Category: DTH Operator

  • DishTV extends its connection up to Flipkart

    DishTV extends its connection up to Flipkart

    MUMBAI: DishTV has joined hands with the e-commerce giant Flipkart to bring to its customers a hassle-free connection. With this association, DishTV becomes the first DTH service provider to be listed on Flipkart.

    As part of this collaboration, for a limited period, users of Flipkart, which was voted as one of the most popular e-commerce brands in India by RedSeer report, will get an opportunity to grab offers from DishTV on their new connections.

    Dish TV India senior vice president-marketing Sukhpreet Singh expressed, “Through this move, the company aims to integrate and connect the tech-savvy consumers to entertainment services on a platform which is dynamic.”

    Flipkart senior director – electronics Hari Kumar said, “Of the total cable and satellite base of 169 million, 47 million are non-digitised households. So, there is a huge opportunity with the existing customers itself. With the TV installations expected to double over the next five years, we see a significant upside in making DTH services available at the customers’ doorstep.”

  • DTH subscriber growth on upswing in first quarter?

    DTH subscriber growth on upswing in first quarter?

    BENGALURU: Is the DTH subscriber growth in the first quarter of fiscal 2017 (Q1-18, quarter ended 30 June 2017, current quarter) on an upswing?  Of the six private players in the Indian DTH ecosystem, three are publically listed and their numbers are available in the public domain. Two players, Airtel DTH and Dish TV, have indicated a quarter-on-quarter growth in number of subscriber additions. Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) has yet to release subscription numbers for Q1-18.

    Airtel has indicated subscriber additions of 0.499 million for Q1-18 as compared to 0.228 million for the previous quarter (quarter ended 31 March 2017, Q4-17, previous quarter). Dish TV reported adding 0.186 million subscribers as compared to an estimated 0.165 million additions for the previous quarter.

    The third player – Videocon d2h reported adding 0.13 million subscribers in Q1-18 as compared to the slightly higher 0.14 million for Q4-17. It may be noted that subscriber numbers are generally rounded off by the players in their reports, in some case to an extent of 10,000. Also, the sum of the net subscriber additions per quarter may not be equal to the overall subscribers reported as added in a fiscal by the companies because of subscriber churn and rounding off.

    Please refer to the figure below:

    public://F1_18.jpg

    As reported by us earlier, despite the sunset date for DAS IV having passed, the DTH industry had not been able to leverage the opportunity that it presented. Financial results of  Airtel Digital TV (Airtel DTH), Dish TV, and Videocon DTH show poor subscriber adds in the quarter ended 31 March 2017 (fourth quarter, Q4-17). As a matter of fact, subscriber additions in Q4-17 was the lowest that the three Indian major operators reported in a quarter for the financial year ended 31 March 2017 (FY-17). The combined subscribers for all the three players grew 8.33 percent to 41.23 million in FY-17 from 38.06 million in FY-16. In FY-16, the three players had added about 65 percent more subscribers in absolute numbers at 4.93 million as compared to the 3.81 million added in FY-17.

    The DTH industry witnessed a slowdown in subscriber growth even in fiscal 2016. Combined subscriber additions of the three pay-direct to home operators in India for the annual period ended 31 March 2016 (FY-16) vis-à-vis the previous year (FY-15) grew by 14.8 percent.  This subscriber growth rate was however was much lower than the growth that these entities had in FY-15 at 24.7 percent as compared to FY-14.

