Tag: Kalanithi Maran

  • Sun ready, DTH play becoming hot chase for satellite space

    Sun ready, DTH play becoming hot chase for satellite space

    MUMBAI: Having finalised on Malaysia-based Astro as his 20 per cent equity partner, Sun network chairman and managing director Kalanithi Maran is preparing the ground to launch his direct-to-home (DTH) service. He has decided on Iredeto as the encryption system while the set-top boxes (STBs) will be from Coship Electronics in China and South Africa-based UEC Technologies, a source close to the company says.

    “He is also looking at more STB vendors. Besides the basic box which will be competitively priced, he will have graded STBs. Multiple vendors will ensure supply safety in case of a huge demand for his service,” adds the source.

    Maran will be using MPEG-4 technology that will allow him to compress more TV channels per transponder. While MPEG-2 can pack in around 12 channels, the advanced compression technology will be able to accommodate over 20 channels.

    Maran will have seven Ku-band transponders on Insat-4B, which launches on 10 March, while Prasar Bharati’s free-to-air (FTA) package DD Direct Plus will have five on the same satellite.

    He may consider himself lucky when the launch of Insat-4C satellite failed in July 2006 after the rocket carrying it veered off course and exploded. He had booked six Ku-band transponders (and one more for digital satellite news gathering) on it for Sun Direct’s DTH service.

    By being located on the same satellite, Sun’s subscribers will be able to access DD Direct’s channels without Maran having to separately put them on his transponders.

    Dish TV which was sharing the NSS-6 satellite with DD, will not be hit badly after the migration. Since NSS-6 is at 95 degree East, a minor realignment of antenna will be required for receiving the channels as Insat-4B shall be located at 93.5 degree East. Tata Sky, on the other hand, will have to recarry DD channels on their transponders.

    The DTH play in India is, indeed, turning out to be a hot chase for satellite space. If Tata Sky had to wait for the launch of Insat-4A as rival Dish TV aggressively went on mopping up customers, it is now the turn of Anil Ambani’s Bluemagic and Bharti Telemedia to plead with the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) to provide them with Ku-band transponders.

    In the sprint to start DTH before the market gets taken away, Bharti may be the clear loser. Unless, of course, it gets the approval from Isro to be on Measat-3, a foreign satellite launched from the Astro Group.

    “Measat has made their Ku-band transponders available for us and have supplied the data. We are studying it technically and are making an internal evaluation,” says Isro contract management and legal services director SB Iyer.

    The satellite has 49 dbW (decibel Watts) as compared to Insat’s 53. “We have indicated this problem and Measat has said that it would examine it and come up with a solution. Insat-4B has 53 dcW and offers a powerful beam across the country. We will have to ensure quality and also come into an agreement with Measat. Besides, the users will also have to express their interest in the satellite,” says Iyer.

    Measat-3 has 24 Ku-band transponders and has been designed to provide capability for data services and DTH applications in Malaysia, Indonesia and the Indian Subcontinent.

    If no clearance is given to Measat, Bharti will have to wait the longest with Insat-4G launching only by 2008-end. The DTH market could possibly have settled by then with the spoils being distributed among Dish TV, Tata Sky, Sun and Reliance’s Bluemagic.

    Anil Ambani will get a shot at the DTH market after Insat-4CR (replacement) launches in the quarter beginning July this year. Reliance has asked for eight Ku-band transponders and Isro is reserving the remaining four for other users like National Informatics Centre.

  • Insat-4B to launch on 10 March

    Insat-4B to launch on 10 March

    MUMBAI: The Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro)-built INSAT-4B, which is mainly meant for direct-to-home (dth) television services, is slated for launch from the European spaceport of Kourou in French Guiana on 10 March.

    The Rs 3 billion telecom satellite, which is identical to INSAT-4A, carries 12 Ku-band and 12 C-band transponders. European space consortium Arianespace will carry out the launch. It will cost around $ 50 million, according to a press release.

    As had been reported last month by Indiantelevision.com one likely customer for the KU band transponders is Kalanithi Maran’s Sun Group, which had booked space last year on the failed Insat-4C for its DTH venture Sun Direct.

    Sun TV had booked six transponders for DTH and one for DSNG (digital satellite news gathering) on Insat-4C.

