Pay TV revenues have begun to fall for the first time after nearly a decade of subscriber losses, and it's only going to get worse
- Cord-cutting finally started to weigh on traditional pay-TV revenues in 2018.
- Revenue from traditional pay-TV access, including cable, satellite, and telecom TV services, fell 3% year-over-year, after being flat in 2017 and rising in previous years, Convergence Research Group found.
- The traditional pay-TV industry lost an estimated 4 million subscribers in the US last year.
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After nearly a decade of losing TV subscribers to streaming services, US cable and other traditional pay-TV revenue showed its first notable decline in 2018, according to new research from Convergence Research Group, a firm that consults for internet, content, telecom, and technology industries.
Revenue from traditional US pay-TV access, including cable, satellite, and telecom services, fell 3% in 2018 to $103.4 billion, Convergence estimated in an April report. The revenue did not include internet-TV services such as Dish Network's Sling TV or AT&T's DirecTV Now.
And it's going to get worse in 2019, according to Convergence, which estimated another 3% drop this year.
The number of US households cutting the cord, or canceling cable and other TV services, has been rising since 2010, according to the firm, which has published an annual independent report on the space since 2003. But, until now, overall revenue remained resilient thanks to rising prices and other tactics. Revenue from cable and other traditional TV services grew modestly in recent years, even as TV subscribers declined, and it was flat in 2017.
Meanwhile, revenue from over-the-top (OTT) services, which deliver video over the internet, grew 37% to $16.3 billion in 2018, based on the 66 providers that Convergence measured, including Netflix, Hulu, and Amazon. It's projected to rise to $22 billion this year.
But those platforms bring in less per subscriber than traditional services. The average revenue per subscriber is currently estimated around $230 per year among online-video services and $1140 per year among traditional pay-TV subscribers.
In 2018, the traditional US TV industry lost 4 million subscribers, according to the report.