    The current DTH scenario in India

    Dish TV is at present the largest private DTH player in the country in terms of number of subscribers. The three players – Airtel DTH, Dish TV and Videocon d2h represent about 60 to 65 percent marketshare of the pay-TV DTH industry subscribers. The other three players are Tata Sky, Sun Direct and Big TV. Please refer to the figure below for the estimated subscriber marketshare of the private pay-TV players.

    public://F2_9.jpg

    The government’s FreeDish DTH service is the largest DTH player by far in terms of subscribers with an estimated 22million or 2.2 crore subscribers in 2016 as per the KPMG-FICCI Indian Media and Entertainment Industry Report 2017 (KPMG-FICCI M&E Report 2017) titled Media for the Masse: The Future Unfolds. It must however be noted that an exact number for registered or active subscribers is not available since this is a free DTH service. Also, the proposed merger of Videocon d2h with Dish TV will create the largest private television carriage player in India and quite likely the second largest in the world, be it cable, internet television or DTH or any other.

     

  • Comment: Jawahar Goel gets into the boxing ring with iron gloves

    Comment: Jawahar Goel gets into the boxing ring with iron gloves

    MUMBAI: Jawahar Goel is known to be a feisty fighter.  The third amongst four brothers, and currently the chairman & managing director of Dish TV, JG (as he is called) was probably the most vociferous amongst them, after eldest brother Zee TV chairman and MP Subhash Chandra,  in the past. Like a pugilist, he had a wide array of punches – the uppercut, the jab, the cross, and even the hook.  And he used them in good measure in the corporate world, weighing his gloves  with lead.

    He was known not to mince his words;  he would speak straight from his heart. On most occasions, they rang true. Hence, they were harsh and would land where it hurt his opponents.

    However, JG has been relatively quiet for a large part over the past half a decade. Almost reticent to a ‘T,’ he shied away from making any major public pronouncements to the media or appearing in any industry conferences.  He left the speaking to professionals in his company or his elder brother or the next generation Punit and Amit Goenka.  

    He, for a long time has smarted and yelped that the DTH sector has been overburdened in terms of entertainment taxes, royalties to government, and of course on content costs that it forks out to broadcasters. His belief has been that the DTH sector has been paying a premium to TV channels and in the process has subsidized  cable TV sector costs for content, and now the OTT platforms, which are getting it for very low cost or free.

    He should know as Dish TV is also the oldest DTH operator in India and has gone the whole route of high capex, customer acquisition, and operating costs,  negative cash flows, and a bleeding bottomline. Finally, after more than a decade of operations it attained profitability a couple of years ago.

    A pioneer, JG had a great hand to play in the setting up the MSO Alliance, a lobby body of multi-system operators or the large cable networks in the early 2000s.  Then, around three years back,  he attempted to bring together several distribution platforms to form a content aggregation company to negotiate carriage deals with large broadcasters.  It made sense on paper – might would definitely bring clout, and help the cabal hammer down prices that networks such as Star India, Sony Pictures levy was charging them. But bringing together fiercely competitive groups with vested interests was an idea bound to fail right from the get-go.  And hence the plan had to be aborted. Finally, he set up a venture called Comnet but with the combine subsrciber base of Siti Networks and Dish TV.

     

    Even then  JG harboured the hope  that others would join the combine. And he continued to bristle about the high costs of content and was waiting, watching, keeping his eyes open for any chance to turn things in DishTV’s favour.  He had been working hard to make the DTH operator cash positive as well as bottom line positive.  And lower content costs by growing  scale could aid him in that attempt. Quite a change for a man who was president of the broadcast industry body the Indian Broadcasting Foundation for four years or terms.

    All along he was planning to make Dish TV even bigger. It was already India’s largest DTH operator. But that was not enough for him. He was looking at more than organic growth.

    The opportunity came from unexpected quarters, rival DTH venture, the fast growing Videocon d2h’s promoters had run into a spot of bother thanks to the overleveraging they had resorted at the parent group  Videocon which is a consumer electronics major and had diversified into oil and gas, real estate, and other ventures.

    Of course, there was a relationship too for the past decade or so, with the two entrepreneurial families – the Dhoots and the Goels – having a connection through marriage.

    JG  and his team quickly evaluated what was on offer and the two groups had the media guessing what would follow next. News reports incorrectly speculated that Dish was acquiring Videocond2h.  Goel and the Dhoots instead went in for a merger, surprising many.  

