Los Angeles Times

More cutting pay-TV cord

- By Meg James meg.james@latimes.com

An estimated 812,000 subscriber­s canceled their service in the second quarter.

The U.S. television industry continues to grapple with the flight of customers who are ditching their payTV service at a rapid clip.

In a grim reminder of the challenges facing media companies, an estimated 812,000 subscriber­s pulled the plug on their pay-television service in the second quarter, according to a study by consulting firm SNL Kagan.

The figure represents a decline in the number of homes that received a bundle of video channels from a cable, satellite or telephone company compared with the first quarter of 2016.

“It is a bit of an accelerati­on and the biggest quarterly loss that we’ve seen,” Ian Olgeirson, an analyst with SNL Kagan, said Monday in an interview. “We are seeing a gradual increase in the decline rate.”

The year-over-year number was more startling. There were nearly 1.4 million fewer pay-TV subscriber­s in the second quarter of 2016 compared with the second quarter of 2015.

The April-June quarter tends to be the weakest for the pay-TV industry as students and families move at the end of the school year, canceling their TV subscripti­ons.

Consumers now have more options. Increasing­ly, they are drawn to online video services such as Netflix, Amazon.com, Hulu and CBS All Access, which can be more affordable when combined with a broadband Internet subscripti­on. Younger users are just as comfortabl­e watching shows on phones and tablets as they are watching them on TVs.

In the second quarter, the telephone sector experience­d the greatest losses, an estimated 488,000 homes, but some of that erosion could be attributed to AT&T’s efforts to migrate customers to its satellite service, DirecTV. AT&T acquired the El Segundo satellite-TV service last year. In addition, Frontier Communicat­ions took over Verizon’s service in several markets, including Southern California.

But even picking up additional customers from AT&T U-Verse wasn’t enough to offset a net loss in the satellite-TV sector. Providers dropped a net 26,000 customers compared with the first quarter. Dish Network has been particular­ly hard hit.

Cable-TV operators have shown strength in the last two years but still experience­d a net loss of 298,000 subscriber­s in the second quarter, the SNL Kagan report found.

Two years ago, the payTV industry experience­d a net loss of 291,000 subscriber­s in the second quarter compared with the first quarter. Olgeirson said the first time that SNL Kagan detected a decline in pay-TV subscriber­s was for the second quarter of 2010.

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