Jump to content

AT&T TV : An Unskinny Streaming Bundle That Looks a Lot Like Traditional Pay TV


steven36

Recommended Posts

AT&T this week launched AT&T TV, a new subscription streaming television service that uses an Android-based internet set-top, in 10 markets. But the way it’s priced and packaged looks very similar to cable and satellite TV services — in other words, AT&T TV isn’t targeted at the cord-cutter crowd.

 

1427.jpg

 

It’s basically designed as a way for the telco to migrate customers from its DirecTV satellite and U-verse services, to deliver a premium, full-price (i.e. healthy margin) TV bundle more cost-effectively by providing for subscriber self-installation. Unlike other “virtual pay-TV” internet services, AT&T TV carries promotional pricing contingent on a traditional two-year contract, and subscribers are subject to activation and early-termination fees.

 

Analysts are unsure whether AT&T TV will see significant uptake. AT&T chief Randall Stephenson has promised that the new product will be the “workhorse” for the company’s pay-TV business over the next few years.

 

t is unclear whether the high end of the market will pay full price for a streaming service,” while AT&T TV will be unattractive to cost-conscious consumers, UBS Securities analyst John Hodulik wrote in a research note Wednesday.

 

The base AT&T TV “Entertainment” package starts at $59.99 per month in the first year — climbing to $93 monthly in the second year. The top-tier “Ultimate” package is $79.99 per month for first 12 months, jumping to $135 monthly thereafter. That pricing is well over other value-oriented over-the-top streaming platforms, like YouTube TV ($50 per month), Hulu With Live TV ($45 per month), or Dish’s Sling TV (which starts at $25 per month).

 

Moreover, note that AT&T TV requires a separate broadband service, with a recommended minimum of 8 Mbps per stream. AT&T is selling a bundle that includes broadband plus AT&T TV for $89.99 per month for the first 12 months going up to $133 monthly ($93 for TV and $40 for internet).

 

“We believe [AT&T TV] alone is unlikely to drive a dramatic shift in sub trends but should lower costs in [AT&T’s] Entertainment segment while providing a boost to addressable advertising,” Hodulik wrote.

AT&T TV is currently available in Orange, Calif.; Riverside, Calif.; West Palm Beach, Fla.; Topeka, Kan.; Wichita, Kan.; St. Louis, Mo.; Springfield, Mo.; Corpus Christi, Texas; El Paso, Texas; and Odessa, Texas.

 

The newly launched AT&T TV does include some bells and whistles: The 4K-enabled set-top integrates third-party apps from Netflix and Pandora, and includes a voice remote with the Google Assistant built-in. But other pay-TV services, like Comcast’s Xfinity X1, offer similar features.

 

AT&T TV allows a maximum of three concurrent streams and includes three months of free access to HBO, Cinemax, Showtime and Starz, as well as a video-on-demand library with 55,000 titles and 500 hours of DVR storage.

 

Meanwhile, AT&T is phasing out the “DirecTV Now” brand name, replacing it with “AT&T TV Now.” Pricing for AT&T TV Now starts at $50 per month, with about 45 channels including HBO.

 

The launch of AT&T TV comes after the company reported a 778,000 net loss in DirecTV satellite and U-verse TV customers and lost 168,000 DirecTV Now subs for the second quarter of 2019. In the last 12 months, AT&T has lost about 2 million traditional pay-TV customers, down 8.6% year over year, and DirecTV Now’s subscriber base has shrunk 26%.

 

The pain will continue into the current quarter: UBS expects AT&T to drop 838,000 premium TV subscribers given program blackouts and subscribers dropping off after their promotional pricing ends. According to Hodulik, in 2020, AT&T TV should help the telco “maintain stability” in the profitability of its Entertainment segment while “sub losses moderate” with the last of the promotional DirecTV subscribers rolling off.

Source

Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Views 581
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...