    The duo’s decision created the largest satellite TV delivering platform in India. And  along with Siti Networks made the Essel Group, arguably the third largest TV distribution firm in the world, courtesy the 38-39 million subs they jointly control.

    The joint venture is expected to see the light of day anytime now following all government, exchanges, and regulatory clearances. But it has resulted in the two families having equal say in managing it. However, Dish TV has the option to either buy a substantial chunk over time from Videocon or the market. With the scale that the Essel group has got now, broadcasters will have to be ready for a  bloody battle when content contract re-negotiation comes up next with Dish TV Videocon d2h.

    JG sounded the clarion call of what is going to come up next, just last week. Clearly at his aggressive best, now that the major part of the joint venture’s regulatory and government permissions  are out of the way, he fired out a bunch of letters to the government, regulators and the media. They were meant to throw a cat amongst the pigeons.

    One of them stated that all the ministries and the Board of Control for Cricket in India had better wake up and not award the telecast rights of world cricket’s most highly valued property, the Indian Premier League to Star India, something which the  latter so desperately needs.  

    He warned that Star has too many sports telecast rights with it ( almost 70 per cent of cricket’s recach – a game that is a religion in India). If and when the IPL  rights are awarded to Star, then it would tantamount to a painful monopoly (more than 85 per cent reach and 93 per cent of the ad revenue on sports channels).  There is no way that so much power should be allowed to be concentrated in one group, he reasoned.

    He expressed that Star does not even care about public interest, pointing to its litigation with Doordarshan on cricket telecast feed sharing.  The Supreme Court recently ordered the pubcaster to make the cricket feed available only on its free to air terrestrial network, and not on cable TV or any other satellite TV platforms.

    He informed all the powers-that-be in his letter that there are clear indications that Star India wants to rule India’s pay TV market and will most likely take the charges it levies on pay TV distributors for its channels northwards, much higher than those recommended by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India under its Tariff Order of earlier this year.  The fact that Star India and DTH operator Tata Sky (co-owned by the Tatas and Murdoch) have been fighting a battle in Indian courts against the tariff order being implemented are pointers to  its intent, he further stated. 

    The order, which was to be implemented more than six months back , has been kept on hold, pending a decision from the Chennai High Court.

    Star India cannot be awarded the IPL telecast rights, he reiterated as higher channel rates  would force TV distribution platforms to up subscription rates for their customers in keeping with what is being charged to them. This in turn would end up being anti-consumer, JG explained in the letter.

    He  went to the extent of saying that the power equation was already lopsided even when Sony Pictures Networks India had the rights to the IPL (over the last decade) and overseas cricket  matches that India plays in some countries.  (The Essel group earlier this year exited the sports telecast business by selling its Ten Sports brand and TV channels to SPNI).

    That JG is firing on all cylinders became evident very soon. He approached the courts seeking to disallow Star India from renaming its channel Star Bharat. The courts disallowed his plea.

    No one knows if this is the last of the letters and litigation from JG’s office chambers.

    For old timers,  however, this in vintage JG lobbying at his best. And it is reminiscent of when he had sent letters to almost every member of parliament in the late nineties and early 2000 stating that ISKYB (Murdoch’s fully owned DTH venture then) should not be allowed to operate in India as it would be anti-national from the security front.

    He bested Murdoch at that time as Star (or News Television India as it was called then) was not given a licence and Murdoch had to  jettison his DTH plans until he found a stronger and more acceptable partner in the Tatas.

    Will his efforts yield results this time around too?

    We will know soon when the winning IPL bids are announced.

