Tag: Charter

  • Charter & Cox to merge to create largest cable TV & broadband provider in the US

    Charter & Cox to merge to create largest cable TV & broadband provider in the US

    MUMBAI: In a mega-merger straight out of a business blockbuster, Charter Communications and Cox Communications have inked a definitive agreement to combine their businesses, creating an industry giant in mobile, broadband, and video entertainment. As part of the agreement,  Charter Communications will buy the privately held rival Cox for $21.9 billion.

    The deal values Cox Communications at a cool $34.5 billion, calculated using Charter’s 2025 estimated adjusted EBITDA multiple.

    Under this arrangement, Charter will snap up Cox’s commercial fibre, managed IT, and cloud businesses, while Cox’s residential cable will be folded into Charter Holdings, a subsidiary of Charter. The merger, which still needs regulatory and shareholder approval, will see Cox Enterprises pocket $4 billion in cash, $6 billion in convertible preferred units, and 33.6 million common units in Charter’s partnership.

    The merger will  create the largest US cable TV and broadband provider with around 38 million subscribers, surpassing market leader Comcast. Industry observers may recollect that Charter had last year agreed to acquire cable TV billionaire John Malone’s Liberty Broadband, which will now have an indirect interest in Cox, following the merger’s clearance.

    The Cox family, which has been in the cable business since 1962, is handing over the reins to Charter but keeping a significant seat at the table. Cox Enterprises, will own approximately 23 per cent of the combined entity and its CEO Alex Taylor will become chairman of Charter’s board, while Chris Winfrey  will continue as president & CEO of the combined company.

    “We’re honored that the Cox family has entrusted us with its impressive legacy and are excited by the opportunity to benefit from the terrific operating history and community leadership of Cox,” said Winfrey. “Cox and Charter have been innovators in connectivity and entertainment services – with decades of work and hundreds of billions of dollars invested to build, upgrade, and expand our complementary regional networks to provide high-quality internet, video, voice and mobile services. This combination will augment our ability to innovate and provide high-quality, competitively priced products, delivered with outstanding customer service, to millions of homes and businesses. We will continue to deliver high-value products that save American families money, and we’ll onshore jobs from overseas to create new, good-paying careers for US employees that come with great benefits, career training and advancement, and retirement and ownership opportunities.” 

    “Our family has always believed that investing for the long-term and staying committed to the best interests of our customers, employees and communities is the best recipe for success,” said Taylor. “In Charter, we’ve found the right partner at the right time and in the right position to take this commitment to a higher level than ever before, delivering an incredible outcome for our customers, employees, suppliers and the local communities we serve.”

    In a patriotic move, the combined company is pledging to bring customer service jobs back to the US, with all employees earning a starting wage of at least $20 per hour, alongside industry-leading benefits. Cox customers will also be treated to Charter’s famed 100 per cent US-based customer support, fast technician dispatches, and transparent pricing—no more surprise fees.

    The consumer-facing brand across Cox’s territories will become Spectrum, while the combined company will eventually rebrand as Cox Communications, maintaining its headquarters in Stamford, Connecticut, and a significant presence in Atlanta, Georgia.

    Spectrum customers can expect access to advanced wifi, Spectrum Mobile with mobile speed boost, and the Spectrum TV app, all under a simplified pricing model. For business customers, Charter’s robust portfolio of business telecom services, including Segra and RapidScale, will become part of the combined offering.
    The merger isn’t just about size—it’s about smarts. With more network muscle, the new entity will ramp up investments in mobile, video, and AI tools while taking the fight to big tech in advertising and content distribution.

    The deal is expected to generate $500 million in annual cost savings within three years, thanks to streamlined operations and better buying power. But it’s not just about the bottom line—Charter will establish a $50 million foundation to support community leadership in Cox’s territories and launch an employee relief fund to help staff in times of crisis.

    The combined company will carry Cox’s $12 billion in debt but expects higher cash flow and better investment returns over time, with a new leverage target of 3.5x to 4.0x. Industry observers may recollect that Charter had last year agreed to acquire cable TV billionaire John Malone’s Liberty Broadband, which will now have an indirect interest in Cox, following the merger. 

    It’s a blockbuster telecom tale where two rivals become allies, customers win, and big tech finally faces a serious challenger.

  • Charter Communications, Comcast collaborate to develop streaming platform

    Charter Communications, Comcast collaborate to develop streaming platform

    Mumbai: Charter Communications, Inc and Comcast Corp on Thursday announced a formation of a 50/50 joint venture to develop and offer a “next-generation” streaming platform.

    Comcast will license Flex, its aggregated streaming platform and hardware to the joint venture, contribute the retail business for XClass TVs and also will contribute Xumo, a streaming service it acquired in 2020. Charter will make an initial contribution of $900 million, funded over multiple years.

