Category: Multi System Operators

  • MPA issues Asia Pacific pay TV slowdown warning

    MPA issues Asia Pacific pay TV slowdown warning

    MUMBAI:  Digital pay TV is slowing down in Asia. That was the key takeaway from Media Partners Asia (MPA) executive director Vivek Couto’s annual report on the Asia Pacific market during the Asia Pacific Operators Summit in Bali, last week.

     

    MPA estimates are that entire Asia Pacific pay television ecosystem added 26 million net new customers in 2013, the lowest annual growth since 2007. This reflects a marked deceleration in China and India as well as softer growth in Southeast Asia, especially Thailand, which was the weak link in the region.

     

    MPA which was until this year bullish on the digital pay-TV universe in Asia Pacific seems to have turned cautious if not bearish. It says that net new additions will accelerate in APAC over 2015-16, largely due to some gains in India associated with next, delayed phase of digitisation but the general trend is one of deceleration. Overall, MPA has downgraded pay TV growth for the region at 9 per cent CAGR until 2018.  Adjusted for multiple subscriptions, the data firm indicates that pay-TV penetration will increase from 52 per cent market share in 2013 to 60 per cent by 2018. 

     

    In India, phase I and II of digitisation boosted growth in 2012 but with that done and amidst various structural factors plus the macro environment along with currency depreciation, growth slowed in 2013. “Now we see the next delayed phase of digitisation that is phase III, boosting net new subscribers to 8 million a year in 2015 and 7 million in 2016 before decelerating again by 2018,” informed Couto.

     

    He estimates that on an active paying basis, India has more than 60 million paying digital subscribers. Of this, while 37 million come from DTH, 23 million is from cable. 

     

    “Over the last 24 months, it’s been a transitionary process for the cable industry in India. While in the analogue regime, the multi system operators were at Rs 11 per subscriber, in the digital era, the MSOs are now getting anywhere between Rs 50-70 in Mumbai and Delhi. They will now need to get to Rs 100-110 to start breaking even on video excluding carriage,” said Couto.

     

    Net additions in southeast Asia slowed by almost half last year from 3.7 million to 1.9 million and the two big DTH platforms in Indonesia in particular and Malaysia contributed more than 45 per cent to that growth.  According to MPA, the net additions will reaccelerate in southeast Asia to about 2 – 2.5 million a year driven largely by Indonesia, steady growth in Malaysia and the Philippines but the expectation is that disruption to continue in Thailand and only incremental growth to show up in Vietnam while Singapore will remain somewhat flat.

     

     

    The brakes have been slammed on cable TV growth in China – the other large TV market globally – courtesy direct competition from IPTV, internet TV (the most popular of which are services provided by Wasu, LeTV, XiaoMi and BesTV’s own OTT service platform), and to some extent, online video. Couto said that IPTV in China saw a steady growth of 5.6 million net additions in 2013, driven by content and increasing broadband reach.

     

    North Asia, consisting of Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan and Korea, saw a rise last year only because of Korea, which contributed 80 per cent to growth due to new customers on IPTV and DTH in a market where penetration exceeds 100 per cent.

     

    “Looking at the macro landscape, you can see pay-TV penetration marginally improve in China over the next five years and this will deliver real pay models, driven largely by IPTV. It might improve further as operators become challenged by the new regulatory policy that establishes a set-top box internet-TV model. A number of online video operators have formed partnerships to enter into the internet TV space,” informed Couto.

     

    In China, India and Indonesia too, the growth in TV houses and wireless broadband users will drive increases in consumption of content. Fixed broadband subscribers across the APAC region will increase too, from 310 million in 2013 to 400 million by 2018 – driven by China, India, Thailand, Philippines and Australia.

     

     

    For Couto, the growth of video on demand (VOD) is now starting to take shape.  “Our metrics just cover pay-TV but this 13 per cent average annual growth to almost US$ 4 billion is driven by China, Korea and Japan while in southeast Asia, Malaysia is the clear market leader with Astro being the best,” he said.

  • MCOF sets up CVNO SCOPE with signal from BR Cable

    MCOF sets up CVNO SCOPE with signal from BR Cable

    MUMBAI: Multisystem operators (MSOs) are in for some serious competition. This time from a MSO cooperative formed by the Maharashtra Cable Operators Federation (MCOF) along with BR Cable Network, christened SCOPE (Synergy Cable Operators Private Limited).  

     
    The first-of-its-kind cable virtual network operator (CVNO) will be formally inaugurated on 2 May, which coincides with the opening day of MCOF’s conference for LMOs called the National Conclave on Broadband and Cable (NCBC-2014).

     
    Already, SCOPE has starting seeding boxes in Mumbai. “While we have seeded boxes in Vile Parle and Thane, in the next 10 days, we will be seeding boxes in 50 other locations in Mumbai and Thane,” MCOF president Arvind Prabhoo tells indiantelevision.com.
     

