TV Subscriptions Fall for First Time as Viewers Cut the Cord

Julius Skrrvin

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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-...s-fall-for-first-time-as-streaming-gains.html

TV Subscriptions Fall for First Time as Viewers Cut the Cord



The U.S. pay-television market is passing its prime.


The number of Americans who pay for TV through cable, satellite or fiber services fell by more than a quarter of a million in 2013, the first full-year decline, according to research firm SNL Kagan. If the slide continues in the coming years, that means 2012 was the industry’s high point.


It’s not that viewers are watching less video. Online-streaming services from Netflix Inc. (NFLX) and Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) continue to draw more users with shows like “House of Cards,” charging fees of less than $10 a month. What’s changed is that fewer people are willing to shell out $40 a month or more for the wider menu of cable channels.

The decline is small so far. Video subscribers across the entire pay-TV industry, which includes Comcast Corp. (CMCSA), DirecTV and Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ), dropped by 251,000 last year to about 100 million, SNL Kagan said in a statement today.

The industry has seen this coming for a while; research firm IHS said in August that TV subscriptions would decline to 100.8 million from 100.9 million in 2013. And cable companies have been suffering declines for years as satellite and phone carriers wrested away market share. In fact, DirecTV (DTV), Verizon and their ilk still gained TV subscribers last year -- just not enough to make up for 2 million lost cable subscribers.

Pay-TV carriers have been preparing for this inflection point by developing services for watching video on tablets and smartphones. They’re also investing to boost Internet speeds as broadband services become more popular, often at the expense of TV subscriptions.

Netflix Deal
As more consumers sign on to streaming offerings such as Netflix, Internet speeds have become important when choosing a broadband provider. Companies like Time Warner Cable Inc. (TWC) have seen competition from telecommunications services like Verizon, which touts its fiber-optic technology and higher speeds.


Comcast struck a deal last month with Netflix to grant the streaming-video company more dependable delivery of shows and movies for an undisclosed price, ensuring the cable company could continue to be a middleman between viewers and video creators.


Philadelphia-based Comcast is also seeking regulatory approval for its $45 billion acquisition of Time Warner Cable, giving it more subscribers to increase its influence over cable networks in fee negotiations.

Cable providers have also been able to squeeze more revenue from each user to help maintain growth. Comcast’s customers paid an average of $78.68 a month for video alone last quarter, up 3 percent from a year earlier.

‘Cord-Nevers’
Still, the industrywide drop last year in video subscriptions suggests there’s a limit to what Americans are willing to pay for their TV fix. Even more worrisome for pay-TV providers, a new generation of young adults hasn’t gotten into the habit of paying for video.

“The market’s decline can be traced in part to the growing number of so-called ‘cord-nevers’ -- those who object to ever having a pay-TV subscription,” IHS said in August. “Equally as important, the price of a typical pay-TV subscription remains high, staying well out of reach for a number of consumers.”

Even an expansion of U.S. housing last year -- normally a surefire source of growth -- wasn’t enough to give the pay-TV industry a subscriber boost, SNL Kagan said.


“While seasonally driven quarterly declines have become routine for industry watchers, the annual dip illustrates longer-term downward pressure even as economic conditions gradually improve,” the research firm said.


To contact the reporter on this story: Edmund Lee in New York at elee310@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sarah Rabil at srabil@bloomberg.net Crayton Harrison
 

Poitier

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The Internet is about to become what cable television used to be sadly.
 

ch15x

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I've been browsing the TV antenna/computer hardware selections online lately...:leon:

I've grown wary of browsing the cable listings for stuff I've already seen or not interested in and only a handful of channels are watched on a consistent basis. I currently have a Vizio Co-star, though I'm shopping for parts to upgrade an old computer into a pseudo-HTPC. I'm also looking at a basic outdoor antenna to get OTA (rabbit-ears can only do so much). Internet's fine, but paying for unneeded content is...:trash:
 

B86

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I've been browsing the TV antenna/computer hardware selections online lately...:leon:

I've grown wary of browsing the cable listings for stuff I've already seen or not interested in and only a handful of channels are watched on a consistent basis. I currently have a Vizio Co-star, though I'm shopping for parts to upgrade an old computer into a pseudo-HTPC. I'm also looking at a basic outdoor antenna to get OTA (rabbit-ears can only do so much). Internet's fine, but paying for unneeded content is...:trash:

Breh, to me it sounds like you're making things way too complicated. Subscribe to 2 streaming services, get a Chromecast/roku and you shouldn't ever have to pay anything but your internet bill and the $20/for subscription services.

I'm telling you subscription services, but I don't even do that because there's so many streaming and download sites
 

The ADD

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Breh, to me it sounds like you're making things way too complicated. Subscribe to 2 streaming services, get a Chromecast/roku and you shouldn't ever have to pay anything but your internet bill and the $20/for subscription services.

I'm telling you subscription services, but I don't even do that because there's so many streaming and download sites
Sports?
 

ch15x

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Breh, to me it sounds like you're making things way too complicated. Subscribe to 2 streaming services, get a Chromecast/roku and you shouldn't ever have to pay anything but your internet bill and the $20/for subscription services.

I'm telling you subscription services, but I don't even do that because there's so many streaming and download sites

Yeah, that's my plan (rambled a bit in my OP).
I'm going the OTA route for regular TV (antenna) and an extra PC (upgraded) for streaming the rest of the media, if I don't cheap out and just stick w/ my Vizio. I'll consider stuff like Netflix later, though the last couple of times I've come across streamed movies on the Internet using my Vizio, they were free (decent quality). I'm pushing for a Summer cut-off date...:patrice:
 

TLR Is Mental Poison

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I hate downloading shyt

Me n wifey watch like 10 shows and football. If we could get all that legally for ~$10-20 a month we would do it. Already got the air antenna for football.

Plus Youtube alone :camby:'d the concept of waiting till a certain time to watch pre-recorded content. shyt is silly. The people who own the content could make so much more if they could sell their shyt on a per view basis.
 
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