In the TV industry, thin is in — and that’s bad news for the TV industry.
The days of wooing new pay TV customers with bloated bundles
of 250-plus channels are on the wane as more and more viewers gravitate
toward “skinnier” packages that offer fewer choices at lower costs.
The trend, known as “cord-shaving,” spells serious trouble for cable
network owners whose revenue is based in part on how many households
they reach. And as skinny bundles grow in popularity, some of the most
popular networks on cable are also the most vulnerable, according to
Brian Wieser, a media analyst with Pivotal Research Group.
“This is a more significant threat than the less pronounced
reality of ‘cord-cutting’ for most networks,” Wieser wrote Monday in a
research note. “Cord-shaving disproportionately impacts networks that
are either particularly expensive or which distributors are willing to
go without.”
Specifically, Wieser singled out the Walt Disney Company and
Viacom Inc. as the media giants that face the biggest threat from
skinny bundles. Disney-owned ESPN is by far the most expensive network
for pay TV operators to carry, and as a result, it’s the most expensive
for consumers. The average cable subscriber pays about $6 a month for
the privilege of having ESPN. Given the popularity of live sports, ESPN
has benefited from the status quo of large bundles, but presumably a
sizable portion of the TV-viewing population would just assume spend
that money on a Grande vanilla latte from Starbucks.
In a skinny-bundle world, households with no sports fanatics
might opt for an ESPN-less package, if they had that option. Similarly,
households without children or teenagers might opt to ditch Viacom’s
Nickelodeon or MTV.
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This is the slippery slope that network groups have resisted
through restrictive licensing agreements requiring pay TV operators to
bundle all their channels together, and it’s precisely why ESPN last
year hit Verizon with a breach of contract lawsuit after it began
offering customized cable packages to FiOS customers.
To come up with his analysis, Wieser cited the latest cable
network “Universe Estimates” report from the Nielsen Company, which
looks at how many households subscribe to pay television services and
which services carry specific networks. The quarterly report for April
2016 showed a median household-subscriber decline of 2.5 percent across
the cable landscape.
Disney-owned networks were among the hardest hit, declining
3.6 percent, while Viacom networks declined 3.1 percent. Faring much
better was 21st Century Fox, whose networks saw a median decline of only
0.9 percent.
None of those declines were a fluke. According to Wieser,
Nielsen data shows declines of about 2 percent per year since the
beginning of 2014. This despite the fact that new household formation
seems to be on an upswing for the first time since the financial crisis, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
Wieser said the trend of cord-shaving will leave networks especially
vulnerable over the long term, as skinny bundles become the norm and
affiliate fees begin to reflect lower penetration for networks.
“Affiliate fees are not necessarily impacted in the
short-term as distributors will often be obliged to pay for certain
minimum subscriber levels,” Wieser wrote. “However, over longer time
horizons we think that the trends captured by Nielsen are likely to be
reflected in the subscriber numbers that programmers get paid for.”
Christopher Zara covers media and culture. News tips? Email me. Follow me on Twitter @christopherzara.
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