Skinny Bundles To Be 25% Of All Pay-TV Subscriptions By 2022 – Analyst

by Dade Hayes
Deadline.com

June 18, 2018 11:01am

https://deadline.com/2018/06/skinny-bundles-to-be-25-of-all-pay-tv-subscriptions-by-2022-1202412562/



A new report from UBS predicts a “steeper ramp” than previously forecast
for so-called “skinny bundle” services like Sling TV and DirecTV Now in the
coming years. By 2022, the financial institution’s media analysts predict,
they will represent 25% of all pay-TV subscriptions.

“As these offerings continue to improve—closing programming gaps, adding
features and improving transmission quality—and traditional TV consumption
falls, we expect the streamers to become increasingly attractive,” said the
report, which was written by a team headed by analyst John Hodulik.

UBS projects there will be 9.2 million online streaming TV subscribers by
the end of 2018, which had been its previous forecast. But based on new
findings and polling data in its Evidence Lab, UBS said it is increasing
its estimate for the end of 2020 to 17 million from 15 million and now
expects 24 million by the end of 2022.

Dish’s Sling, which was very early to market, leads the skinny field with
2.3 million subscribers, followed by DirecTV Now. Hodulik wrote that AT&T’s
DirecTV Now — a key strategic asset that got a lot of mentions during the
company’s courtroom battle with the government over the Time Warner merger
— has grown “faster than expected,” reaching 1.5 million customers in its
first 18 months. It should get further momentum from anticipated launches
of non-sports, basic bundle AT&T Watch and another package described by
Hodulik as “a higher-end, device-centric service.”

At 800,000 subscribers for its Live TV service, Hulu “could get a boost if
selected as Verizon’s OTT partner,” Hodulik writes. He estimates YouTube TV
at about 750,000 subs in its first year. Other skinny players include
Sony’s PlayStation Vue and a handful of offerings from traditional cable
operators.

In a survey by the UBS Evidence Lab, nearly one in three respondents said
they were likely or very likely to consider signing up for streaming TV.
Satisfaction with streaming TV remains high, with DirecTV Now leading the
pack. Satisfaction with traditional pay TV bundles and interest in
cord-cutting and cord-shaving held steady at about one in five and one in
four households, respectively.

“Doubling up, or subscribing to both traditional and streaming TV,
continues to decline, suggesting the recent boost to total pay TV subs will
taper off,” Hodulik wrote.

For the corporations behind the bundles, the economics are very different
between a traditional and a digitally delivered bundle. Long-term contracts
and equipment rentals are standard with traditional subscriptions, whereas
new packages have lower price points, no contract, no equipment and minimal
friction for subscribers looking to join and cancel. That can lead to
higher churn rates, and the not-infrequent outages that skinny-bundle
customers experience have also become a nuisance.
_______________________________________________
Medianews mailing list
[email protected]
http://etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews_etskywarn.net

Reply via email to