    The newly-minted set-up will borrow its infrastructure from BR Cable Network while operations will be handled by MCOF. “This is a way to re-empower the last mile owners.  It is they who will manage the subscribers. They will have full ownership of the customers, unlike what is happening in the current scenario, where the MSO claims ownership of the customers.  Also, the LMOs will have limited access to the SMS, where they can feed all details about the customer and bill the subscriber,” explains Prabhoo.
     

    Unlike the rest of the cable TV industry, SCOPE will enter the market, with packages in place. “We will create packages according to the needs of subscribers. While other players have still not got packaging in place, we will give consumers the choice to watch what they want to,” informs Prabhoo. “We will not deal with broadcasters on our own. We will take the channels from BR Cable and then package them to give them to our subscribers.”

     
    SCOPE will pay BR Cable 15 paise per channel, per set top box, per month as signal processing charges. SCOPE will pay a minimum of Rs 15 per STB per month and a maximum of Rs 25 per STB per month for any number of channels it takes from BR Cable. Over and above this, SCOPE will pay the operator content cost charges as per the package. For subscribers, minimum package cost will be Rs 125 and this will include all the Marathi channels and have a top-up channel facility. The LMO will get 60 per cent of the package fee, the subscriber opts for. SCOPE has already bought 50,000 STBs and placed an order for an additional 2 lakh boxes. Currently, all members of MCOF are part of SCOPE. Ask Prabhoo how big is SCOPE and he laughs, “The number of LMOs who have come together is staggering, beyond someone’s belief.”

     
    Each LMO has made an initial investment of Rs 1 lakh in return for 100 STBs. “The best part of the cooperative is that irrespective of the number of subscribers one owns, every LMO has five shares in the company,” informs Prabhoo

     
    MCOF hopes that SCOPE will serve as a role model for DAS phase III and phase IV. MCOF also hopes that in the beginning, SCOPE customers will achieve savings of 25 per cent over the prevailing MSO packages and at least 15 per cent over comparable DTH offerings.

     
    About adding customers, Prabhoo says, “Well initially, we will convert 25 per cent of our existing customer base to SCOPE customers, replacing their existing boxes with the SCOPE box, at no additional cost. If any customer wants to upgrade, we will give them the SCOPE HD STB.” The SCOPE SD box will cost Rs 1,100 and the HD box Rs 1,500. 

     
    The new entrant will also provide high speed internet service to its customers.  “The service will be provided by Bolt. Subscribers can opt for any kind of speed they want and at 30 per cent less than what is provided by others,” says Prabhoo. Plans are afoot for bundling services like a cable and internet combo pack. The MSO will also launch an Android box. 

     
    SCOPE is eyeing not only Maharashtra, but the whole country. Even as its collaboration with BR Cable Network takes off, it has also got into an arrangement with CCN from Siliguri. “This model can be applied throughout the country.  People will realise this is the way forward,” says Prabhoo, who is hopeful that more MSOs will want to get associated with SCOPE once they understand the model.

     
    “We don’t want LMOs from phase III and IV, to suffer the way we did. And so this set up,” he signs off.

  • Hathway launches online & TV service, H-tube

    Hathway launches online & TV service, H-tube

    MUMBAI: Hathway has announced an exciting new service christened H-tube which will give TV viewers an opportunity to telecast their videos and watch themselves on TV.

     

    Customers can upload their videos on the H-tube website and thereafter, subject to quality checks, their videos will be telecast on the new service available to Hathway subscribers on their Hathway digital cable TV connection. Customers can upload amateur videos shot on mobile devices or professional videos and everyone has an opportunity to have their content telecast to Hathway’s customers.

     

    “H-tube is a part of our on-going endeavor to connect with our customers in numerous ways. User-generated content for TV is an untapped source, which we would like to access and give a platform for exhibition. We hope this unleashes the latent creativity of our customers.” said Hathway Cable and Datacom MD Jagdish Kumar. “This is a first of its kind service in the world which fully exploits the synergies of the Hathway Broadband and Cable service. We are confident that being watched by a potential viewer base of 50 million TV viewers will add to the appeal of the product”.

     

    Broadband business head Kunal Ramteke added “There is an inherent excitement for any viewer to watch himself on TV. The TV viewing behavior of customers is increasingly being shaped by technology. Our 50 Mbps Fiber Broadband service and our large TV viewership provide the perfect combination for true democratization of TV. H-tube is an exciting platform for budding artists, housewives, students to showcase their talent and our role is to help them discover their inner artiste.”

     

    The H-tube TV channel is available to Hathway TV viewers in Maharasthtra on channel 25 and will soon be extended to Hathway’s cable TV subscribers across the country. Apart from this, there will be different time slots telecasting genres like fashion, recipes, kids, celebrations, short-format episodes, travel, so viewers can share and enjoy viewing the content conveniently.  

     

    In the past, Hathway has launched channels like, Hathway CCC, Hathway movies and Hathway Music

     

    Hathway plans to launch many more channels covering genres like entertainment, music, movies, adventure and lifestyle.

