USA TODAY US Edition

Verizon sees more signs of pay-TV cord-cutting

- Mike Snider @mikesnider

Verizon provided more evidence that consumers continue to opt for broadband-delivered TV offerings such as Netflix and Amazon Video over traditiona­l pay-TV service.

The telecom giant added 66,000 Fios broadband customers while losing 18,000 Fios video customers during the July to September third quarter, the compa- ny said Thursday. Overall, Verizon now has 5.8 million Fios broadband customers and 4.6 million Fios Video customers.

Verizon’s decline in video subscriber­s follows AT&T’s report last week in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that it had lost 90,000 video subscriber­s during the third quarter. That loss would have been larger had AT&T not added 300,000 new subscriber­s on its DirecTV Now broadband-delivered TV service.

Similarly, Comcast has forecast it will report losses of as many as

The telecom giant added 66,000 Fios broadband customers but lost 18,000 Fios video customers during the third quarter.

150,000 subscriber­s during the July-September period when it releases its Q3 financials next week.

“There’s nothing new here in terms of the trends we have been seeing over the past few years around whether it’s cord-cutting or cord-nevers or whatever else,” Verizon chief financial officer Matt Ellis said in a conference call after the company released its earnings results. “Two or three years ago, we really started speaking about the fact the traditiona­l linear TV bundle is not long-term sustainabl­e. ... We are not surprised.”

The trend here goes beyond Verizon alone as the number of homes with broadband Internet service is expected to hit nearly

100 million this year, up from

97.6 million last year, according to The Diffusion Group. The number of broadband homes has surpassed those with pay-TV service, the research firm estimates.

Overall, Verizon posted mixed third-quarter results. Net income of $3.62 billion remained flat compared to the same period last year and fell short of expectatio­ns of $3.96 billion, based on analysts polled by S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce. Adjusted earnings of

98 cents per share beat expectatio­ns of 97 cents.

Revenue of $31.72 billion rose

2.5% and beat expectatio­ns of

$31.44 billion.

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