    Also Read:

    Jawahar Goel raises alarm of emerging Star cricket monopoly (updated)

    Dish TV shoots off letter to IBF; alleges discrimination by b’casters, OTT platforms

    TDSAT ‘no’ to stay Star Bharat launch, DPO payments subject to adjudication

  • Dish TV moves TDSAT against Star Life OK name change & turning FTA

    Dish TV moves TDSAT against Star Life OK name change & turning FTA

    NEW DELHI: After having raised an alarm a day back over an impending monopoly of Star India if it wins the broadcast and other rights to IPL cricket, Essel/Zee Group’s DTH platform Dish TV has moved broadcast and telecoms disputes tribunal seeking restraining order against Star Life OK’s rebranding process and turning free-to-air (FTA).

    In its interim prayer Dish TV has sought an order from disputes tribunal TDSAT to “restrain” Star India from converting Life OK from a pay channel to FTA by changing its name to Star Bharat and joining the Doordarshan FreeDish platform. Reason?

    According to the petition, reviewed by Indiantelevision.com, Star is making the changes “without informing” sector regulator TRAI as also without giving public notice about the change as “specified in clause 4-3 of the TRAI regulations.”

    Star India is in the process of renaming on-air GEC TV channel Life OK (a pay channel) into Star Bharat and put it on Doordarshan’s FTA DTH platform DD FreeDish. Though industry sources indicated that the change was to come into effect from sometime end of August 2017, sources in Prasar Bharati, owner and manager of DD, had said the pubcaster’s DTH platform was not yet technically capable of bringing on board more channels despite they winning slots to be part of the FTA KU-band service as an upgradation process was still not complete.

    The case at TDSAT is scheduled to for an initial hearing on 25 August 2017. Dish TV, along with its partner Videocon D2h, has appealed the tribunal for a restraint on Star India and any other further direction that it may “deem fit and proper” keeping in mind the facts placed before the court.

    Keep tuned in for more episodes on the new and unfolding corporate warfare in the Indian media and entertainment realm.

    ALSO READ:

    Jawahar Goel raises alarm of emerging Star cricket monopoly

    Star Bharat to be available on DD FreeDish as b’caster’s fourth FTA offering

    Life OK rebranded as Star Bharat

     

  • Dish TV shoots off letter to IBF; alleges discrimination by b’casters, OTT platforms

    Dish TV shoots off letter to IBF; alleges discrimination by b’casters, OTT platforms

    NEW DELHI: In a move that’s certain to set the cat amongst the pigeons, Dish TV, one of India’s biggest satellite platform in terms of subscribers, has not only accused broadcasters of  “discrimination” relating to making available content to various pay distribution platforms vis-à-vis likes of OTT, but also “creating huge disparity” in the market.

    “Broadcasters, on one hand, keep on charging huge subscription fee from us and, on the other hand, provide the same content/channel to the OTT platforms at highly subsidized rates, thereby not only creating a non-level field, but also causing huge detriment to the subscribers of Dish TV. Availability of same content/channel on alternate distribution platform on much cheaper rate vis-a-vis DTH has started resulting into migration to the alternate distribution platforms,” Dish TV has said in a letter to the Indian Broadcasting Foundation, an apex body of TV channels or broadcasting companies operating in India.

    The Dish TV letter dated 11 August 2017, reviewed by Indiantelevision.com, goes on to highlight why the move of TV channels to turn FTA, join Doordarshan’s free-to-air DTH platform DD FreeDish after paying a carriage fee, and making available content at highly subsided rates to OTT platforms like YouTube and that being proposed by Reliance Jio slides the Indian television market’s business model to be largely advertising driven.

    “It is a common industry knowledge that the broadcasters have provided their channels to the OTT platforms at a highly discounted rates, which is totally prejudicial and discriminatory to the DTH platforms,” the Dish TV letter stated, which has also been sent to the DTH Association of India and the All India Digital Cable Federation, a body of digitally-able MSOs.

    The letter from Dish TV, written by the satellite platform’s managing director Jawahar Goel, is addressed to IBF president Punit Goenka, who also is Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited MD and CEO, and a nephew of Goel. Goenka’s father and media baron Subhash Chandra is a member of India’s Upper House or Rajya Sabha.

