Bangkok Post

Australia’s Woolworths Group admits to underpayin­g thousands of supermarke­t employees to the tune of US$200m.

- HELEN COSTER LISA RICHWINE

BURBANK, CALIFORNIA: AT&T Inc in May will launch its HBO Max streaming service with a new Game of Thrones series at the current HBO price of $14.99 a month in an aggressive move to battle Netflix Inc, the Walt Disney Co and Apple Inc for the future of TV.

The price, which many expected to be higher, surprised the financial analysts and investors attending the Warner Media presentati­on on Tuesday.

HBO Max is expected to reach 75 million to 90 million global subscriber­s by 2025, with about 50 million of these coming from the United States. The new service is expected to generate about $5 billion in US revenue by 2025.

The stakes are high for AT&T, which is saddled with debt from a $134 billion acquisitio­n spree to combine media conglomera­te Time Warner and satellite TV provider Direc TV with the second-largest US wireless phone company by subscriber­s.

The success of HBO Max is in many ways a referendum on a strategy to merge content with the means to distribute it.

HBO, which invented high-end, subscripti­on programmin­g, is playing catch-up in the streaming era dominated by Netflix.

To compete, AT&T has committed to invest up to $4 billion in additional HBO Max content by 2025, executives said, just a day after reporting tepid media results for the third quarter.

The investment falls far short of its biggest rival Netflix, which has earmarked $15 billion in cash on content spending in 2019. But AT&T and Warner Media executives believe they have content and ways to get it in front of consumers that are lacking at Apple, Disney and Amazon.com Inc.

Warner Media chief executive John Stankey this month told Reuters that HBO Max would be available this spring to 10 million current AT&T customers in the United States — a mix of wireless, satellite TV, and some HBO Now subscriber­s — at no extra charge.

“The price point of $14.99 for HBO Max strikes a good balance between not cannibalis­ing HBO’s existing revenue base, while also addressing the competitiv­e environmen­t in streaming television,” said Sam Hendel, president of Levin Easterly Partners and a portfolio manager at the firm, which owns about 3.5 million shares of AT&T.

“The HBO Max content offering is extremely robust and I think

‘‘

The price point of $14.99 for HBO Max strikes a good balance between not cannibalis­ing HBO’s existing revenue base, while also addressing the competitiv­e environmen­t in streaming television. SAM HENDEL

President of Levin Easterly Partners

it will be well received by investors and consumers.”

From Stage 21 on the Warner Brothers Studio lot in Burbank, California, executives demonstrat­ed the breadth of new original programmin­g and the depth of Warner Media’s extensive library of films and TV series.

They include the entire collection of DC Universe superhero film franchises from the last decade such as Batman

and recent box office hits such as Joker

that will be available within the first year of its launch. Warner Media also secured the US streaming rights to South Park.

To court new viewers, Warner Media executives said they would introduce 88 original series in 2021, 38 from HBO and 50 under the category it called “Max Originals” that will target younger audiences.

Executives announced a batch of new shows from high-profile producers and directors including Raised by Wolves by Alien filmmaker Ridley Scott about androids raising human children and College Girls from comedian, actress and writer Mindy Kaling.

Ahead of the presentati­on, HBO cancelled a much-anticipate­d prequel to the Game of Thrones starring Naomi Watts, one source familiar with the matter said, confirming reports in Hollywood media.

Instead, Warner Media executives announced 10 episodes of a new Game of Thrones prequel called House of Dragons.

The series will be set 300 years before the events of the just-concluded series and is based on author George R.R. Martin’s book Fire & Blood.

Although the Warner Brothers library includes popular content like The Shining and Scooby-Doo — and the HBO brand is known for edgy, high-quality programmin­g — it does not have the same brand awareness as Pixar, Marvel or Disney properties that will be included in the Disney+ streaming service that launches Nov 12.

And as one of the latest entries in the streaming wars, HBO Max will be competing for household dollars that may have already been allocated to rivals.

Warner Media is hoping that with HBO Max, it can continue serving HBO’s core over-40 audience, and expand to include younger viewers who may prefer to stream content and do not want to pay for cable.

“This is not Netflix. This is not Disney. This is uniquely HBO Max,” AT&T chief executive Randall Stephenson said.

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