The Mercury News

Comcast teams up with Hisense to sell smart TVs at Walmart stores

- By Christian Hetrick

With millions of Americans ditching cable TV channels for online streaming, Comcast on Tuesday unveiled its latest plan to remain a fixture in living rooms: selling internet-connected TVs.

Comcast launched XClass TV, a 4K Ultra High Definition television that will be sold in some Walmart stores starting this week and Walmart.com weeks later. It’s the first time U.S. consumers can access Comcast’s entertainm­ent offerings without being in the Philadelph­ia cable giant’s service footprint.

The smart TV, made in partnershi­p with Chinese electronic­s maker Hisense, is the latest internet-connected device from Comcast that could appeal to so-called cord-cutters,

who watch movies and shows through an array of apps instead of traditiona­l pay-TV plans. The company recently launched a smart TV in Europe through Sky, its U.K.-based TV provider, and released XiOne, its first global streaming box.

“We’re thrilled to bring our award-winning entertainm­ent experience to smart TVs nationwide and for the first time offer consumers inside and outside our service areas a simple way to navigate their live and on-demand content, whether streaming or cable,” Sam Schwartz, Comcast’s chief business developmen­t officer, said in a statement.

The Hisense XClass TV, which runs on Comcast’s operating system, comes with

hundreds of streaming apps, such as Netflix, Hulu, and HBO Max. It also includes a free one-year subscripti­on to Comcast’s own streaming service, Peacock Premium.

The device uses the same technology platform that powers the company’s cable and streaming boxes, letting consumers access streaming apps, cable subscripti­ons, and other entertainm­ent in one place. Users can search for content by clicking or speaking into a voice remote. The smart TVs are available in two sizes: 43 inches and 50 inches. Walmart.com listed the price for the larger TV at $348.

“This is a clear move by Comcast to position itself in the connected device market as they leverage their best-inclass tech stack,” said Geetha Ranganatha­n, a Bloomberg analyst. She noted Comcast already challenged market leaders Roku

and Amazon when it released its Flexbrande­d streaming box a couple years ago.

“But that somewhat limited them to be within their footprint given that it was tied to Xfinity broadband,” Ranganatha­n added. “With a smart TV, Comcast is not constraine­d by regional boundaries and can have a truly national offering. I view this as another way to turbocharg­e their digital ad business as well.”

Comcast’s stock price was up 1.13% to $53.82 as of 11:16 a.m.

Comcast continues to sign up hundreds of thousands of internet customers per quarter while bleeding payTV subscriber­s. From January through June of this year, the company’s cable unit added 814,000 broadband customers while losing 889,000 video subscriber­s. Overall profits at the firm were up 25% during the second quarter, to $3.7 billion.

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