Santa Fe New Mexican

Apple streaming TV service costs $5 a month

- By Michael Liedtke

CUPERTINO, Calif. — Apple is finally taking on Netflix with its own streaming television service and, uncharacte­ristically for the company, offering it at a bargain price — $5 a month beginning Nov. 1.

Walt Disney Co. is launching its own assault on Netflix the same month, for just $7 a month.

It may be sheer coincidenc­e that the cost of both Apple and Disney subscripti­ons will be a dollar less than Netflix’s main plan, priced at $12.99 a month. But the companies’ intent to disrupt Netflix’s huge lead in the streaming business couldn’t be clearer.

Apple delivered the news Tuesday while also unveiling three new iPhones that won’t look much different than last year’s model other than boasting an additional camera for taking pictures from extra-wide angles.

Hoping to propel its streaming service to a fast start while also boosting iPhone sales, Apple will give a year of free access to its original shows and films to anyone who buys an iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch or Mac.

The aggressive pricing is unusual for Apple, which typically charges a premium for products and services to burnish its brand. Most analysts expected Apple to charge $8 to $10 per month for the service, which will be called Apple TV Plus.

But Apple is coming into a market that Netflix practicall­y created in 2007 — around the same time as the first iPhone came out — and now has more than 150 million subscriber­s, so it needed to do something extraordin­ary to make a big splash.

“It’s Apple. They’re going to be competitiv­e, so you have to expect they’re going to do something, considerin­g how hypercompe­titive the streaming video space is,” said Tim Hanlon, CEO of Vertere Group.

Apple CEO Tim Cook did not have much new to say about the TV service beyond its pricing and service date, although he did show a trailer for a new Jason Momoa-led series called See.

Like Netflix and similar services from Amazon and Hulu, Apple has been spending billions of dollars for original programs featuring stars such as Oprah Winfrey, Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoo­n. The service will launch with nine original shows and films, with more expected each month. It will only carry Apple’s original programmin­g, and will be available in 100 countries at launch.

Apple also announced a new videogame subscripti­on service that will cost $5 a month when it rolls out Sept. 19. Called Apple Arcade, the service will allow subscriber­s to play more than 100 games selected by Apple and exclusive to the service.

Disney Co., one of the most hallowed brands in entertainm­ent, is also muscling its way into the market with a streaming service featuring its treasured vault of films and original programmin­g.

That means both Apple and Disney will be undercutti­ng the industry leaders. Besides Netflix, there is Amazon at

$9 per month and Hulu at $8 per month.

The price war is unfolding as Netflix tries to bounce back from a rough spring in which it suffered its first quarterly drop in U.S. subscriber­s since 2011. Apple’s pricing tactics caught investors’ attention. Netflix’s stock fell 2 percent on Tuesday.

Apple is the latest entry to the crowded video subscripti­on market, with each new service stretching the limits of just how many monthly plans people are willing to pay for.

The Apple streaming service will, at least for now, offer fewer viewing options than Netflix or Disney but also a significan­tly lower price.

Apple’s pricing shows it is serious in a field dominated by Netflix and in which Disney will likely also be a strong contender, said Colin Gillis, director of research at Chatham Road Partners.

The new iPhones were largely unchanged from previous models and were accompanie­d by an unexpected price cut for the cheapest model, which underscore­d the company’s efforts to counteract the deepest slump in sales for its flagship product in the 12 years since the phone was unveiled.

IPhone shipments are down 25 percent so far this year, according to the research firm IDC, putting more pressure on Apple to generate revenue from services such as music, video streaming, games and its App Store. Revenue from services rose 14 percent to nearly $23 billion during the first half of this year.

Apple is cutting the price of the iPhone 11 to $700 from $750, the price of last year’s XR. The lower prices reverses a trend in which premium phones get more expensive as people upgrade them less often.

 ?? TONY AVELAR/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Apple unveiled its newest iPhone models during a new product announceme­nt event in Cupertino, Calif.
TONY AVELAR/ASSOCIATED PRESS Apple unveiled its newest iPhone models during a new product announceme­nt event in Cupertino, Calif.

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