  • Viren Raheja’s reengineering drive at Hathway

    Viren Raheja’s reengineering drive at Hathway

    BALI: Viren Raheja is a man with a mission: to change the culture at India’s leading cable TV multi system operator Hathway Cable & Datacom. With eight million digital TV homes from a total of 11 million, the network has been regarded as one of the shining stars emerging out of India’s cable TV ecosystem. But it has lost some of that shine in recent times.

     

     Admits Raheja who is a director of the firm: “We are going through a challenging phase – turbulence in the cable TV space – life is challenging.”

     

     Raheja is using the changing climes in India’s fragmented cable TV ecosystem – which has been undergoing a government mandated digitization rollout – to re-engineer his firm. “The company – like most of the other MSOs – was rooted in a B2B mindset as most of the time we were dealing with LCOs,” he reveals. “Now we are working on changing the DNA of Hathway from B2B to B2C.  We have already changed the entire senior management with one that has more of a B2C mindset. You will see more of that happening with talent from the telecom being hired.”

     

    Speaking at the Media Partners Asia organized Asia Pacific Operators Summit in Bali, Raheja  revealed that Hathway has done better than most in digitizing and putting set top boxes in subscribers’ homes  with a 30 per cent marketshare nationally. 

     

    “Now the key challenge is monetizing, upscaling customers to HD services and getting subscribers to pay,” he said.  “Gross billing has happened in some places but we are mostly at net billing with the LCOs. Over six months we see the movement to net billing being completed in phase I areas and over 12 months in phase II.”

     

     Raheja pointed out that digitizing is leading to a new power equation being forged between LCOs and MSOs. “Over 12-18 months, this relationship will stabilize. The current revenue split between us and our LCOs in 40 per cent to us and 60 per cent for them.  We see that settling at 65 per cent for us and 35 per cent for the LCOs. Once that happens, we may then think about acquiring some of them.”

     

    He is clear that the next 12 months are going to see the MSO focus on developing local content, pushing HD services and also building up its broadband play.

     

    “HD will help us give a better viewing experience and also the customer will pay more and local content will help keep them engaged,” Raheja disclosed.

     

    “On the broadband front, today, 15-20 per cent of our revenue is coming in from broadband. I would like to see that going up to 35-40 per cent over the next three years. Our play includes giving world class broadband with DOCSIS 3.0 modems. For me getting a nice return from subscribers is more important. Hence, I will be open to losing a video subscriber to retain a broadband subscriber who pays a lot more.”

     

    He believes that all this will need a cash infusion of about $100-150 million, which he intends to raise through a mix of debt and equity dilution.

     

    No merger or acquisition is on the cards with any other multisystem operator – at least for now- he revealed. “Cable is about local operations…I am not sure a merger with DEN or anyone else will create something unique,” concluded Raheja.

  • JAINHITS commences dual language voice feeds

    JAINHITS commences dual language voice feeds

    NEW DELHI: JAINHITS has started providing voice feeds in dual languages on its platform at no additional cost for its customers.

     

    While initially, it is providing the dual language feed to four of its channels; it will later expand this proposition to other channels.

     

    Consumers will be able to avail dual language voice feeds for the channels namely Discovery, History TV18, Animal Planet and Nickelodeon. Through this offering, JAINHITS customers can choose to have audio voice feeds in Hindi or English. The language options from English to Hindi or vice versa can be switched using the remote.

     

    According to JAINHITS head Rakesh Gupta, “Spreading happiness is JAINHITS’ motto. This is one more effort to spread the happiness amongst our ISO (Independent Service Operator) partners and their customers. This is one more step towards JAINHITS’ endeavour to offer the most advanced and enriched digital cable TV services.”

     

    JAINHITS provides consumers with more than 250 channels and plans to increase it to 500 in the near future. The company provides MPEG-4 quality digital cable TV services including SD/HD channels from national, regional and International broadcasters.

     

     JAINHITS will soon roll out its full HD and multi-screen services for consumers. The key proposition of the HITS platform is its cost-effective investment for cable operators which stands at a minimum of only Rs 25,000 per month. With this, they expect to do business with 400 plus partners and install over 1000 Mini Downlink Headend’s across 640 districts of India by the end of 2014.

     

      

    The HITS platform is the only Direct-to-Network (DTN) service in India. This system has an advantage of having a centralized Conditional Access System (CAS) and Subscriber Management System (SMS). JAINHITS offers Triple Play Service throughout India – Video, Data & Voice. 

  • “Phase III and IV should be broken into three phases”: Ashok Mansukhani

    “Phase III and IV should be broken into three phases”: Ashok Mansukhani

    Having served as Indian Revenue Service Officer in the income tax department for 22 years, Ashok Mansukhani’s last government posting was as Doordarshan deputy director general (1992-96), during which DD metamorphosed from being a single channel broadcaster to a multilingual and multichannel regional entity reaching over 100 million homes in the country.

     

    Mansukhani’s association with the cable TV industry started in 1996 when he joined IndusInd Media and Communications Limited (IMCL), the media wing of Hinduja Ventures Limited (HVL), as director. Over the years, he became executive director and then president of Hinduja TMT before taking on the mantle of whole-time director of HVL.