    The service will be available on a variety of branded 4K streaming devices and smart TVs, all the top apps, and more choice in the streaming marketplace. The joint venture will offer app developers, streamers, retailers, operators, and hardware manufacturers the opportunity to reach customers in major markets across the country with the platform.

    The XClass TVs will be available through national retail partners and potentially direct from Comcast and Charter to provide more customer choice. Xumo will continue to operate as a free global streaming service available through the joint venture’s products and third-party devices. Charter will offer the 4K streaming TV devices and voice remotes beginning in 2023. Comcast will continue to offer the Flex streaming platform as a streaming device and service to its customers.

    “We’re thrilled to partner with Charter to bring this platform and its award-winning experience to millions of new customers,” said Comcast Cable CEO Dave Watson. “These products are all designed to make search and discovery across live, on-demand and streaming video seamless and incredibly simple for consumers. This partnership uniquely brings together more than a decade of technical innovation, national scale and new opportunities to monetise our combined investment.”

    The joint venture’s products will give consumers a state-of-the-art streaming experience to access their favorite apps, based on Comcast’s Flex product, which currently delivers all the most-watched streaming apps in the marketplace. The products will feature hundreds of free content choices through Xumo, a free, ad-supported service currently delivering more than 200 unique streaming channels. Peacock also will be featured on the joint venture’s streaming platform, alongside other popular apps.

    The closing of the joint venture is subject to customary closing conditions. This joint venture does not involve the broadband or cable video businesses of either Comcast or Charter which will remain independent.

    “Our new venture will bring a full-featured operating platform, new devices, and smart TVs with a robust app store providing a more streamlined and aggregated experience for the customer,” said Charter chairman and CEO Tom Rutledge. “As the video landscape continues to evolve, this venture will increase retail consumer options, compete at scale with established national platforms, and join our existing lineup of options for the Spectrum TV App available on most customer-owned streaming devices.”

  • AT&T, Comcast, Charter and Dish Network emerge among top cable, satellite and telco pay-TV operators

    AT&T, Comcast, Charter and Dish Network emerge among top cable, satellite and telco pay-TV operators

    MUMBAI:  AT&T (IPTV + Satellite), Comcast    (Cable), Charter (Cable), Dish Network  (Satellite), Verizon (IPTV), Cox (Cable), and Altice (Cable) have emerged as the top seven cable, satellite and telco pay-TV operators in the third quarter this year.

    FierceCable has tallied a look at the third-quarter earnings season, ranking the top satellite, cable, and telco pay-TV operators and studying their performance through key metrics, including average revenues per user (ARPU) and subscriber growth.

    Top US Pay TV Service Provider Metrics Q3 2016 (ranking by subscribers)
    Rank   Platform Subscribers (millions) Net Adds ARPU*
    1 AT&T IPTV + Satellite 25.292 -3,000 $118.09
    2 Comcast Cable 22.428 32,000 $148.47
    3 Charter Cable 16.887 -47,000 $80.81
    4 Dish Network Satellite 13.643 50,000 $89.44
    5 Verizon IPTV 4.673 36,000 n/a
    6 Cox Cable 4.146 3,000 n/a
    7 Altice Cable 3.598 -41,000 $117.80

     

    Source- Fierce Cable

    Meanwhile, satellite, cable, and telecommunications-based subscription video services lost 430,000 customers in the third quarter, according to SNL Kagan, giving the industry a loss of 1.3 million subscribers. The research firm’s count for the third quarter is lower than the 486,000 estimate given by MoffettNathanson analyst Craig Moffett last week. UBS experts sent analysis of the overall video industry in the United States, showing losses and gains in the past few years in this space. The firm said that it estimated that the pay TV subscribers base of U.S. multichannel including Sling TV,  dropped by 0.6 per cent year over year in the third quarter, similar to the drop in both the first quarter and the second quarter.

    MoffettNathanson experts said the overall subscriber declined in the pay-TV space in the last 10 years. Dish Network’s Sling TV service has affected the trend, the experts said. Experts said that Charter, Comcast, and other cable companies are scoring over telco providers such as Verizon and AT&T as also on satellite providers such as Dish Network. In the broadband internet space, UBS experts marked impressive performance of Comcast and Charter against Verizon and AT&T.

    According to Firece Cable, in the third quarter, around 94,000 pay-TV customers were lost by cable operators, SNL Kagan said. This was still the sector’s best performance in 10 years.  AT&T’s decision to give priority to the growth of DirecTV generated 323,000 new subs for the platform in the third quarter, offsetting huge losses for Dish Network in satellite. In the 12-month period ending 30 September, SNL Kagan calculated that Dish Network’s Sling TV added 925,000 customers.

