Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Streaming video catches up with Pay TV; revenues to follow?

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Telecom and media giant AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T) announced Tuesday morning that its DirecTV Now over-thetop streaming service has signed up more than 1 million subscriber­s in the first year of the programme’s life.

The downside is that streaming revenue has not replaced pay-TV losses on either the satellite or wired side of AT&T’s business.

AT&T has offered a variety of incentives to get customers to sign up. There have been low introducto­ry prices and device giveaways, along with promises of new features due over the next few months. The company said it will introduce DVR in the cloud that allows subscriber­s to record shows and access them virtually anywhere, 4K Ultra High Definition (UHD) quality video, capacity for more than 35,000 on demand titles, individual profiles and a better user experience.

The company launched the programme on November 30, 2016, and claimed 250,000 subscriber­s by the end of last year.

By August the company had 500,000 subscriber­s, and by October the total had reached nearly 800,000.

Half of DirecTV Now subscriber­s have been lured away from competing traditiona­l pay-TV providers and 10% have come from AT&T’s DirecTV satellite service or its U-verse wireline service.

The remaining 40% are people who have never subscribed to pay TV.

That last subscriber group is vital to AT&T and other payTV services like Comcast, Time Warner Cable and Charter. According to research by analysts at Raymond James and cited by eMarketer, 31% of internet users polled last month say that a streaming service like Netflix or Hulu is their primary method of consuming video content. That’s up from 24% a year ago.

More important, perhaps, is the Raymond James finding that 35% of internet users still use a cable provider as the primary source of video content. Satellite providers Dish and DirecTV account for just 17% of video content consumptio­n, while telecom wireline services nab just 10%.

Raymond James noted that over-the-top subscriber­s are not cutting pay-TV services altogether but are picking up socalled “skinny bundles” that provide the broadcast TV channels, some sports programmin­g and access to premium channels.

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