     

    In his present capacity, Mansukhani is preparing IMCL for a future that is essentially about pay-per-view, video-on-demand and triple-play services, even as his contemporaries grapple with the initial phase of digitization. With his vision and experience, Mansukhani has also been appointed president of the MSO Alliance.

     

    In a t?te-?-t?te with indiantelevision.com’s Seema Singh, Mansukhani, who is just back from a week-long holiday, talks about the way the industry is moving in terms of digitisation, plans for IMCL, and the growing need for communication among its various stakeholders.

     

    Excerpts:

     

    IMCL underwent huge reshuffling a couple of months back. What was the reason behind it?

     

    There is a new digital era that has come in and the board and promoters may have felt that it would be good to bring in fresh talent, to get professionalism in the analogue regime as we transit to the digital era. And what has really been done is that a new team has been brought in that not only understands media but will be able to carry the media assets of the Hinduja group in the next 10 years. So, it is from that point of view that changes may have been made.

     

    The company recently got the licence for taking forward its Headend In The Sky (HITS) project. How far has the work progressed?

     

    Every possible step will be taken to meet the December 2014 deadline. There are certain permissions which are statutory in nature and which need to be taken. There could be perhaps a three to four week lag factor because of elections. But post 15 May, the process will get fast forwarded and personally, I would like to see it operational before the end of the year.

     

    Will HITS play a major role in phase III and IV markets? How will IMCL cope with these phases?

     

    Yes it will, because it is meant to really take advantage of the fact that in phase III and IV, there are hardly any MSOs that operate. But there are 6,000 independent operators and 60,000 LCOs and a majority of them are in phase III and IV. Now they will find it tough to meet digital regulations, quality of service norms, subscriber management system, conditional access systems and sourcing of STBs.

     

    It is a tough task for a small guy, but if he continues to be the proprietor of his network and is helped by a HITS platform to be able to supply high quality 300-500 channels in MPEG 4 capacity, then surely it will cause excitement. To add to it, it will be a prepaid model, having complete transparency.

     

    Yes, HITS will play a major role, but that doesn’t mean that Indigital will be left behind. From the group’s perspective, both will be developed and both are being developed.

     

    Incable exists in phase III, but not in phase IV. For phase III, there are already specific cities for which plans are being drawn up. Incable is also pioneering the concept of digital feeds, which is fibre optic based feeds. Because it may not make sense in a city like Udaipur to put up a digital headend of Rs 10 crore, but it may make sense to take a city like Bhopal and set up a headend and the rest of the state can well be served by fibre optic feed, because then the cost of transmission goes down.

     

    Incable anyways has thousands of kilometres of installed fibre optics of its own, which many others do not have. So we have the capacity and we will now utilize that. Even in phase II, we have digital feeds running through fibre optics. There have been regulatory issues like broadcasters having a different view, but our say to broadcasters is that in digitisation when every box is accounted for and every customer is paid for, then surely the mode by which we transmit should not be the problem of the broadcaster, but should be left to the MSO to work out the best cost effective model.

     

    Digitisation means that you can use a mix of both. Currently, fibre in India is to the colony gate and in the time to come, it will be to home and when that happens, there will be quadra-play. We will have cable telephony as well coming in, but these are far away, at least 3-4 years away.

     

     Will we see investments in IMCL as well by the group?

     

    IMCL is currently being funded by HVL through a preferential share capital based on its requirements for phase III and consolidation of phase II. IMCL will not suffer from shortage of money. That’s not the issue. The issue is that IMCL has to cope with change and with that change, whatever support is needed is available.

     

    SitiCable has launched local cable TV channels. Is IMCL treading that path? If you have to launch a channel, what kind of content will you have?

     

    We are the pioneers as far as local content is concerned. In Mumbai for example, we had In Mumbai channel which we started way back in 1995-96. It was operational for a couple of years and was very popular. It had a mix of news, local events, interviews and it was more of a city-specific channel. At one stage, almost every city that Incable was operating in had a local channel and even today there are local channels, but it has typically not been run by the company in the recent past, but has been run by people who had perhaps bought time on the channel or have agreed to share a part of their advertising revenue.

     

    So basically, they source the content and not the company, since our focus had shifted more on distribution. But today, with a fat distribution pipe being created and video on demand on the way, with two-way to happen with broadband, localization of content, in my view, has a strong public demand.

     

    It also helps in stickiness in terms of vast competition in MSOs and DTH. So at one stage, when In Mumbai was part of Incable, it was a reason that people stayed with us, because they wanted to watch it. Also we had In News which ran in five languages.

     

    Localisation, not on the Siticable model, but perhaps reviving the In Mumbai model, may take place.

     

    While news and sports are important, I feel localized content, like local events, regional events, festivals and community events, have been neglected. The vast progress that we have seen internationally is more of a mom and pop show in India.

     

    This area can undergo an upgrade, both in terms of quality and quantity. It is an interesting area to look at. Animation is again an interesting area that can be tapped.

