Etc.: Netflix Downgraded - Dolan's 'Running' Cablevision - Research: Gateways Overtake STBs?
Analyze This:
Raymond James analyst
Aaron Kessler downgraded
Netflix from 'market perform' to 'underperform' saying 1) the company's costs for content are becoming too high too quickly, and 2) competition is mounting. "Netflix is potentially being impacted by the law of large numbers and rising competition," Kessler said. "Competitors... include
Amazon,
Hulu,
HBO and
Showtime, though we believe other players including
Google,
Apple, and the recently announced
Redbox/Verizon joint venture and
Comcast Xfinity Streampix, could become more competitive as well."
QRs:
Cablevision posted its Q4 results Tuesday with consolidated net revenues increasing 7.3% during the period to $1.69B and operating income up 28.3% to $346.2M.
Citi's
Jason Bazinet said the company's basic net losses of 14K was "a modest miss" vs. Street expectations, while internet adds of 20K beat the firm's estimate of 17K. Voice net adds of 31K also beat estimates of 20K. Revenue per video sub came in at $154.10, beating estimates of $151.59. CVC CEO
James Dolan said Tuesday that the company wouldn't replace former executives
Tom Rutledge and/or
John Bickham, and that Dolan himself would run the cable business. Cablevision stock was trading higher after posting its quarterly results, but finished the day down 9.65% after the conference call with Dolan.
Retrans:
New Young Broadcasting's
ABC affiliate in Green Bay, Wis. (
WBAY) is notifying
Time Warner Cable subscribers that they will lose access to the station if the two sides can't reach a new retrans agreement by tonight. The company's ABC affiliate in upstate New York (
WTEN) ran notifications during the Academy Awards Sunday night warning TWC subs that they would lose access to that station as well if a new deal isn't reached.
Strategy: Speaking at a media conference this week,
Verizon CFO
Francis Shammo said the company's video streaming JV with
Redbox will launch sometime in August. The exec didn't give details on the service's name, costs or what content would be made available. Shammo also said Verizon expects to close its $3.6B
Spectrum Co. deal by mid-sumer.
WebTV:
Google is building a
YouTube Developer Program with platform companies to bring viewers to the branded channels on its premium channel expansion plan. The technology is yet another step toward evolving the site into a virtual broadcast network.
MeidaPost has details.
Deals:
Starz's contract with
Netflix expired yesterday;
Gizmodo says today's the last day for streaming the company's titles. Here's the pub's
20 Best Movies (being pulled from Netflix). In related news, the
NYT says with Starz's departure, Netflix is now
more focused on TV content than movies. So much for the 'flix' part...
$$$:
Bloomberg says
Sprint is going to sell upwards of $2B in notes to help pay for refinancing, network upgrades and "possible" funding for
Clearwire. ---
Will Richmond at
VideoNuze says
Mediamorph, a cloud-based service which tracks and measures digital assets across the multiplatform industries, has raised an additional $8M from
Smedvig Capital and
Motorola Mobility.
Research:
iHS shipments of residential gateways will overtake STBs during the next three years as units are expected to triple between now and 2015. The firm says with cable and wireless carriers rolling out more wireless broadband services, global gateway shipments will grow to 4.2M this year (up from 345K in 2011), with total shipments to reach 12.6M by 2015. "While the set-top has been the heart of the home media environment... the residential gateway will be the next step up as it is able to link together an even wider range of devices," iHS analyst
Jordan Selburn said. The firm says leading service providers will adopt the server/client model now seen in
DIRECTV and
Comcast whole-home DVR services.
Service:
Comcast launched its
Xfinity Home service in Washington State Tuesday offering home security protection, remote monitoring, and secure live video streaming from wireless cameras. The service also comes with the Xfinity Home app, which is available for free on
iTunes.
Tech: Interested in the iPad 3? Reports say
Apple will unveil the new tablet on March 7.
Get details here. --- Outdoor weatherproof TVs? Yup.
SunBright TV showed them at CES.
Check 'em out.
Mobile:
Viacom's
MTV launched a mobile, social TV app called
Under The Thumb. Developed by
Viacom International Media Networks and
AKQA in Viacom’s European offices, the free service is available for Android and iOS devices. The company said it will also introduce paid sections with premium content.
Online:
The Street says users of social networks are "finally starting" to realize that what they post online can come back to haunt them. Citing a new study from
Pew, the pub says
Facebook users are de-friending people from their network at a faster clip than ever before. The study says 63% of social network users are culling friends (compared to 56% in 2009) and 58% are restricting their profiles with heightened security efforts.
Programming:
Verizon added Spanish-language movie channel
Cine Estelar to its FiOS TV lineup. ---
3net, the joint venture 24/7 3D network from
Sony,
Discovery and
IMAX, will air "Fields of Valor: The Civil War" - the first native 3D war documentary - on Saturday, March 24 (8PM ET).
Retail:
WSJ has details about a plan
Wal-Mart is working on that would create an in-store service for customers to register their DVDs with
UltraViolet. Interesting,
if not pointless.
Over, Up & Under:
Rogers added
Tribeca Film titles to the Rogers On Demand and Rogers Anyplace TV movie lineup. --- France's
CanalSat is dropping three
NBC Universal channels from its lineup on March 1:
E! Entertainment,
13eme Rue HD, and
SyFy HD after the two sides failed to reach a new carriage agreement. ---
SkyItalia is prepping a new software release to offer subscribers access to IP-delivered video content.
Events: The
Hollywood Radio and Television Society is hosting its 'Cable Programming Summit' on Wednesday, March 7. The event will feature
David Janollari, Head of Programming,
MTV;
Kate Juergens, Programming EVP,
ABC Family;
Joel Stillerman, Original Programming EVP,
AMC;
Michael Wright, Programming EVP,
TNT/TBS/TCM and
Carmi Zlotnik, Managing Director,
Starz Media. Information and registration,
here. ---
Standard & Poor's is hosting its Media, Entertainment and Cable Industry Breakfast on March 7. Guest speakers and more information can be
found here.
People:
LightSquared said CEO
Sanjiv Ahuja has resigned from his position and the company is looking for his replacement.
Doug Smith, current chief network officer, and
Marc Montagner, current CFO, will serve as interim co-COOs. --- Former
TiVo senior exec
Todd Juenger has joined the crew at
Bernstein Research for market analysis of the U.S. media sector.
Misc.:
CTAM issued its 2011 Report Card this week saying its CableMover program generated 1.8M leads for cable companies from customers that moved to new addresses last year; secured 1B 'earned media impressions' selling cable services; and increased the amount of money spent by new
Movies On Demand users to an average of $7.71 per week. More details about CTAM's 2011 can be
found here.
Wow!: Music from
Fox's hit show "Glee" is #8 in the top-10 selling digital artists of all time.
SoundScan says consumers have downloaded more than 32M songs from the show, bringing the program's total of 'Hot 100' hits to 193... surpassing
Elvis,
The Beatles and
James Brown. The apocalypse can't come fast enough.
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Catch today's media market news in The Evening BRIDGE. •