     According to people familiar with the development, IBF’s member-companies have been asked to give their feedback on the content of the letter, which could be put to vote some time mid-September.

    “The IBF constitutes of seven major members, viz. Star, Zee, Sony, IndiaCast, Sun (TV group), Discovery and Times, which not only control the IBF but also are the major players collecting the subscription and advertisement revenue— collecting more than 99 per cent of the subscription and advertisement revenue of the Indian broadcasting industry,” the letter stated, adding that actions of the broadcasters “clearly indicate” the focus was shifting towards increasing the advertising revenue against subscription revenue.

    Raising the issue of sector regulator TRAI and disputes tribunal TDSAT’s emphasis on “fairness, reasonability and non-discrimination” as far as making available content to distribution platforms,  Dish TV pointed out that strategies employed by broadcasters were “deterrent to the pay TV market.”

    Pointing out that certain actions of the broadcasters could amount to breach of cross-media restrictions too, the letter exhorted the IBF members to discuss “whether the emphasis has to be on pay model (where the broadcasters can collect subscription) or an FTA model (where the broadcasters can get the advertisement revenue)”.

    Till the time of writing this report, Indiantelevision.com could not get across to IBF for a reaction.

    “Availability of same content/channel on alternate distribution platform on much cheaper rate vis-a-vis DTH rate has started resulting in(to) migration to the alternate distribution platforms,” the letter highlighted, adding that big broadcasters’ own OTT platforms (like Star’s Hotstar, Viacom18’s Voot, Sony Pictures Entertainment’s SonyLIV and Zee’s dittoTV, for example) also contributed to compounding the problem.

    The letter added: “It will be critical for your (IBF) members to spell out the strategy to hold/grow the pay TV market, which has been contributing to around 35-40 per cent of the total revenue of the pay broadcasters.”

    However, it seems that the present slew of letters from Dish TV and accusations will again rock the approximately Rs 558  billion Indian media and entertainment industry, which had thought corporate skirmishes of mid 1990s to mid 2000s had been buried in favour of overall growth of the broadcast and cable sectors and the media and entertainment industry, in general.

    ALSO READ:

    Jawahar Goel raises alarm of emerging Star cricket monopoly

     

     

     

  • Dish TV India reports muted numbers for first quarter

    Dish TV India reports muted numbers for first quarter

    BENGALURU: The Essel Group’s television direct to home (DTH) Dish TV India Limited (Dish TV) reported 5 percent and 5.1 percent declines in subscription and operation revenue for the quarter ended 30 June 2017 (Q1-18, current quarter) as compared to the corresponding year ago quarter (Q1-17). Dish TV says that it is making a smart recovery from the lows of the demonetization impacted previous quarters. The company reported subscription revenue of Rs 6,917 million in the current quarter as compared to Rs 7,282 million in Q1-17. Operating revenue in Q1-18 was Rs 7,389 million as compared to Rs 7,786 million in Q1-17.

    Dish TV reported a net loss of Rs 139 million in the current quarter as compared to profit after tax of Rs 361 million in Q1-17. EBIDTA in Q1-18 was 22.9 percent down at Rs 2,016 million as compared to Rs 2,610 million in Q1-17. Total comprehensive loss in the current quarter was a Rs 134 million as compared to total comprehensive income of Rs 364 million in the corresponding year ago quarter.

    Dish TV reported net addition of 0.186 million subscribers in the current quarter which takes it subscriber base to 15.7 million. The company had closed the previous quarter (last quarter of fiscal 2017 or Q4-17) with 15.5 million subscribers.

