For the first time in a decade, the number of TV sets in the US connected to a pay-TV provider's service has fallen under 50%. A new study from Leichtman Research Group said just 47% of all TVs in use have a providers’ set-top box.
Also down: Total connections. Just 75% of TV households nationwide subscribe to some form of live pay-TV service, LRG said, down from 84% five years ago and from 87% in 2009. That 75% is similar to the number of households that watch TV that currently take a subscription video service like Netflix, Hulu, or Amazon Prime.
Just more than half (54%) of TV households have both a cable, satellite, or telco video service and an SVOD service, while a nearly equal number (21% and 20% respectively) have only a pay-TV service or only an SVOD service. Just 5% have neither, LRG said.
Pay-TV is losing younger viewers faster
Not surprisingly, older demographics remain more likely to subscribe to a pay-TV service than do younger consumers. About 83% of adults ages 45+ have a service—compared to 64% of ages 18-44.
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Households with more TVs are more likely to be connected to a pay-TV service, with 87% of households with three or more TVs subscribing. That compares to 75% of households with two TVs, and 52% with one TV.
Overall, 27% of households now have an over-the-air antenna, LRG said, including 53% of non-subscribing TV households.
One other very worrisome trend is the decay in the number of households subscribing to a bundle of service from a cable, telco, or satellite provider, which for years has been a measure of the industry’s health and profitability. Combining high-margin phone and Internet service with low-margin video services has been crucial.
LRG said just 60% of providers now have a bundle of services, compared to 67% in 2014.
Finally, the cost of pay-TV services continued to rise. LRG said the average price tag was up about 6% since 2016 to $109.60.
The report is based on a telephone survey of 1,115 US adults age 18+. It has a statistical margin of error of +/- 2.9%.
The bottom line
The pay-TV business is evolving rapidly, with alternative video sources like Netflix et al setting a new table of choices for consumers. As AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson said during the telco’s Q2 earnings call with analysts last month, the speed of the changes caught many traditional media companies and distributors by surprise.
With a new wave of services just surfacing—Disney+ and Apple TV+—the changes and challenges aren’t likely to slow down and slow-moving media companies risk being swamped by the rising tide around them.
Stay tuned.
Ed. Note: This post first appeared on the Videomind blog.
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