3. TV networks have committed about $150 billion for sports
programming such as the NFL’s Super Bowl that have traditionally
attracted viewers and allowed them to charge the highest fees to
cable companies.
4. The accelerating fragmentation of the media world makes it
uncertain the networks will collect the revenue to support those
costs. A weakening TV-ad market and threat to billions in affiliate
fees as subscribers dwindle may force content owners to move to
streaming platforms, which have had tepid success.
5. Disney, 21st Century Fox, Time Warner, Comcast and CBS are
committed to paying at least $148.7 billion for sports programming
rights, such as the Olympics, NFL games and Nascar races,
according to their most recent annual reports.
6. Sports content is expensive because live events attract large
audiences and advertisers. 21st Century Fox may pay the most at
$49 billion. Disney, which owns ESPN and ABC, is committed to
shelling out $44 billion, though this excludes its $24 billion NBA
renewal with Turner in October.
7. Disney’s ESPN lost 2.97 million subscribers, or 3.1% of its base, in
the past year, according to Nielsen, driven by consumers cutting
back or cutting the cord.
8. ESPN2 has lost a similar number of subscribers, and other sports
networks, NFL Network and the MLB Network, also lost about 3%
of subscribers, slightly better than the 3.5% drop in total cable
network customers.
9. ESPN commands industry-leading affiliate fees of $6.61 a month,
for an estimated $7.5 billion in 2015, according to SNL Kagan.
10.
11. The emergence of skinny bundles and streaming products are
threatening not only the ad market but also almost $50 billion in
2015 affiliate fees.
12. Sports networks are highly exposed to falling subscribers and
lower affiliate revenue, given carriage fees make up about 75% to
80% of total revenue at the big networks. Ads account for the rest
of operating sales. In contrast, a non-sports network such as USA
derives 50% of revenue from affiliate fees, which make up 44% of
Discovery Channel’s revenue.
75%
carriage fees
44%
affiliate fees
13. Disney’s ESPN is well ahead of peers with estimated monthly
affiliate fees per subscriber of $6.61 in 2015, according to SNL
Kagan. ESPN’s fee is four times Time Warner-owned TNT’s $1.65
and five times Disney Channel’s $1.34, affirming the high value for
sports content. ESPN and its sister channels generated $8.4 billion
in 2014 affiliate revenue, accounting for almost 80% of Disney’s
affiliate revenue. ESPN’s leading position also exposes it to the
highest risk, should the TV bundle concept start to lose favor.
14.
15. An erosion of its subscriber base may spur ESPN to launch a
streaming platform sooner rather than later. While Disney said
it doesn’t plan to go over-the-top in the next five years, the fast-
changing landscape may prompt ESPN to hasten its foray into
streaming.
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