AT&T-Dish Break Signals Cloudy Weather For Satellite TV

As AT&T rolls out its own IPTV offering, it may see its satellite TV 
partnerships as insignificant to its overall strategy.

By Richard Martin
InformationWeek

July 2, 2008

URL: http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=208802242



The news that AT&T will end its distribution deal with Dish Network has 
sent the shares of Dish reeling: the No. 2 U.S. satellite-TV company has 
lost more than 7% of its market cap since the closing bell on Tuesday. But 
Ma Bell's maneuver could indicate a broader weakness in the satellite TV arena.

In a Securities and Exchange Commission filing late Tuesday, Dish said the 
agreement, which began in 2003, will conclude at the end of the year. 
Earlier this year AT&T ended a partnership with DirecTV, the No. 1 
satellite TV provider.

Some analysts believe AT&T is angling for better terms from Dish Network to 
renew the partnership, or that it will try to spark a bidding war between 
the two satellite providers, which rely heavily on telecom-company 
partnerships to market their services to consumers.

As AT&T rolls out its own Internet Protocol television (IPTV) offering, 
however, it may see the sat-TV partnerships as less integral to its overall 
strategy. In the tangled market for supplying bundled services to 
residences, including voice, Internet access, and entertainment, big 
providers like AT&T are offering multiple, and often competing, services.

Launched in 2006, AT&T's U-verse IPTV service has struggled to find 
customers and to supply television and video-on-demand in a cost-effective 
fashion. There are signs, however, that U-verse is gaining traction: At the 
end of the first quarter of 2008, the company said it had 378,000 U-verse 
subscribers and plans to offer the Internet-based service to 31 million 
residential customers in the next few years.

AT&T has about 2.23 million satellite-TV subscribers, through both DirecTV 
and Dish Network.

"AT&T would not monkey with its satellite partnerships if it lacked 
confidence in U-verse," wrote Morgan Keegan analysts Simon M. Leopold, Paul 
A. Bonenfant, and Mark Carroll Jr. in an "Investor's Soapbox" column on 
Barrons.com.

FiOS TV, the IPTV offering from Verizon Communications launched in 2005, is 
also winning customers from cable and satellite providers. Adding 263,000 
subscribers in the first quarter of this year, Verizon now has about 1.3 
million IPTV subscribers.

By comparison, the top cable and satellite providers, Comcast and DirecTV, 
have more than 50 million subscribers combined. That gap could narrow in 
coming years, according to a recent report from research firm SNL Kagan. 
The telcos' share of the pay-TV market will triple in the next three years, 
to 9%, Kagan predicts. Particularly strong will be video-on-demand 
services: IPTV providers' revenue from video could jump tenfold by 2012, 
according to research from Gartner.

"Competitive pressures in the consumer communications market" are driving 
the big telcos "to expand their suite of services to include broadcast 
television and video programming," said Amanda Sabia, principal research 
analyst at Gartner.

AT&T has been rolling out a bundled service that comprises U-verse TV, 
high-speed Internet access, and voice services to selected regions. Last 
week Verizon announced the biggest upgrade to date for its FiOS Internet 
Service, saying it will increase the upload and download speeds available 
to more than 10 million homes and businesses across 10 states. The company 
said it expects FiOS be available to more than 18 million potential 
customers by 2010.

While FiOS is a pure fiber-optics technology, AT&T's U-verse network uses a 
combination of long-haul fiber and copper connections to the home. 
Previously selling to largely separate geographical territories, the two 
services have begun to compete directly in some markets.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu

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