zero gain for AT&T’s overall entertainment video business.

And, as a background matter, if AT&T is losing accounts overall. As nearly all fixed network service providers also are losing landline accounts, AT&T naturally should see additional ideo attrition pressures as it loses voice accounts.

As its primary cable TV competitors compete with triple-play offers, losing any single service is also likely to pull along a loss of one or two other services.

The other question is the extent to which AT&T actively is pushing its U-verse video customers to buy DirecTV instead of U-verse. That seems to be happening.

Early on, many thought that was the plan, all along. AT&T knows linear video is a product in the “decline” period of its product cycle, so the lower delivery cost and national footprint (except for Dish Network, no other linear video provider has a national footprint) will likely matter.

Also, as some have noted, offloading video traffic from the fixed network frees up bandwidth for Internet access, a strategic approach U.S. cable TV operators have been doing for some time, shifting to digital delivery of video (and signal compression)  in part because that frees up more bandwidth for Internet access services.

It also now appears that the U-Verse brand is going to be dropped, in favor of simple “AT&T video” or “AT&T Internet” branding.

AT&T might also be encountering an operational learning curve as well. It is not clear to what extent  equipment installs are being shifted to internal AT&T crews, rather than using the former DirecTV crews. Nor is it clear how well AT&T sales staff are selling the new product. But it would not be unusual for a learning curve to take place.

Monday, August 15, 2016

Linear Video Subscriber Losses Continue in 2Q 2016, But Inflection Point Not Yet Reached

There were not too many--if any surprises--in the latest Leichtman Research Group survey of the U.S. linear TV business. The second quarter of 2016 showed net subscriber losses, but that is consistent with the trends of the last several years.


Some might point to the magnitude of the net losses--665,000 net video subscribers--compared to 545,000 subscribers in the same quarter of 2015.


But the second quarter always is the worst quarter of the year, and the magnitude of those losses could decline for the next three quarters. And most of that came from losses of AT&T U-verse accounts.


Statistically, a loss of 665,000 customers represents about seven-tenths of one percent. Perhaps not pleasant for linear video service providers, but hardly a jarring loss.


On an annualized basis, if continued at the same rate, that would work out to about three percent annually. That would be historically high for any one-year period. And, granted, at that high rate, it wouldn’t take long for the industry to lose most of its business over a decade or so.


And that is what observers will be watching.


Fixed network voice accounts supplied by incumbent telcos (cable TV companies have gained accounts) have fallen far faster than that over the last couple of decades.


From 2000 to 2015, incumbent telcos lost about 70 percent of switched access lines and 79 percent of switched retail residential access lines.




From 2006 to 2011, U.S. fixed voice lines fell from about 139 million to 89 million, a drop of 50 million lines, or about 36 percent, or roughly seven percent a year.


From 2010 to 2015, voice lines fell at a slower rate, from about 153 million to 135 million, a loss of 18 million lines, or about 12 percent over five years, or perhaps 2.4 percent annually.


If past is prologue, the steep period of losses of linear video accounts has yet to begin.


Linear Video Subscribers, Second Quarter, 2016
Pay-TV Providers
Subscribers
Net Adds
Cable Companies


Comcast
22,396,000
(4,000)
Charter*
17,312,000
(143,000)
Altice**
3,639,000
(25,000)
Mediacom
842,000
(11,000)
Cable ONE
338,974
(11,602)
Other major private company***
4,330,000
(30,000)
Total Top Cable
48,857,974
(224,602)



Satellite TV Companies (DBS)


DirecTV
20,454,000
342,000
DISH^
13,593,000
(281,000)
Total DBS
34,047,000
61,000



Phone Companies


AT&T U-verse
4,869,000
(391,000)
Verizon FiOS
4,637,000
(41,000)
Frontier^^
1,340,000
(70,000)
Total Top Phone
10,846,000
(502,000)



Total Top Pay-TV Providers
93,750,974
(665,602)
Source: Leichtman Research Group

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