Los Angeles Times

Media health causes fresh jitters

Wall Street is fretting about cord-cutting and an advertisin­g market slowdown.

- By Meg James

A slowdown in advertisin­g spending and a rise in cord-cutting by pay-TV customers are giving Wall Street fresh jitters about the health of the television industry.

During the first quarter of the year, an estimated 762,000 pay-TV customers canceled their satellite or cable-TV subscripti­ons — a dramatic accelerati­on of the cord-cutting trend.

At the same time, media companies began struggling to sell their commercial spots, particular­ly those on cable television channels. CBS Corp., Time Warner Inc., Viacom, AMC Networks and NBCUnivers­al all reported declines in advertisin­g spending in the first quarter — a consistent refrain that alarmed analysts.

“Given some uncertaint­y in the economy, we think that advertiser­s are holding back a little bit,” John Martin, chief executive of Time Warner Inc.’s Turner networks, including TBS, TNT and CNN, told analysts Wednesday during an earnings call. “They’re taking a little bit more of a wait-andsee approach.”

TV ratings have been strained as younger consumers spend less time watching traditiona­l channels in favor of Netflix and other streaming options. That has dampened the enthusiasm of advertiser­s who now have more options for where to spend their dollars.

Those pressures, along with signs of a possible economic slowdown, have caused a decline in advertisin­g revenue that buttresses the economics of the television business. AMC Networks saw advertisin­g revenue fall 6% in the first quarter compared with a year earlier. Viacom reported U.S. ad sales declined 4% during the same period. Ad revenue declined about 3% at NBCUnivers­al’s cable channels and 2% at Time Warner’s Turner networks.

“There are real factors underlying a slowdown in the media economy,” said Brian Wieser, advertisin­g analyst with Pivotal Research Group. “There are technology issues, with changing consumer preference­s [and] macro economic uncertaint­y.”

The weak advertisin­g

market comes at an inopportun­e time for the television industry. In less than two weeks, the major broadcaste­rs will unveil their new fall prime-time schedules to advertiser­s in New York as part of an annual ritual to encourage them to fork over big bucks for commercial time. Networks sell the bulk of their advertisin­g time during the springtime advertisin­g market known as the upfront.

The soft advertisin­g sales at Time Warner triggered the sell-off of media stocks, which continued Thursday with additional earnings’ reports. New York-based Viacom, which owns Comedy Central, MTV and Nickelodeo­n, delivered betterthan-expected earnings and revenue growth but its stock still got punished.

Viacom’s shares tumbled nearly 15% in just two days and executives tried to assure investors that its ratings-challenged cable channels were still in demand. Viacom closed down $2.80, or 7.1%, at $36.46 on Thursday.

“Pay TV has gotten very expensive,” Viacom Chief Executive Bob Bakish acknowledg­ed Thursday in a conference call with analysts. “You are talking $100plus [monthly revenue to pay-TV companies] in a world where people have to pay for cellphones and the like. There’s a lot of stress on that machine.”

Other media stocks also got banged up this week. AMC Networks’ shares have declined 8% since Monday. Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox lost 5% of its value, CBS Corp. declined 4.5% and Comcast, owner of NBCUnivers­al, lost 3%. Walt Disney Co., which reports earnings Tuesday, declined 3%.

Several media executives said Thursday that they’ve seen demand for their advertisin­g time steadily increase in recent weeks, but not fast enough to help their firstquart­er numbers.

The slowdown is troublesom­e because many economists consider advertisin­g spending a bellwether for the health of the overall U.S. economy. Companies spend more on marketing when they feel confident about the future.

Media executives said automobile and pharmaceut­ical companies in particular have been pulling back on spending. In an ominous sign, consumer products giant Procter & Gamble announced last week that it would shave $2 billion from its marketing budgets over five years.

Pay-TV providers have

‘It was the worst-ever first-quarter subscriber loss.’ — Craig Moffett, telecommun­ications analyst

been hardest hit. Charter Communicat­ions’ shares lost about 7% of their value since Monday. Charter disclosed this week that it had lost about 100,000 video customers in the quarter. AT&T U-Verse service lost 233,000 subscriber­s in the quarter. And Frontier Communicat­ions lost 80,000 payTV subscriber­s during the period.

Telecommun­ications analyst Craig Moffett said the drop of about 762,000 video customers for the quarter was five times worse than the 141,000 shed in the first quarter of 2016.

“The first quarter is usually a seasonally strong one for pay-TV. It wasn’t this year,” Moffett said. “It was the worst-ever first-quarter subscriber loss.”

The sell-off was an echo to the media meltdown in the summer of 2015 when Disney executives disclosed that the company’s ESPN networks were losing more subscriber­s than anticipate­d because millions of consumers had opted for “skinny” pay-TV bundles with fewer channels.

Despite the market’s reaction, TV executives this week were optimistic that advertiser­s would continue to line up to buy television time in the upfront market, which will kick off in two weeks.

“The upfront, to me, is going to be very strong. There is a lot of demand for our product,” CBS Chief Executive Leslie Moonves told analysts on an earnings call Thursday.

Late Thursday, CBS reported a 30% decline in advertisin­g spending to $1.6 billion, but the company said tough comparison­s were responsibl­e for the drop. In 2016, CBS broadcast the Super Bowl and an additional NFL playoff game — which brought in more than $350 million in ad revenue. Removing the Super Bowl and NFL playoff game revenue from the equation, CBS said its ad revenue would have fallen by only about 1% in the quarter.

CBS shares closed up Thursday 39 cents, or less than 1%, to $63.85.

 ?? Brad Barket Getty Images for Nickelodeo­n ?? NICKELODEO­N characters meet guests. Viacom, which owns Nickelodeo­n, delivered better-than-expected earnings and revenue growth but its stock fell.
Brad Barket Getty Images for Nickelodeo­n NICKELODEO­N characters meet guests. Viacom, which owns Nickelodeo­n, delivered better-than-expected earnings and revenue growth but its stock fell.

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