     

    Content can be self generated, syndicated or can be brought in and then re-created. What we have seen recently is that there is enough competition in every sphere of television and yet there is scope. Therefore, our sister company in entertainment will look at it and take advantage. There are 30 million cable TV homes with boxes, another 100 million to follow. 2014 is an ambitious year. Even if we can achieve 50 per cent of this, there will be 80-90 million cable TV homes to tap. 24 hours of programming is needed. It is not easy to really supply that content, so perhaps it’s easier to create content or to source it and then re-purpose it for your own audience.

     

    The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) recently came out with its regulation on tariff rise in non DAS areas. How does it impact the business of MSOs?

     

    This simply means that the cost of television has gone up by 27 per cent. When the consultation had started, I had personally taken it up with TRAI and told them that the price shock, if it has to be given, must be in phases. It was expected and long due and in the long run, as long as packaging is sensibly done, a la carte channels are offered, it will benefit all the stakeholders.

     

    In the beginning, customers will be hit by the price shock, but after that, they will adjust.

     

    Time has come for MSOs to discipline themselves. The MSO today has to take a stand that it doesn’t make sense for a non-paying or a zero paying LCO to have the signal.

     

    Every change is resisted initially, but once it happens, things fall into place.  There is a need for more communication in the industry.

     

     When do you see gross billing starting in Mumbai for phase I? By when will digitisation of 38 cities in phase II be completed?

     

    There have been discussions and there are amendments in the entertainment tax acts, but the notification has not been issued as yet by the entertainment tax authorities. According to me, in whichever way gross billing has to happen, it will take a couple of weeks more.

     

    The 38 cities that comprise phase II should be completed by 30 June.

     

    When do we see packaging of channels taking place in phase I and II cities? Why is it taking so long? What kind of packages can one expect?

     

    The initial task of installing 30 million STBs was tough. Today, attention has shifted to packaging which will also be a function of the prices at which packages can be obtained from the broadcaster. There is disaggregation that will happen soon, which will lead to re-pricing of packages, possibly from July 1.

     

    Packaging has to be a joint exercise of broadcasters and MSOs. Currently, it is not. So that’s another aspect which needs to be kept in mind that at the end of the day, it is the product of the broadcaster and the distribution is ours.

     

    What if packaging teams were to be set up between MSO Alliance and IBF as an example? They could then get together and do a customer research and find out who wants to do what.

     

    New models for packaging need to come in. Why should I pay ‘X’ amount for sports throughout the year, when during the year, there will be only three times that we watch Sports channels,. So can’t we have variable pricing, say during the world cup?

     

    The second phase of digitisation will happen when the market will mature. And all this will happen in 2014-15 and 2016.

     

    DTH today has a much better hold on packaging, than the MSOs. Regional packages need great attention and especially for national MSOs. The need of a customer in Bengaluru is different from that of a customer from Gujarat. Packaging requires research and customer connect. The customer is being currently taken for granted and they do not like it.

     

    We still need to move to the CPS model and once that happens, the MSO can collect the money and pay the broadcaster. There are people who are still working with an analogue mindset in the digital era.

     

    One way is to sell the channels on an a la carte, the other way is to shrink the package and the third is to say that I will give you growth, but cannot give the growth you demand which has no relation with the actual size of my network.

     

    Why is there resistance from broadcasters, every time a new packaging model is suggested? 

     

    When status quo is disturbed, things change. Also when a particular channel is not available in a package offered to most, then the broadcaster may lose the advertisement support. But in time to come, we will move to a 50:50 regime, in subscription and advertisement.

     

    What is the impact of the TRAI regulation on disaggregation on MSOs?

     

    The regulation has given a great level playing field for independent MSOs like IMCL. So far, there has been clear favoritism towards MSOs who are owned by broadcasters and therefore, independent MSOs have had tough times or litigation times and that has taken away from further move to say digitisation. This is a welcome move and yet, sufficient safeguards have been given to the broadcasters. They have got 27 per cent tariff hike. The order should be accepted in the spirit. It is to increase digitisation and not to harm anyone.

     

    Are you looking at enhancing broadband services, like Hathway Cable & Datacom did recently?

     

    We have broadband services and that will be a key focus area in the years to come and what I personally look forward to is: pay per view, video on demand and triple play services. But these will take time. These services will be possible more in the prepaid era.

     

    We always have been operating broadband as we have the ISP licence.

     

    We don’t want to ape Hathway. They have their own focus point, we have ours. We want to develop digital best practices, keeping in mind what the customers want.

     

    How would you look at phase III and IV markets? Will Incable compete with HITS in these areas?

     

    It will be in phases. We will first concentrate on phase III, where we already have a reach, so we will see which cities to cover there. Then we have to decide which cities will be covered by the HITS platform. Which cities will have headend and which will have fibres. These are things that the IMCL management is working on.

     

    No, the two will not compete with each other, as the markets will be different. There could be synergies in best practices but not in market.

     

     Should phase III and phase IV of digitisation be taken at the same time? Do you think it can be completed within the deadline of December 2014?

     

    My view is phase III and IV should be broken into three phases. If it took two phases to do 30 million homes, how can one expect 100 million homes to be done in two phases? The statistics don’t work and then currently, there is no movement in phase III.

