Major US pay-TV providers lost about 1,740k subs in 3Q 2019
November 15, 2019 08.57 Europe/London By Broadband TV News Correspondent
Leichtman Research Group found that the largest pay-TV providers in the US representing about 93% of the market lost about 1,740,000 net video subscribers in 3Q 2019.
This compares to a pro forma net loss of about 975,000 subscribers in 3Q 2018.
The top pay-TV providers now account for about 84.8 million subscribers with the top seven cable companies having 46.1 million video subscribers, satellite TV services 26.3 million subscribers, the top telephone companies 8.6 million subscribers, and the top publicly reporting Internet-delivered (vMVPD) pay-TV services 3.8 million subscribers.
Key findings for the quarter include:
-Satellite TV services lost about 1,140,000 subscribers in 3Q 2019 compared to a net loss of about 725,000 subscribers in 3Q 2018
DIRECTV had record net losses for the sixth consecutive quarter, while DISH TV had fewer net losses than in any quarter since 3Q 2014
The top seven cable companies lost about 410,000 video subscribers in 3Q 2019 compared to a loss of about 245,000 subscribers in 3Q 2018
The top telephone providers lost about 210,000 video subscribers in 3Q 2019 compared to a loss of about 80,000 subscribers in 3Q 2018
Internet-delivered (vMVPD) services, Sling TV and AT&T NOW, added about 20,000 subscribers in 3Q 2019 compared to about 75,000 net adds in 3Q 2018
AT&T had a net loss of about 1,370,000 subscribers across its three pay-TV services (DIRECTV, AT&T U-verse, and AT&T NOW) in 3Q 2019 compared to a net loss of about 295,000 subscribers in 3Q 2018.
The top pay-TV providers had a net loss of about 1,740,000 subscribers in 3Q 2019. This marked the fifth consecutive quarter of record pay-TV industry net losses, said Bruce Leichtman, president and principal analyst for Leichtman Research Group.
AT&T, the leading pay-TV provider in the U.S., accounted for 79% of the net losses in the quarter compared to 30% of net losses in 3Q 2018. This change is largely the result of AT&Ts strategic decision to increasingly focus on retaining and acquiring more profitable subscribers.




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