Dish Network Cord-Cutting Woes Accelerate In Q3 2015, Highlighting
Satellite TV Vulnerability

By Oriana Schwindt
International Business Times

November 09 2015 11:05 AM EST

http://www.ibtimes.com/dish-network-cord-cutting-woes-accelerate-q3-2015-highlighting-satellite-tv-2175613


It’s not a great time to be a satellite company. A year ago, satellite TV
provider Dish Network Corp. had 14.04 million subscribers. Today, the
company reported in its most recent quarterly earnings that it has 13.91
million subscribers. It lost 23,000 customers in the three months ended
Sep. 30, nearly double the losses it suffered in the same three months last
year.

That’s not exactly a nightmare scenario for Dish, but when the rate of
cord-cutting among cable companies in general is slowing, an increase in
the rate for Dish suggests trouble. In the company’s defense, it had a
couple high-profile carriage disputes with massive local station groups in
August and September, which isn’t helpful when one is still trying to erase
the taste of a nasty contract battle with Fox News in January of this year.
August saw the company tussling with Sinclair Broadcasting Group over
Sinclair’s push to be paid a higher fee per Dish subscriber, which led to
129 local stations going dark for 5 million customers. And fellow station
super group Tegna played hardball with the satellite company at the end of
September.

Charging providers more to carry a channel is one of the ways that networks
are seeking to unshackle themselves from their dependency on advertising
dollars as traditional TV ratings decline, and the rapid rise of affiliate
fees is only expected to continue. Although Dish has been one of the few
providers willing to force showdowns with station owners, the repeated
blackouts haven’t exactly made Dish popular with many viewers.

Sling TV Mystery Continues

Like just about every other company with an over-the-top TV service, Dish
isn’t breaking out the number of subscribers for its own streaming service,
Sling TV, which allows viewers to live-stream certain channels, including
ESPN or AMC, for a base price of $20 per month with no cable subscription.

The number of Sling customers could be obscuring the real number of
traditional pay TV customers Dish has lost, despite most industry insiders
agreeing that Sling hasn’t been the cord-cutting cure-all it was promised
to be. Investment analyst firm MoffettNathanson estimates that Sling added
24,000 customers this past quarter, down sharply from the 80,000to 90,000
additions in the previous quarter. “Within another quarter, Sling TV,
touted to be their future growth engine, could already be showing net
subscriber declines,” senior analyst Craig Moffett wrote in a note to
investors.

Further toughening Dish’s row to hoe is its Internet woes. Other pay TV
providers like Comcast have managed to capitalize on the surge in broadband
demand, but Dish has been left in the dust, despite offering its own
wireless Internet service (dishNET). Comcast’s broadband subscribers now
outnumber its video subscribers, but Dish lags considerably with only
608,000 Internet customers. The company says it’s investing heavily in
satellite Internet, but unless it can find a big wireless provider to team
up with, as DirecTV did with AT&T, the odds of ever attracting enough
Internet customers to balance out its video losses aren’t great.

Those odds have investors grumbling: Dish’s share price has fallen nearly 3
percent since Nov. 3.
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