  • AT&T, Comcast, Charter and Dish Network emerge among top cable, satellite and telco pay-TV operators

    AT&T, Comcast, Charter and Dish Network emerge among top cable, satellite and telco pay-TV operators

    MUMBAI:  AT&T (IPTV + Satellite), Comcast    (Cable), Charter (Cable), Dish Network  (Satellite), Verizon (IPTV), Cox (Cable), and Altice (Cable) have emerged as the top seven cable, satellite and telco pay-TV operators in the third quarter this year.

    FierceCable has tallied a look at the third-quarter earnings season, ranking the top satellite, cable, and telco pay-TV operators and studying their performance through key metrics, including average revenues per user (ARPU) and subscriber growth.

    Top US Pay TV Service Provider Metrics Q3 2016 (ranking by subscribers)
    Rank   Platform Subscribers (millions) Net Adds ARPU*
    1 AT&T IPTV + Satellite 25.292 -3,000 $118.09
    2 Comcast Cable 22.428 32,000 $148.47
    3 Charter Cable 16.887 -47,000 $80.81
    4 Dish Network Satellite 13.643 50,000 $89.44
    5 Verizon IPTV 4.673 36,000 n/a
    6 Cox Cable 4.146 3,000 n/a
    7 Altice Cable 3.598 -41,000 $117.80

     

    Source- Fierce Cable

    Meanwhile, satellite, cable, and telecommunications-based subscription video services lost 430,000 customers in the third quarter, according to SNL Kagan, giving the industry a loss of 1.3 million subscribers. The research firm’s count for the third quarter is lower than the 486,000 estimate given by MoffettNathanson analyst Craig Moffett last week. UBS experts sent analysis of the overall video industry in the United States, showing losses and gains in the past few years in this space. The firm said that it estimated that the pay TV subscribers base of U.S. multichannel including Sling TV,  dropped by 0.6 per cent year over year in the third quarter, similar to the drop in both the first quarter and the second quarter.

    MoffettNathanson experts said the overall subscriber declined in the pay-TV space in the last 10 years. Dish Network’s Sling TV service has affected the trend, the experts said. Experts said that Charter, Comcast, and other cable companies are scoring over telco providers such as Verizon and AT&T as also on satellite providers such as Dish Network. In the broadband internet space, UBS experts marked impressive performance of Comcast and Charter against Verizon and AT&T.

    According to Firece Cable, in the third quarter, around 94,000 pay-TV customers were lost by cable operators, SNL Kagan said. This was still the sector’s best performance in 10 years.  AT&T’s decision to give priority to the growth of DirecTV generated 323,000 new subs for the platform in the third quarter, offsetting huge losses for Dish Network in satellite. In the 12-month period ending 30 September, SNL Kagan calculated that Dish Network’s Sling TV added 925,000 customers.

  • Charter, TNS ink deal for audience measurement services

    Charter, TNS ink deal for audience measurement services

    MUMBAI: Broadband communications company Charter Communications, Inc. and TNS Media Research have entered into an agreement to launch video audience measurement services in Los Angeles.

    Charter will utilise TNS audience measurement services to maximise efficiencies when building custom television advertising campaigns and promotional schedules internally and externally. The service will also provide additional information for programming services as well as offering added revenue opportunities. “We are pleased about our partnership and the fact that it will afford cable networks and advertisers valuable insight about the digital cable environment,” said Charter senior vice president advertising sales Jim Heneghan.

    Beginning this month, Charter Communications will provide aggregated and anonymous viewing data from 55,000 households in the Los Angeles. TNS will process the aggregated data and allow for next-day analysis through InfoSys, the most widely used media analysis and planning system in the world. InfoSys allows end-users to analyze media data in depth including day part and program studies, target group studies, lead in/lead out studies, duplication analyses, minute-by-minute flow studies and competitive reports.

    Charter’s cable service provides its customers with an array of video programming options, including services in which customers choose to interact with Charter or others through Charter’s broadband technology. Charter values its customers’ privacy and considers personally identifiable information and viewing preferences contained in Charter’s business records to be strictly confidential. Unless customers provide consent through an express opt-in process, Charter only provides aggregated and/or anonymized information to Audience Measurement services, such as TNS. A complete statement of Charter’s privacy policies can be found at www.charter.com.

    The Charter partnership further solidifies TNS’ entry into the US marketplace for digital TV audience measurement services. Additionally, TNS has been providing media research in the US for many years; including ad spend tracking as well as ad copy and TV pilot testing.

    “The increased popularity of digital services, DVR, VOD and iTV has compromised traditional methods of measuring TV audiences. TNS is at the forefront of the digital revolution in video and radio measurement and is pleased to be partnering with Charter Communications to explore the new opportunities presented by digital set-top box data,” said TNS Media Research chief operating officer George Shababb.