  • Aamna Sharif, Ram Kapoor take top honours at Indian Telly Awards 2006; Maran conferred with Contribution to Television Award, Ekta inducted into Hall of Fame

    Aamna Sharif, Ram Kapoor take top honours at Indian Telly Awards 2006; Maran conferred with Contribution to Television Award, Ekta inducted into Hall of Fame

    MUMBAI: The Popular Nite of India’s premier awards for excellence in television, The Sixth Indian Telly Awards 2006 brought to you by Sony Entertainment Television, were held in Mumbai’s Chitrakut ground on 24th November with star-studded performances and attendance from the television and film fraternity.

    The best actress award was bagged by Aamna Sharif for her performance as Kashish in Kahin To Hoga on Star Plus, while the best actor went to Ram Kapoor for his essaying of the role of Jai Walia in the Zee TV TRP topping drama Kasamh Se…

    Ram and his co-star Prachi Desai (Bani) also won the couple of the year award for their on screen chemistry in the show. Prachi also shared the Fresh New Face of the Year (Female) Award with the Zee TV’s Saat Phere lead Rajashree Thakur.

    Sun Network chairman Kalanithi Maran was conferred with the Contribution to Television award at the hands of Sony Entertainment Television CEO Kunal Dasgupta for driving and growing the southern Indian cable and satellite
    television market through his Sun Network, India’s second largest television broadcasting group. Balaji Telefilms creative head Ekta Kapoor was inducted into the Hall of Fame. Ekta has been the creative brains behind the runaway success that Balaji Telefilms has achieved. Young professionals in television who have contributed a lot to the industry are inducted….

    The evening was marked by energetic dance performances from Sangeeta Ghosh, Eijaz Khan and Akashdeep Saigal, Mona Singh, the Left Right Left cast (Arjun Bijlani(Alekh), Gazal Rai (Pooja), Vikas Manattala (Huda), Priyanka Bhassin (Naina), Harshad Chopra(Ali), Kunal Kapoor(Yudi), a stand up comic act from Great Indian Laughter Challenge runner up Naveen Prabhakar, a performance by debutantes of last year and this year – Barkha Bisht, Sanjeeda, Daljit Kaur – and by television couples – Surveen Chawla and Manish Goel (together on a Sony show), Mouni Roy and Pulkit Samrat (the hot new couple on Kyunkii’s new generation) , Divyanka Trivedi and Sharad Malhotra (the couple from Dulhan on Zee TV).

    The awards evening was anchored by the leading face of television – Kiran Karmakar, Juhi Parmar, Anuj Saxena, Mona Singh and Manav Gohil, Shweta Kawatra, Ayub Khan, Renuka Shahane, Karishma Tanna and Gaurav Chopra.

    Billed as the Indian equivalent of the Emmys, the Indian Tellys are the brainchild of founder Anil Wanvari, who is also a board member of the International Emmy Academy in New York, one of the few Indians to make it there.

    Says Wanvari, “Television is evolving and the awards will also evolve. Our sincere effort is to make The Indian Telly Awards the industry’s benchmark because the awards have been created for the industry to recognise the excellence in the creative, business and technical spheres.”

    The Sixth Indian Telly Awards were brought to you by Sony Entertainment Television, with the show slated to be telecast on 3 December at 8 pm on the channel.

    The ground sponsors for the event were CNN Ibn, Ibn7, Zee Cinema and Times Now; the Radio partner Radio City 91.Fm; Outdoor Partner Bright Advertising; Multiplex Partner Fun Cinema; Print Partner Rajasthan Patrika and Mid-Day; Party Venue Partner Some Place Else; and Pr Partner CMCG.

    Coming in January will be the he Technical Nite of the Indian Telly Awards.

  • TDSAT asks Tata-Sky, Sun TV Group to settle differences

    TDSAT asks Tata-Sky, Sun TV Group to settle differences

    MUMBAI: The Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (TDSAT) has proposed to direct-to-home (DTH) player Tata-Sky and Chennai-based broadcaster Sun TV Group that they resolve their dispute between themselves.

    According to a tribunal official, the two parties are set to negotiate a potential settlement at a meeting in Chennai that is likely to take place by the end of week.

    Nonetheless, the tribunal dispute forum has also drawn up the date for next hearing before adjourning the case to 29 November if the attempts to achieve a “lucid response” through the discussion fails.

    Tata-Sky had moved the tribunal accusing the broadcaster of refusing supply of its bouquet of channels. The DTH player approached the disputes forum after repeated requests to provide the signals of the channels of Sun’s bouquet of channels on “non-discriminatory terms” proved futile.

    According to the norms laid down by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), all content should be made available to all delivery platforms on a nondiscriminatory basis.