    Dish TV CMD Jawahar Goel, said, “With digitization spreading to rural India, our primary objective is to address the needs of pay-TV viewers in small towns and villages. For the first time in the history of DTH industry in India, indirect tax rates have been separately communicated to the consumers. In an attempt to make TV viewing affordable for viewers, Dish TV introduced the Rs. 160 per month (plus taxes) pack this month. In addition, by partly adopting TRAI’s new Tariff Order, Dish TV also started offering all channels, except Sports and select south channels, at affordable ala-carte prices of Rs. 8.50 and Rs.17.00 (plus taxes) per channel per month for SD and HD respectively. It would be worthwhile to mention here that none of these new offerings would be margin dilutive for our business.

    Dish TV’s total expenditure in Q1-18 increased 6 percent to Rs 7,788.5 million (105.4 percent of operating revenue) from Rs 7,350.6 million (94.4 percent of operating revenue) in the corresponding quarter of the previous year. Employee Benefit Expense in Q1-18 increased 1.5 percent to Rs 388.4 million (5.3 percent of operating revenue) from Rs 382.6 million (4.9 percent of operating revenue) in Q1-17. Operating Expenses increased 5.2 percent y-o-y in Q1-18 to Rs 3,731.5 million (50.5 percent of operating revenue) from Rs 3,547.5 million (45.6 percent of operating revenue) in the corresponding quarter of the previous year. Other expenses were flat at Rs 1,223.8 million (16.6 percent of operating revenue) as compared to Rs 1,223.6 million (15.7 percent of operating revenue) in Q1-17. Finance costs increased 12.1 percent y-o-y in Q1-18 to Rs 589.6 million (8 percent of operating revenue) from Rs 526.1 million (6.8 percent of operating revenue) in Q1-17.

    In its earnings release, Dish TV says that it is excited about the mega size, strength and reach that it is going to achieve post the formation of Dish TV Videocon Limited. The new company would be riding on the strength of a resurgent economy and a growing market that should help enhance the efficiencies from this mega merger. It says that the combination of DishTV and Videocon D2h would create one of the World’s largest DTH platform.

    Goel, said, “The proposed amalgamation will further help create scale in the highly fragmented TV distribution landscape in India while creating significant synergies through the combination. Drawing inference from our initial estimates and integration meetings held so far, we expect approximate net synergies from the amalgamation to the tune of Rs. 1,800 million in FY-18 and Rs. 5,100 million in FY-19. Significant amongst these would be synergies arising from unified content contracts as each major contract becomes due for re-setting.”

    Speaking about GST, Goel informed, ““Dish TV has successfully transitioned to the GST regime. The DTH industry has seen a reduction in the overall indirect tax rates under GST. Though benefits due to the unified tax may take some time to reflect in numbers, the sheer check on tax avoidance in the informal cable sector should be immediately helpful in reducing irrational competition from cable. The Harmonized System Nomenclature (HSN) codes, unit and rate which need to be separately declared in the invoice in value chain right from the broadcasters to the local cable operator, under GST will give a logical and systematic classification to goods and services thus reducing the possibility of misdeclaration by businesses. The total amount of GST to be collected and payable by Dish TV during the current quarter would be to the tune of Rs. 1,350 million.”

    Addressing concerns being raised on whether data prices could hit rock bottom levels such that some entertainment viewers would prefer streaming content, as perceived to have been done in the West, instead of sticking to the traditional cable/DTH distribution methods, Goel, said, “New technology would generally replace the traditional means only if it provides something better than what the incumbent is providing and at much more efficient price levels. The fact of the matter is that even at the current, all time low data prices, the cost of watching Standard Definition TV for a month through streaming devices would turn out to be at least 3-5 times higher than the popular average monthly DTH subscription.”

    Speaking on The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India’s (TRAI) Tariff Order, Goel, said, “The broadcasting community wanted forbearance on pricing which has been granted under the order. Distribution platforms have been allowed to charge for the network. The proposed Tariff Order, on seeing the light of the day, will ensure minimization of discriminatory pricing amongst distribution platforms thus ensuring a level playing field for all players.”