     

    While TRAI gave a start date for implementing digitisation, there is no need to give an end date. The regulator should incentivise those who digitise faster. Tax holiday or tax benefit or a better rate in terms of 42 per cent guideline of the Supreme Court, would work better than giving deadlines.

     

    Phase III and IV is huge and untapped. The industry needs to be recognised as a small industry. Also there is a need for bank financing, formation of cable cooperatives and associate ventures. This is the reason that IMCL has pioneered joint ventures which exist is smaller towns and cities.

     

     

    Dish TV launched its new Zing service in February; does it bother the MSOs in any way?

     

    90 per cent of cable TV homes in phase I and II remained with MSOs. While the customers may have switched MSOs, they largely stayed with being a cable TV home. And this, when everyone thought that DTH players will have a smooth walk in these cities. DTH is an expensive proposition.

     

    If DTH players think of launching something which is less expensive, it can lead to cannibalizing DTH itself and not necessarily an MSO. The MSO already has a sunken asset. We are just looking at stickiness of consumers and return on investment. Such moves will not affect MSOs.

     

    Post elections, there can be a regulation on the cable TV monopoly. Do you think that will impact MSOs?

     

    It may affect the regional MSOs, but not the national ones. These are proposals, but what comes out in the fine print will finally determine our way to look at it. I expect lighter facilitative and not restrictive regulations and I think TRAI is moving towards that.

     

    What are the biggest challenges for you today?

     

    The ability to harness the latest technology with the fastest way in which you can bring in specialty content at the cheapest possible cost in such a way that every member of the value chain is made happy with the money he retains after all taxes are paid is the real business plan challenge that industry needs to work on and which we are also working on. Ultimately, we should be able to run a profitable business.

     

    Do you see the ARPUs going up? If so, by how much, and when?

     

    The ARPUS will go up by 20 per cent in the next 12 months.

  • Star Sports, Hathway lock horns

    Star Sports, Hathway lock horns

    MUMBAI:  Two hard-to-miss campaigns have been doing the rounds of television, radio and digital media lately.

     

    One, launched by sports broadcaster Star Sports, hits out at multi-system operator (MSO) Hathway for not providing Star Sports channels to subscribers, apart from suggesting that subscribers move to other MSOs or a DTH platform.

     

    The other, launched by Hathway, informs viewers to subscribe to Star Sports channels as part of the MSO’s ‘Sports Package’ or on a la carte basis.

     

    Subscribers may be confused but what is obvious is that Star India and the MSO, once close partners, seem to be no longer on the same page and are scrapping with each other like a couple after a bitter parting. And that too in the public eye.

     

    But both deny that they are hitting out at each other; they say they are just protecting their individual interests.

     

    “We noticed that several subscribers didn’t even know how to subscribe to our channels and were therefore under the impression that the channels had been switched off at our end. We were thus compelled to issue an advertisement in mainline newspapers to assist our viewers and clear all misgivings so that consumers could explore their options to avail our channels,” explains the Star Sports spokesperson.

     

    “We would like to highlight that we have received complaints that many consumers are facing lot of difficulties in getting our channels activated. There are newspaper reports talking about subscribers facing challenges in availing signals from Hathway.”

     

    On his part, Hathway Cable & Datacom CEO Jagdish Kumar says, “We had to launch the campaign because of the wrong information that was being spread against us. We have not pulled off Star Sports channels. We have simply removed them from our premium package and are now giving them to subscribers either a la carte or through our Sports package.”

     

    Didn’t Star Sports spark off Hathway’s move by raising the sticker price of its channels? “We have not increased the price of our channels.  The channel pricing is regulated by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) and no broadcaster can unilaterally increase the channel price,” the spokesperson shoots back.

     

    However, unconfirmed reports are that Star Sports asked Hathway to pay for a higher number of subscribers this year – when its contract came up for renewal –  if it wanted  the channels to be placed in any of its packages. Something which most broadcasters are resorting to with the onset of greater transparency following the wider spread of set top boxes in subscriber homes.

     

    This was something which Hathway was not open to hence it yanked Star Sports channels from its existing pack and begin charging separately for them.

     

    “I don’t understand why it is being made out as such a big issue? Isn’t digitisation about this? We are giving the consumer the power to choose. Any consumer who wants the sports channels can get them either a la carte or they can subscribe to our sports pack,” Pillai maintains.

     

    The Star Sports spokesperson however insists that the move has affected Hathway consumers adversely. “They are today worse off than before as they have to now pay more to Hathway for availing the same set of channels, including the Star Sports Channels,” he empasises.

     

    Pillai contradicts this saying, “Who says we are charging more? We have instead reduced the package price for consumers, who have opted for a la carte channels.”

     

    He claims that the MSO has reduced the price of its premium package by Rs 5 and is offering Star Sports 1, 2, 3 and 4 at Rs 17.25 per month. Consumers opting for these channels would have to subscribe for a period of three months, he adds. Else, the channels are available as part of its Sports Pack with Neo Sports at the same price and consumers could subscribe to that for a period of one month.

