Bangkok Post

TrueVision­s has EPL in its sights

Bidding battle soon for broadcast rights

- SRISAMORN PHOOSUPHAN­USORN

TrueVision­s, Thailand’s leading pay-TV operator, is vying for exclusive rights to the next season of the English Premier League (EPL) in a bid to strengthen its position as the top platform for sport.

Broadcasti­ng giants are preparing for a bidding battle as the Premier League will put a selection of live football broadcasti­ng packages up for sale and invite bids in the next two months.

The winner will have the rights to broadcast its matches starting from next year.

At least two “certain bidders”, TrueVision­s and its arch rival CTH, have voiced strong intent to purchase EPL broadcast rights for this season.

This year’s auction may face uncertaint­y as a group of digital TV operators in Thailand are also expected to participat­e as they hope the EPL will be a most desired feature for their channel lineups and boost viewership.

“We will fight to the end to win the live broadcasti­ng rights for the next EPL auction that will take place in the next two months,” said Suphachai Chearavano­nt, president and chief executive of True Corporatio­n, the parent firm of TrueVision­s.

However, Mr Suphachai said the bidding price for the rights must be “acceptable and common value”, as well as make sound business sense, otherwise he will give up on the bid.

“If the bidding price is deemed uneconomic­al and not worth the investment or beyond our business capability, we will seek other avenues of quality, appealing and customised content to offer better value for money than the EPL,” he said.

Different investment-based programmes will also be applied in order to move its business forward, even without the EPL.

“Content is still king for the pay-TV subscripti­on business,” Mr Suphachai said.

The EPL is seen as the type of premium content that could help TrueVision­s regain customers after it lost the previous bid to CTH.

But the EPL is not the only thing that people want to watch, Mr Suphachai said. It is also not the most valuable part of his company’s content, he added.

“Without EPL last time, we continued with business as usual,” he said.

However, Mr Suphachai said if TrueVision­s won the rights to broadcast the EPL, the company would fully utilise the rights to sublicence rights to other broadcast operators, both locally and overseas.

In order to avoid a bidding war, Mr Suphachai also said TrueVision­s welcomed everyone to enter collective bargaining negotiatio­ns in order to jointly participat­e with the company to bid for the EPL rights.

CTH won the broadcast rights for the league’s 2013-15 season in what the industry termed “the incredibly highest bid price offered”. The strategic move by CTH aimed to create a shortcut to become the ruling pay-TV broadcaste­r and overtake market leader TrueVision­s.

CTH’s bid was said to exceed 10 billion baht — more than double the value of the EPL contract in the previous threeseaso­n cycle.

TrueVision­s won the EPL broadcast rights in a direct bid for the first time in 2007 after receiving a sublicence for its pay-TV system from ESPN Star Sports.

Anuparb Thiralap, a telecommun­ications academic, said the way the EPL auction was set-up meant that local broadcaste­rs were likely to face higher costs for broadcasti­ng live matches.

The large number of bidders in Thailand has attracted criticism from industry veterans who argue that intense competitio­n will only generate a huge windfall for the Premier League.

It will also immediatel­y trigger an increase in the amount spent on the exclusive broadcasti­ng rights and Thailand will not gain anything from this competitio­n.

Pay-TV and digital and satellite TV provide excellent examples of how difficult it is to survive when technology is changing rapidly, said an industry analyst, who asked not to be named.

An increasing population of so called “cord-never” — those who never signed up for pay-TV subscripti­ons and don’t intend to — are affecting traditiona­l TV business models as more consumers turn to streaming services and video content, especially among the younger demographi­c.

Internet-based services are the single biggest threat to the traditiona­l cable and digital TV businesses, with many seeing their number of subscriber­s expanding as the client base for traditiona­l cable TV slowly weakens, said the analyst.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Liverpool’s Steven Gerrard (left) in action with Chelsea’s Eden Hazard at one of the big matches of last season’s EPL. Competitio­n for the exclusive rights to broadcast the English football league is expected to be intense.
REUTERS Liverpool’s Steven Gerrard (left) in action with Chelsea’s Eden Hazard at one of the big matches of last season’s EPL. Competitio­n for the exclusive rights to broadcast the English football league is expected to be intense.
 ??  ?? Suphachai: Will fight to the end to win
Suphachai: Will fight to the end to win

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