    Sun TV promoter Kalanithi Maran has set forth plans to enter the DTH space through the still to launch commercially Sun Direct TV. He runs a string of successful channels, which include SunTV, GeminiTV, SuryaTV, UdayaTV, KTV, TejaTV, UsheTV, KiranTV, AdithyaTV, Sun News, KiranTV, GeminiTV, TejaTV, Teja News, Udaya2 and Udaya News.

  • Gemini, Udaya to be merged into Sun?

    Gemini, Udaya to be merged into Sun?

    MUMBAI : The market is expecting founder-promoter Kalanithi Maran to merge the affiliate companies, Udaya TV Pvt Ltd and Gemini TV Pvt Ltd, where he has significant equity interests, with Sun TV Ltd.

    Maran had early this year raised Rs 6.03 billion through a public float of Sun TV which included the Tamil and Malayalam channels. But he kept his popular channels in Telugu and Kannada outside the ambit of the initial public offering (IPO) as they were under separate entities and had other minority stakeholders.
    The speculation in stock trading circles is that the decision would soon be taken to merge the two profit-making companies with Sun TV, offering investors a width of strong channels across the four southern states of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Kerala.

    The rumour comes at a time when Sun TV has made an announcement in the BSE that its board would be meeting on 27 November to “consider the proposed merger of satellite television broadcasting companies.”

    The stock would see a sigificant boost if “these rumours” turn out to be true. “The valuation of the company will shoot up if Gemini and Udaya are merged with Sun. It is not only the topline which will inflate but the bottomline will also continue to be strong,” stock market analysts say.

    Indiantelevision.com’s attempt to reach senior executives in Sun TV to get an official confirmation proved futile. Maran was also not available for comment.

    The equity shares of Udaya TV, as of 7 March 2006, are held by Maran (66.67), S. Selvam (16.67 per cent) and S Selvi (16.66 per cent). In Gemini, Maran has 26.5 per cent, Kal Communication (a promoter Group company), 23.5 per cent, K Bharathi 30 per cent, Indira Anand 16 per cent and A Sai Siva Jyoti 4 per cent.

    Before going for an IPO, Maran consolidated his ownership position by buying out entire stakes of Sharad Kumar and Dayalu Ammal (wife of DMK president M Karunanidhi). Analysts say he will try to do the same thing by buying out the minor partners in Gemini and Udaya before he decides to merge these two companies with Sun TV.

    “We don’t know if he also already bought out the stakes. If he has, the path is clear for him to go ahead with the merger,” an analyst in a brokering firm says.

    What is further fuelling the speculation is that Maran has recently consolidated the Telugu and Kannada channels under the Gemini and Udaya brands respectively. Teja News has been renamed Gemini News and Aditya TV as Gemini Music. Ushe TV, similarly, is now called Udaya Movies.

    Gemini and Udaya already share a business relationship with Sun TV Ltd. For instance, the approvals for uplinking Udaya News, Ushe TV, Aditya TV and Teja News have been granted in the name of Sun TV Ltd.

    Maran also has the option of consolidating Gemini and Udaya’s financials and taking them for an IPO. “This, however, is not what the market is expecting. We believe these two companies will merge with Sun TV to create a media behemoth,” analysts say.

    The Sun TV scrip opened the trading day at Rs 1361.55, reached a high of Rs 1389 and closed at Rs 1363.85.

  • Sun TV to turn pay from 2 December; priced at Rs 12

    Sun TV to turn pay from 2 December; priced at Rs 12

    MUMBAI: Southern Indian broadcast powerhouse Sun TV Ltd will switch its flagship channel Sun TV to the pay mode starting 2 December.

    The channel has been tagged at a price of Rs 12 per month per subscriber for the cable operators to access the channel.

    The Kalanithi Maran promoted network is also likely to turn its Malayalam language entertainment channel Surya TV pay in the near future.

    At present, it has three pay channels – KTV, Sun News and Sun Music. But in Chennai, which is a conditional access system (CAS) market, the consumers can view the pay channels through a set-top box (STB). But all these pay channels are free-to-air.

    Ahead of the implementation of CAS in the southern zones of the three metros — Delhi, Kolkata and Mumbai — Sun TV accepted the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) fixing a common price of Rs 5/- per channel per subscriber per month (excluding taxes).

    However, the pay channel price cap is not applicable in Chennai, which is already a CAS-driven market.

    The Sun TV scrip opened the trading day at Rs 1210.25 and closed at Rs1219.50 and touched a high of Rs 1249.

  • Sun TV Q2 net profit up 27% at Rs 479 million

    Sun TV Q2 net profit up 27% at Rs 479 million

    MUMBAI: Kalanithi Maran’s Sun TV today reported its second quarter revenues of Rs 1059 million over the corresponding period in the previous fiscal where it stood at Rs 990.4 million.