     

    The Star Sports spokesperson then accuses Hathway of not giving prior and adequate notice to its consumers before making these changes to its package composition and “discontinuing the exhibition of Star Sports channels”.

     

    “We have received information that Hathway did not protect those who had subscribed to the packages containing the Star Sports channels in the last six months nor did it protect those who had paid for the same on a yearly basis, thereby breaching its obligations under the relevant regulations. We have been inundated with enquiries from agitated and confused consumers of Hathway, who saw their favourite sports channels suddenly going off  their TV screens, thereby missing out on quality sporting action on our channels,” alleges the spokesperson.

     

    Pillai has a quick riposte to this allegation. Says he:  “Who says we had not given any prior notice? We had sent out a public notice 20 days back informing our subscribers of our plan. In fact, we were also running scrolls on the TV screen, informing them of the same.”

     

    So, can consumers expect some kind of resolution soon? “We have always acted in the spirit of cooperation. As a result, our content is widely available across cable TV and DTH platforms,” highlights the Star Sports spokesperson. “Having said that, we cannot accept that our viewers are taken for granted. We also expect distribution platforms to behave responsibly as both broadcasters and distributors owe a minimum quality of service to our viewers as provided for in the regulations framed by TRAI.”

     

    Pillai reveals that his company is just following market demands, adding that  “we are examining all options. The case had come up for hearing in TDSAT, where the tribunal had disposed-off the petition of Star Sports. I don’t see a reason for the sports broadcaster’s reaction. We are just complying with what digitisation was meant for.”

  • Broadcasters to hike rates in both DAS and analogue areas

    Broadcasters to hike rates in both DAS and analogue areas

    MUMBAI: Things will be different the next time multi-system operators (MSOs) and direct-to-home (DTH) players sit across the table with broadcasters for renewal of channel contracts. Thanks to the price defreeze proposed by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) after nearly seven years. The regulator on Monday released a notification, offering a 27.5 per cent inflation-linked hike to stakeholders in the tariff ceiling. The hike can be implemented in two phases: 15 per cent from April and the remaining 12.5 per cent from January 2015.

     

    Broadcasters in particular have welcomed the move. With the 15 per cent hike April onward applicable to the analogue business, broadcasters are happy that they can at least increase their ARPUs.

     

    “CPS deals in DAS areas will not be impacted with this tariff ceiling hike. But if the MSO or DTH player has a RIO deal, be it in the DAS or non-DAS region, the rates will go up,” informs Media Pro COO Gurjeev Singh Kapoor.

     

    For those wondering how rates can head north in DAS areas when the tariff ceiling notification is for non-addressable areas, here’s the logic. With RIO rates on digital platforms being 42 per cent of those on analogue platforms, a 15 per cent increase in analogue rates is bound to raise RIO rates for digital. Hence, while the hike in tariff ceiling is for non-DAS areas, the same is applicable to DAS areas as well. “This is the best thing that has happened to the industry, as we now have a platform to increase the ARPU and ask for more from consumers,” says Kapoor.

     

    While an aggregator, on condition of anonymity, puts it as: “DAS rates are related to non-DAS rates. The hike of 15 per cent is on the RIO rate. So even though many feel that the fixed deals will not get affected, they will. Because the matrix for negotiation will change now and this is not only for analogue areas, but also for DAS areas. The negotiation for fixed deals is done on the RIO rate, and if that goes up, of course, the fixed deal will also rise.”

     

    Most of the contracts are up for renewal in April; for TheOneAlliance, 60 per cent of the contracts will be renewed now whereas for Media Pro, close to 90 per cent of the contracts with both DTH operators and MSOs are up for renewal.

     

    “We have a very good scope and so, have decided to increase the rates for every MSO and DTH player in both DAS and non-DAS areas.  After a long time, broadcasters have got a hike in tariff ceiling and so, we would take the opportunity to hike the rates,” says TheOneAlliance EVP sales and strategy Makarand Palekar. “We will sit with the concerned MSOs and DTH players and try and incorporate this even in existing channel deals. And I am sure that DTH operators and MSOs will be happy with this as they can collect the same from the ground now.”

     

    Will consumers see a hike in bills this month onward? “We will move things gradually. We will sit for negotiations now,” informs Palekar.

     

    Are broadcasters happy with the percentage of hike? Palekar feels it could have been better. “But with digitisation, MSOs are currently in investment mode. So, in the current scenario, this could have been the best,” he says.

     

    Kapoor agrees with Palekar saying, “Yes, it is not enough. The increase should come in every year, but then it is a welcome move. They have finally woken up from their slumber.”

     

    According to the aggregator, “This figure of 15 per cent has been derived by the authority using past metrics and calibrations. While the hike is under the inflation rate, this is the best TRAI could have come up with.”

     

    Apart from broadcasters, are MSOs happy with the move? “MSOs will get bothered with this hike. We may end up paying for this from our own pocket if we cannot collect it from the ground,” rues ABS 7 Star CMD Atul Saraf.

