Internet and telco TV eat away at cable TV market share

Entertainment

According to new data from ABI Research, internet TV and and television services run by telecoms – such as Verizon or AT&T— are slowly eating away at cable TV’s market share. Cable TV subscriptions dropped from 72% in 2009 to 69% in 2010, and cable providers in North America and Western Europe saw the greatest subscriber losses. Despite the customer losses, the overall pay-TV market continues to grow — there were 11.3 million new pay-TV subscribers in Q1 2011, and that the total number of subscribers is expected to exceed 759 million by the end of this year. Cable TV is continuing to grow in Latin America, however, and penetration in Brazil is expected to reach 10% in 2011. “The emergency of digital TV in different pay-TV platforms begins to offer more choices to consumers,’ Khin Sandy Lynn, an ABI research analyst, said. “Digital terrestrial TV (DTT) channels and high definition (HDTV) channels are gaining popularity in pay-TV markets. ABI research expects that there will be more than 230 million high-definition TV subscriptions across different platforms at the end of 2011.” Hit the jump for the full release

Telco TV and Internet TV Capture Share from Cable TV in Mature Markets

According to new market data from ABI Research, 11.3 million pay-TV subscribers were added at the end of first quarter of 2011. “By the end of 2011, the total number of pay-TV subscriptions is expected to exceed 759 million,” says practice director Jason Blackwell of ABI Research.
Cable TV still maintains the largest market share; however, its relative share of subscriptions dropped from 72% in 2009 to 69% in 2010. Cable TV operators in Western Europe and North America in particular faced subscriber losses in 2010 as new television services such as telco TV and online TV replaced traditional cable TV services.
However in emerging markets such as Latin America, cable TV will continue its growth. As an example Brazil, a country with more than 59 million households, has only about 17% pay-TV penetration. Many parts of Brazil still have no access to cable TV services. In a plan recently released by the country’s telecom regulator, cable TV penetration is expected to reach 10% in 2011.
Analog switch-off is taking place across the world. The momentum of the process is especially high in Western Europe, with the UK and Italy expecting to complete analog switch-off in 2012. Asia-Pacific countries such as China and India have taken the first steps to switch off analog transmission, and the process is expected to be complete by 2015.
“The emergence of digital TV in different pay-TV platforms begins to offer more choices to consumers,” notes research analyst Khin Sandi Lynn. “Digital terrestrial TV (DTT) channels and high definition (HDTV) channels are gaining popularity in pay-TV markets. ABI Research expects that there will be more than 230 million high-definition TV subscriptions across different platforms at the end of 2011.”
ABI Research’s new Market Data product, “Pay-TV Subscriber Market Data” presents an overview of the pay-TV market across three key subscription video platforms: satellite, cable, and telco TV. Detailed market trends and market forecast information for key regions and countries around the world are provided where available.
The study is a part of the company’s TV and Video Research Service.
14 Comments
  • Anonymous

    When your cable bill goes up 5 dollars each month yearly due to programming companies like News Corp and Viacom asking for more money that is why people give up on Pay TV. We need to support Ala Carte programming.

  • RH

    Well here’s an idea…how about cable companies dropping their rates to COMPETE?

    • Matthew

       I agree, but they do the opposite when they are loosing money they increase the prices.  The thing is when more people cancel from cable providers most of those providers offer internet as well.  All they are going to do is do what wireless carriers are doing and enable a data cap so you can’t get away from having both of their services.

  • Henry Earl

     can AT&T even count as a telco on this one? they play both sides of the fence when it comes to TV/Cable/internet/telephone.

  • Booboolala2000

    Good riddance.

  • Jack

    Seriously, proof read and make sure you’re quoting properly.

  • Drew

     Anything to put Craptastic out of business… Horrid pieces of s#!t!!!

  • Aa

    Good, cable TV operators have been ripping us off for years. 

    • Ismileo

       now you have ATT and Verizon ripping you off.

  • Anonymous

    Proof read your articles…consider it an emergency.

    I agree with other comments…cable providers are plain evil. Their glorified monopolized existence is a FAIL and they screw their customers with dumb rates and horrible customer service.

  • Anonymous

     Why is there no pie chart?  Give me a pie chart!!!!

  • Anonymous

     Its about damm time. Hopefully this will force them to lower there prices

  • Senor Chang

     The prices are related to the deals they make w/ the networks… its the networks fault for cable companies raping the consumer (though, you take a closer look and the cable co’s are typically owned by some network conglomerate anyway).

    What cable needs to do, especially to lower prices, is to finally push back against the studios and start dropping all those idiotic redundant or lame-channels.  Who needs THREE home-shopping channels?  You realize you are PAYING for that when you pay your monthly bill, right?
    And what better way to make an argument about axeing channels that no one wants than to start offering tiered or ala carte packages!!    If you tell people they can pick 30 channels for a lower price, and no one in all of the United States of America on these plan opts to add, say, The Cow Milking Channel, then it gives the cable co the power to go back to the networks and say, “Look here.. no one wants it.  We’re going to drop it”.

  • Anonymous

    Reminds me of the typewriter repair shop I saw out in rural Arizona a couple of years ago…the telephone poles can be uprooted–there’s nothing to do these days but push electrons around.  When people see that the telcoms are charging the same for stirring ones and zeros that they charged for actually maintaining something, the backlash will force a free-fall in wireless rates.

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