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Led by a record decline in cable, traditional pay-TV providers lost 1.86 million in Q1, and virtual MVPDs shed about 201,000 subs, according to MoffettNathanson's latest 'Cord-Cutting Monitor.'
The US pay-TV market took another pounding in the first quarter of the year as subscriber losses by traditional service providers accelerated and the collective virtual multichannel video programming distributor (vMVPD) market went negative, according to MoffettNathanson's latest Cord-Cutting Monitor.
US Cable operators, telcos and satellite providers lost 1.86 million pay-TV subs in the period, the report (registration required) found. Cable's losses widened to -920,000 (for an all-time worst rate of loss of 6.9%), as satellite providers lost 732,000 and the telcos lost 217,000. That kept the rate of decline for traditional providers at about 9%, the report found.
Figure 1: (Source: JJ Gouin/Alamy Stock Photo)
That 9% rate of decline would have been "unthinkable just a few years ago," MoffettNathanson analyst Craig Moffett explained. "For traditional Pay-TV as a whole, there is seemingly no floor; whatever sports and news floor there might be for cable network programming, that need can be met as easily by vMVPDs as traditional ones."
Moffett points out that the market for linear TV is eroding in absolute terms, but definitely in relation to subscription video-on-demand (SVoD) and, increasingly, to ad-supported VoD services. Price has almost always been an issue for pay-TV, but the analyst also says the ongoing decline is also a function of a dip in quality as media companies shift their best content to direct-to-consumer streaming platforms, "leaving their linear cable networks impoverished."
MoffettNathanson's new report comes just weeks before companies start announcing second quarter results. The report didn't forecast expectations for Q2, but the period is usually a soft one for the sector.
vMVPDs struggle to gain subs
The vMVPD picture isn't great either. That category, which includes YouTube TV, Hulu, Sling TV, Philo, FuboTV and Vidgo, also came up short, losing about 201,000 subs in the quarter. That compares to a gain of 18,000 in the year-ago quarter and a gain of 931,000 in Q4 2021. MoffettNathanson estimates there were 14.93 million vMVPD subs at the end of Q1 2022.
Tied into that, MoffettNathanson found that the conversion rate of vMVPDs (subs they capture from those fleeing traditional providers) is hovering around all-time lows – 32.8% in Q1 2022, compared to 35.6% in Q4 2021 and 41.5% in Q1 2021.
With all of pay-TV rolled up, the sector lost 2.05 million in the quarter, a decline of about 5.1%.
Figure 2: Click here for a larger version of this image.
(Used with permission)
Moffett noted that the vMVPD subscriber cycle is becoming more seasonal, with gains accelerating later in the year, especially in Q3, as the pro and college football seasons start, and disconnects growing after those seasons conclude in Q1 of the following year.
Another issue for the vMVPD is pricing, with the analysts noting that the costs of most major services in the category have nearly doubled over the last four years.
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— Jeff Baumgartner, Senior Editor, Light Reading
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