Bangkok Post

Walmart teams up with MGM for content

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NEW YORK: Walmart Inc said yesterday that it would partner with US movie studio Metro Goldwyn Mayer to create content for its video-on-demand service, Vudu, which the retailer bought eight years ago.

Walmart has been looking to prop up Vudu’s monthly viewership that remains well below that of competitor­s like Netflix Inc and Hulu LLC, which is controlled by Walt Disney Co, Comcast Corp and 21st Century Fox Inc.

Media outlets had reported the Bentonvill­e, Arkansas-based company was looking to launch a subscripti­on streaming video service to rival that of Netflix and make a foray into producing TV shows to attract customers.

Walmart is not planning such a move, company sources have told Reuters. The retailer continues, however, to look for options to boost its video-on-demand business and offer programmes that target customers who live outside of big cities.

Walmart and MGM will make the announceme­nt at the NewFronts conference in Los Angeles on Wednesday. It will include the name of the first production under the partnershi­p, which Walmart will license from MGM.

“Under this partnershi­p, MGM will create exclusive content based on their extensive library of iconic IP (intellectu­al property), and that content will premiere exclusivel­y on the Vudu platform,” Walmart spokesman Justin Rushing told Reuters.

“The focus will be on family-friendly content that Walmart customers prefer,’’ Rushing said.

The financial deals of the deal were not disclosed.

Licensing content is a cost-effective strategy at a time when producing original content has become a costly venture.

As of July, Netflix said it was spending $8 billion a year on original and acquired content. Amazon.com Inc’s programmin­g budget for Prime Video was more than $4 billion, while US broadcaste­r HBO, owned by AT&T Inc, said it would spend $2.7 billion this year.

Walmart acquired Vudu in 2010 to safeguard against declining in-store sales of DVDs. It bet that customers would continue to buy and rent movies and move their titles to a digital library, which Vudu would create and maintain for viewers.

But the video site has not posed a significan­t challenge to rivals that dominate the segment even though it is pre-loaded or can be downloaded to millions of smart television­s and video-game consoles.

Vudu offers 150,000 titles to buy or rent, while its free, ad-supported streaming service, called Movies On Us, includes 5,000 movies and TV shows.

There are currently more than 200 video services that bypass cable providers and stream content directly to a TV, laptop, phone or game console. That is up from 68 five years ago, according to market researcher Parks Associates.

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