  • Educational DTH channels to remain free-to-air, says minister

    NEW DELHI: Swayam Prabha, the 32 educational direct-to-home educational TV channels launched early in July, are free to air and will transmit high-quality educational content on 24X7 basis direct to every home, the Parliament has been told.

    (At a National Convention on Digital Initiatives for Higher Education om 8 July 2017, it had been announced that these channels would be available on Dish TV and Doordarshan’s FreeDish platforms.)

    Minister of state in the ministry of human resource development Mahendra Nath Pandey said digital initiatives of his Ministry also include Swayam, an indigenous MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses) Platform for providing best quality education to anyone, anytime and anywhere using the IT System.

    The National Academic Depository (NAD), a digital depository which authenticates all the certificates issued by Institutions according to the need of the user is another digital initiative.

    The minister said these were inaugurated by former president Pranab Mukhejee at a National Convention on Digital Initiatives for Higher Education from 8 to 10 July 2017 attended by vice-chancellors of central universities, deemed-to-be universities, private universities, state universities, state-private universities, directors of central institutes such as IITs, IIMs, IISERs, IISc, IIITs, NITs and other central institutes.

    ALSO READ :

    32 free DTH educational channels on Dish TV & FreeDish start functioning

    Only Dish TV carrying HRD ministry’s educational TV channels

    DTH channels being launched by September to impart education: Javadekar

     

  • Profit returns to Videocon d2h, court approves Dish TV merger scheme

    BENGALURU: After three consecutive profitable quarters in fiscal 2017 (year ended 31 March 2017, FY-17), Indian direct to home Saurabh Dhoot led major Videocon d2h Limited had reported a net loss of Rs 87 million for the last quarter of last fiscal (Q4-17). The company has returned back to the black for the quarter ended 30 June 2017 (Q1-18, current) with a profit after tax (PAT) of Rs 12 million. After the Essel group’s DTH company Dish TV India Limited, Videocon d2h is one of the few television signal carriage companies in India that have started reported profits after taxes.

    The company has informed the bourses through a press release that it has received a nod from the Mumbai bench of the National Company Law Tribunal ( for the scheme of arrangement among Videocon d2h (transferor company), Dish TV  India and their respective shareholders and creditors for the amalgamation with Dish TV. The appointed date for the amalgamation is 1 October 2017.

    Commenting on the company outlook, Videocon d2h executive chairman Saurabh Dhoot said, “In the past few weeks, the management has been working on an integration plan. The merged entity plans to adopt and implement the best practices of both companies. We believe this merger provides exciting opportunities through the customer service model, convergence of technologies, expanded breadth of content offerings including expansion of exclusive content, advertising income growth potential as well as synergies from a combined subscriber base of more than 28 million. The merged entity would be one of the largest pay TV platforms in the world in terms of subscriber base, according to the company estimates. I am very excited for this new journey of a business that commands strong business fundamentals and growth opportunities supported by our strong balance sheet and growing free cash flows.”

    Speaking on the business outlook, Videocon d2h CEO Anil Khera said “I am pleased to share that Goods and Service Tax (GST) came into effect starting July 1, 2017. GST will simplify the taxation regime and improve the ease of doing business. GST would also drive the unorganized segment, such as local cable operators, towards taxation.

    I am happy to share that the monsoons this year have been in line with long term average. This is likely to strengthen the macro-economic sentiment and imply good consumption from rural India. This is positive for the DTH industry and the upbeat rural sentiment due to the good monsoon could lead to a strong outlook for the festive quarter.”  

    The company reported a 1.2 percent increase in revenue from operations for the current quarter at Rs 7,726 million as compared to Rs 7,633 million in Q1-17. Subscription and activation revenue increased 1.7 percent in Q1-18 to Rs 7,091 million from Rs 6,970 million in Q1-17. Adjusted EBIDTA was slightly lower in Q1-18 at Rs 2,485 million as compared to Rs 2,519 million in the corresponding year ago quarter. However, adjusted EBIDTA less capex in the current quarter increased substantially to Rs 1,246 million from Rs 887 million in Q1-17. Content costs in Q1-18 have increased to 42 percent of revenue as compared to 38.7 percent in Q1-17.

