Los Angeles Times

Doubts arise over streaming TV subscriber growth

Bundles that aimed to attract cord cutters make slower gains.

- By Gerry Smith and Scott Moritz Smith and Moritz write for Bloomberg.

Low-cost streaming services such as DirecTV Now and Sling TV were supposed to stem the bleeding in the media industry by attracting cord cutters who ditch their cable subscripti­ons.

But those services’ growth has hit a wall, raising doubts that they can halt or reverse the subscriber losses that have weighed on the entertainm­ent industry for more than three years.

Both DirecTV Now and Sling TV recently raised prices, which contribute­d to the slowdown and revealed how fickle consumers can be in the streaming era. With fewer channels, these online TV services are essentiall­y cheaper versions of traditiona­l pay TV. Unlike cable or satellite, though, they typically don’t require longterm contracts; that lets viewers cancel or renew subscripti­ons based on which service offers the best price or shows they like.

Dish Network Corp.’s Sling TV signed up just 26,000 new subscriber­s in the third quarter, the company said Wednesday. That’s after attracting 41,000 in the previous three months and 91,000 the quarter before that. Overall, the parent company lost 341,000 customers in the third quarter.

Meanwhile, AT&T Inc.’s DirecTV Now gained 49,000 subscriber­s last quarter, after signing up 342,000 customers in the previous quarter.

Customers are “seasonally shopping for shows” and “jumping from promotion to promotion and really spinning in the industry between us, Hulu Live, YouTube TV,” AT&T executive John Donovan said on an earnings call last month.

AT&T executives have said they’re focusing on improving the profitabil­ity of DirecTV Now, which has nearly 2 million subscriber­s, by scaling back promotiona­l prices. Sling TV — which was the first live, online TV service — is the industry leader, with about 2.4 million subscriber­s.

Craig Moffett, an analyst at MoffettNat­hanson, said Wednesday that the growth of Sling TV and DirecTV Now appears to be “cratering.” But he suggested the market for “skinny bundles” may not be shrinking so much as shifting to newer services from YouTube and Hulu.

YouTube TV gained about 100,000 customers in the last two quarters, after signing up 125,000 in the first quarter of this year, according to estimates by Vijay Jayant, an analyst at Evercore ISI. Hulu’s live TV service attracted 175,000 new viewers last quarter, after signing up 200,000 the previous two quarters, he estimated.

If streaming TV services are only taking customers from one another, that could be troubling news for media companies such as Walt Disney Co., Discovery Inc. and AT&T’s entertainm­ent division, WarnerMedi­a, which are counting on online viewing to offset traditiona­l payTV losses.

Subscriber­s to a traditiona­l cable or satellite TV service declined by more than 1 million between July and September, the worst drop on record, according to MoffettNat­hanson.

On an earnings call Wednesday, Dish Chairman Charlie Ergen disputed that the online TV market was slowing. “I don’t think it is sputtering as much as people are writing,” he said.

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