     

    According to him, MSOs don’t put pressure on LCOs by hiking rates in the analogue regime. “There are chances that the local cable operator can go to the other MSO, if the other player doesn’t hike the price. So either both the MSOs operating in a particular area increase the price, or else, there will be competition,” he adds.

     

    About hiking prices in DAS areas, Saraf says, “Broadcasters have already hiked the price in DAS areas. Also, the deals are on per box basis and there is 100 per cent declaration. So why would they want to increase the price in the DAS regime? So in the DAS regime, if broadcasters plan to hike prices, a few of us may go to the court.”

     

    The increase in RIO by 15 per cent leaves a grey area for broadcasters to hike rates in both DAS and non-DAS areas, according to Saraf. “But there are hardly any RIO deals currently, as we prefer entering into a fixed deal, and especially in the non-DAS areas. But now it may be that MSOs may do a RIO deal, especially for sports channels,” he informs.

     

    GTPL Hathway COO Shaji Mathews too feels MSOs will not benefit from the tariff hike. “Given that DTH rates are also low today, this hike will lead to more competition between the MSO and DTH,” he says.

     

    Kapoor however begs to differ. “The ARPU for DAS phase III and IV is Rs 160 while for DTH, it is close to Rs 300. Even with the hike, the ARPU for cable will go up to Rs 190. There is a big gap between the two and I don’t see consumers moving from cable TV to DTH due to this hike,” he opines.

     

    Whether the MSOs and LCOs will benefit from the move or no, still needs to be seen. The question now is, whether the consumer will pay for the hiked price in the cable TV bills? “The problem is not with the consumers, they are ready to pay,” says Palekar.

     

    “We are showcasing around 400 channels, so the hike was much needed. It is also a good way to move people to digitisation,” concludes Kapoor.

  • Siti Cable gets Rs 140.25 crore investment from promoters

    Siti Cable gets Rs 140.25 crore investment from promoters

    MUMBAI: After getting a shot of Rs 102.75 crore last week, multi system operator (MSO) Siti Cable has now finally received the third and last tranche that its promoters had intended to release.  In an announcement to the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), the MSO has said that it has received Rs 140.25 crore today. Within a span of a week, Rs 243 crore has been invested in all.

     

    The release on the BSE reads: “As per the terms of 16,20,00,000 warrants issued by the company on 19 March 2013 on preferential basis, the allotment committee of the board of directors has upon receipt of balance of  75 per cent consideration aggregating to Rs 140,25,00,000 approved further allotment of 9,35,00,000 equity shares upon conversion of such remaining warrants at an issue price of Rs 20 per share to the allottees: Essel Media Ventures and Essel International.”

     

    It was in March 2013 that the company got the nod for getting Rs 324 crore, out of which Rs 81 crore flowed in that month itself. Even though, the promoters had time till September 2014 to flush out the rest, the decision to invest it all was taken recently. Following which, the next two tranches have been released for the MSO.

     

    With this, the total promoter shareholding has risen to 72.82 per cent.

     

    Not only this, the MSO also claims to have reached a subscriber base of 40 lakh digital customers as on 31 March 2014. “Encouraged by the significant improvement in the performance in FY 13-14 and to support the aggressive growth plan to grow the subscriber base to 1 crore  in FY 14-15, the promoters have invested additional Rs 243 crore in the business,” the MSO said in a release sent today.

     

    The funds will be utilised primarily for business expansion and to partially reduce debt.

     

    Essel Group and Zee chairman Subhash Chandra through a statement said, “The Indian television distribution industry is on the cusp of high growth value phase as it marches towards the digitisation of balance phases of cable television in the country. With the change in leadership last year, Siti Cable has driven higher revenue and profitability through relentless focus on operational excellence despite uncertain environment. Our sustained investment in this sector will further accelerate the growth momentum and will serve the digital cable TV viewing needs of many more million Indians on Siti Cable Network.”

     

    Commenting on this development, Siti Cable CEO VD Wadhwa said, “For the wider digitisation roll out, the company needs to invest in upgrading its digital infrastructure further and enter into newer strategic markets. We plan to seed over six million set-top-boxes in phase III and IV markets through organic and in organic growth. We believe that we are well poised to benefit from the ongoing digitisation implementation and ready to penetrate the market at a faster rate.”

     

    Package wise billing and collection has already been initiated in the phase I. The company estimates that by beginning of the next quarter, package wise billing and collection will be in line. The MSO claims to have made significant progress on subscriber wise billing and collections in its phase-II markets as well. “The company is far ahead of other operators in terms of subscriber wise billing and collection,” said a statement released by the company.

  • Home Ministry seeks details of MSOs for security clearance

    Home Ministry seeks details of MSOs for security clearance

    NEW DELHI: The Home Ministry has issued an additional format to be filled by the multi-system operators (MSOs) for grant of security clearance.

     

    All existing MSO applicants who are applying to the Information and Broadcasting Ministry for grant of MSO registration are required to furnish the details according to a format placed on the Ministry’s website: mib.nic.in.

     

    The MIB wants details of the MSO and its directors, apart from details of when the MSO was set up.