    The company added 0.13 million net subscribers in Q1-18, far lower than the 0.43 million added in Q1-17 and lower than the 0.14 million subscribers added in the immediate trailing quarter. Quarter-over-quarter average revenue per user (ARPU) was Rs 198 in Q1-18 as compared to Rs 211 in Q1-17 and Rs 196 in Q4-17. Monthly subscriber churn in Q1-8 was higher at 1.27 percent as compared to 0.49 percent and 0.87 percent in Q1-17 and Q4-17 respectively. Subscriber acquisition costs in the form of hardware subsidies were INR 1,865 per subscriber during the first quarter of Fiscal 2018.

    ALSO READ :

    Dish TV–D2H merger gets NCLT approval

    Madras HC to hear Star India’s rejoinder in TRAI challenge today

    Videocon d2h reports maiden annual net profit

  • Dish TV–D2H merger gets NCLT approval

    MUMBAI: Dish TV India has announced that the Mumbai bench of National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) has approved the scheme of arrangement for merger between Videocon D2h Limited and Dish TV India.

    The company informed BSE that a hearing held on 27 July 2017 the NCLT approved the agreement between the two companies and their respective shareholders and creditors under the provisions of Sections 230-232 and other applicable provisions of the Companies Act, 2013.

    The appointed date for the scheme is 1 October, 2017.

    On May 2017, the proposed merger of two DTH players, Zee group’s Dish TV and VideoconD2h received the approval of Competition Commission of India (CCI).  The merger was announced in November last year.  After merger, the new entity will be called Dish TV Videocon.  

    ALSO READ:

    Videocon d2h receives shareholder, Competition Commission nod for merger with Dish TV

    Dish TV Videocon Ltd. may start operations in Sept ’17

    Videocon D2H to merge with Dish TV; serve 28 million subscribers

     

  • Airtel Digital TV sub base expands, even as ARPUs dip

    MUMBAI: Q1 2018 ended 30 June 2017 has been a bit of a mixed bag for the Sunil Mittal headed Bharati Airtel’s DTH biz – Airtel Digital TV. Its subscriber base expanded by nine per cent to 13.3 million as compared to 12.14 million in Q1 FY 2017 ended 30 June 2016. Net customer additions were hence around 499,000. The average revenue for the quarter however dropped to Rs 228 as compared to Rs 233 in the corresponding quarter last year.

    Revenues from the DTH segment grew at a slower pace of seven per cent in Q1 FY 2018 to touch Rs 897.4 crore (Rs 836.9 crore in Q1 FY 2017). EBIDTA in the latest quarter grew 10 per cent over the previous corresponding period to Rs 330 crore, even as its capex went up 31 per cent to Rs 266.1 crore (Rs 203 crore). Its operating free cash flow was down 35 per cent from Rs 98.1 crore to Rs 63.9 crore.

    Bharati Airtel’s cumulative investment to date in Airtel Digital TV has spurted to Rs 7225.3 crore as compared to Rs 6693.6 crore in the previous corresponding quarter.

    Cumulatively, the DTH service is contributing five per cent revenues to the telecom behemoth’s top line even as investments in the segment are at three per cent.

    Says an industry observer: “Airtel Digital TV is among the three to four players who are offering a world class service at very reasonable prices to consumers. The quality of customers who may have signed on in the last quarter could be coming in from Phase III and phase IV areas of cable TV digitization (where customers have a lower propensity to pay for the premium services) or it could be that the competition is forcing it to cut its prices. But overall it has done reasonably well in a difficult year. “

    Airtel Digital TV offers both standard and high definition (HD) digital TV services with 3D capabilities and Dolby surround sound. It offers a total of 590 channels including 67 HD channels, five international channels and four interactive services.