Interest in selling the ad-tech specialist could be another clear signal that AT&T is also exploring a plan to sell off its struggling DirecTV satellite TV unit.

Jeff Baumgartner, Senior Editor

September 1, 2020

3 Min Read
AT&T exploring sale of its Xandr advanced ad unit – report

After AT&T spent years and billions of dollars trying to cobble together what it viewed as the future of video and TV, the company appears to be getting ready to dismantle several pieces of it.

Just days after rumors spread that AT&T was again exploring the sale of its struggling DirecTV satellite TV business, The Wall Street Journal reports that AT&T is now looking to unload Xandr, its advanced advertising unit.

AT&T introduced Xandr in September 2019 following the $1.6 billion acquisition of ad-tech company AppNexus. Xandr's ambitions appeared to get even bigger last fall via the purchase of Clypd, a company that specializes in automated/programmatic advertising systems.

Figure 1: Xandr was created in September 2018 in the wake of AT&T's acquisition of AppNexus. Xandr was created in September 2018 in the wake of AT&T's acquisition of AppNexus.

But word of AT&T's desire to sell the ad-tech and analytics unit also comes roughly six months after Xandr CEO Brian Lesser unexpectedly resigned and AT&T later folded Xandr into WarnerMedia.

A potential sale of Xandr signals that AT&T is "curbing its ambitions to become a force on Madison Avenue," the WSJ reported.

Xandr, which was expected to play a role in a future ad-supported version of the new HBO Max streaming service, has been struggling during a pandemic that has seen a slashing of TV advertising budgets. Xandr, which pulled down $2 billion in 2019 (up 16% versus 2018), saw revenues dip 25.4% in Q2 2020, to $362 million.

Part of a bigger plan?
But the pursuit of a sale of Xandr might also signal something bigger, as it could fit in with recent reports that AT&T is getting serious about unloading DirecTV as well.

Last fall, John Stankey, then AT&T's COO and head of WarnerMedia, told the WSJ that the company had no plans to sell DirecTV, arguing that the satellite TV unit was too valuable as it would play a big role in the company's streaming a strategy and its plans involving advanced advertising. If AT&T unloads Xandr, that obviates one of the main reasons why Stankey thought it made sense to hold onto DirecTV.

And, a nearly a year after Stankey presented a case to retain DirecTV, the DirecTV brand is also no longer tied to any of AT&T's streaming properties (the DirecTV Now OTT-TV service has been renamed AT&T TV Now) and the satellite TV unit has been hemorrhaging satellite TV subs at an alarming rate.

Meanwhile, DirecTV has been relegated to low priority status in AT&T's overall pay-TV sales strategy as OTT/streaming services become the primary focus.

In March, Stankey declared that DirecTV would continue to be sold "where it has a rightful place in the market, places where cable broadband is not as prevalent." For now that largely means rural and less dense suburban areas, but that could all change as the US government continues to splash cash on rural broadband initiatives.

When these purported plans are taken together, it now appears that key pieces that were to form the foundation of AT&T's TV and video future are crumbling fast.

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— Jeff Baumgartner, Senior Editor, Light Reading

About the Author(s)

Jeff Baumgartner

Senior Editor, Light Reading

Jeff Baumgartner is a Senior Editor for Light Reading and is responsible for the day-to-day news coverage and analysis of the cable and video sectors. Follow him on X and LinkedIn.

Baumgartner also served as Site Editor for Light Reading Cable from 2007-2013. In between his two stints at Light Reading, he led tech coverage for Multichannel News and was a regular contributor to Broadcasting + Cable. Baumgartner was named to the 2018 class of the Cable TV Pioneers.

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