Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

Rapid TV News

TelcoTV: U.S. IPTV set for double-digit growth as cable stalls

New research from Parks Associates to be unveiled at teh upcoming TelcoTV event shows that U.S. telcos are successfully leveraging their fiber-based broadband offerings and IPTV to woo pay-TV subscribers away from cable and satellite. The research firm predicts that number of U.S. IPTV subscribers will rise from 8.8 million in 2011 to 18.6 million in 2017.

That means that its market share will rise to 18%. In the same period, satellite's share of the pay-TV market will drop to 30% by 2017, and cable, the big Kahuna, will continue to lose subscribers, declining from 60.7 million in 2011 to 56.1 million in 2017. That segment's share will fall to 52%.
Overall, Parks Associates notes U.S. subscribership to satellite and cable television services has plateaued.

"The era of huge subscriber gains in the U.S. pay-TV market is over," said Jim O'Neill, research analyst at the firm. "Cable TV providers are losing subscribers to IPTV services from AT&T, Verizon, and CenturyLink. Satellite providers also will experience subscriber loss as telcos continue to expand fiber footprints, leverage pricing on triple- and quad-play bundles, and offer advanced TV Everywhere products. Going forward, subscriber retention will become the focus for cable and satellite providers." Making things worse, Google has also entered the IPTV market with the deployment of Google Fiber in Kansas City.

Seeing the writing on the wall, large cable operators such as Comcast and Time Warner Cable are looking to shore up their revenue models, and are already adjusting their messaging and packages to emphasize their broadband services.

"Experiments in high-speed broadband will spawn the next wave of advanced Internet services, including new streaming and cloud-based video services," said Stuart Sikes, president at Parks Associates.

From the article, "TelcoTV: U.S. IPTV set for double-digit growth as cable stalls" by Michelle Clancy.

Previously In The News

Half of pay-TV subs with HBO OTT would cut the cord

HBO's prospects for picking up a new audience with a standalone streaming service are looking pretty good: about 17% of US broadband households are likely to subscribe to an over-the-top (OTT) vide...

Quarter of US broadband households own streaming media device

The connected home is increasingly becoming smarter and a hub for wireless video according to research from Parks Associates. RokuSeagateIn its report, Parks found that ownership and usage of c...

Netflix gnaws away at pay-TV, Premium Channel VOD revenues

The increasing influences of OTT in the decision processes of pay-TV consumers, says the Choosing Content: Viewing Video report from Parks Associates, raises the possibility of Watch Instantly cann...

Connected TV growth means a sea of change for TV advertising

The number of North American households with a smart TV will reach 87 million by 2016, according to new research from Parks Associates. That will have major ramifications on how viewers think of an...