    Sun TV has posted a net profit of Rs 479.6 million for the quarter as compared to Rs 336.10 million for the corresponding period last year. Operating profit registered at Rs 829.4 million as against the previous fiscal where it recorded Rs 788.9 million.

    Total income has increased from Rs 832.10 million for the quarter ended 30 September, 2005 to Rs 1059.00 million for this quarter.

    The broadcaster incurred an expenditure of RS 229.6 million as compared to Rs 201.5 million for the corresponding period a year ago. The expenditure includes, cost of revenues Rs 46.80 million, employees remuneration and benefits Rs 106.10 million and other expenditure Rs 76.70 million.

    Against the total projected utilisation of Rs 5220 million upto 31 March, 2007 from the IPO funds, an amount of Rs 740.60 million has been utilised towards capitalization of Kal Radio Ltd.

    The balance proceeds from the IPO after meeting the IPO expenses, pending utilization have been invested in Fixed Deposits with the banks.

  • Sun TV in for a consortium with Red FM

    Sun TV in for a consortium with Red FM

    MUMBAI: Kalanithi Maran’s Sun TV Ltd. is expected to enter into a consortium with Red FM, the operators in Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata, for its radio business.

    The alliance will offer a joint platform to advertisers, making it a formidable bouquet against the biggies like Radio Mirchi and Radio City. Brand promotions will also be a part of this exercise, market sources say. Both Red FM and Sun TV Ltd were not available for comment till the time of filing this report.

    Malaysia’s Astro All Asia Networks plc, which is one of the three stakeholders in Red FM, recently said that it was in advanced discussions with strategic partners on various initiatives in India, including participation in a nationwide consortium of FM radio networks. “We expect to finalise partnership arrangements in the coming months. Appropriate announcements will be made in due course,” Astro Group CEO Ralph Marshall told reporters after the company’s AGM in Kuala Lumpur.

    Maran, who made an aggressive nationwide bid in the second phase of FM radio expansion, had excluded Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata, the cities where Red FM operates. While Kal Radio (where Sun TV owns 89 per cent) would confine its operations to the southern language states, South Asia FM (Sun has 94.91 per cent equity) would carve out stations in the other regions.

    Joining hands with NDTV and Hyderabad-based Value Labs to acquire Red FM from Radio Today for around Rs 1.3 billion, Astro is eyeing a major presence in the FM sector in India. “We expect that we would have a 20 per cent interest in a nationwide radio licence as soon as we receive the approvals,” Marshall had told reporters in Kuala Lumpur.

    Apart from Red FM, Astro is already managing two FM radio stations in Kolkata through AMSI (Airtime Marketing & Sales India). The company, working with its local Indian partners Power107.8 FM and Aamar 106.2 FM, provides studio facilities and airtime sales and marketing services to the two FM radio stations in Kolkata.

    Sun TV Ltd, which raised Rs 6.03 billion through an initial public offering (IPO), has bet big on radio to scale up revenues. A consortium with Red FM would particularly help Sun in the newer markets, analysts say. In the southern language markets, Sun has the advantage of dominating ownership of movie rights which it can leverage for its radio business.

    Before the IPO, Sun had taken clearance from the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) for issuing equity shares to foreign investors. The company, in its application, had said that it was intending to issue this either by “way of a preferential allotment prior to the IPO” and/or by “way of an initial public offering of its equity shares of the face value of Rs 10 each of 10 per cent of its post IPO paid up equity capital, subject to the maximum foreign investment limit as prescribed.”

  • Isro sets the launch of Insat 4C for mid-July

    Isro sets the launch of Insat 4C for mid-July

    MUMBAI: Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) is targeting to launch Insat -4C in the second week of July, the latest in the Insat 4 series. The launch of this satellite is being seen as a big boost for the DTH operators.

    Kalanithi Maran’s Sun Group has booked space on Insat 4C for its direct-to-home (DTH) venture.

    Insat 4C will be put into orbit by the Geo-synchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle-5 (GSLV), which will blast off the from the launch pad at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota. Insat 4C satellite will be used for broadcasting 150 TV channels through the direct-to-home platform. 

    “Preparations are on for the launch from the second launchpad,” Satish Dhawan Space Centre director Shar M Annamalai said.

    Isro officials say launch from a homegrown rocket meant cutting launch costs by one-third – if the same was to be launched from the spaceport of Kourou in French Guiana by an ariane vehicle, India has to pay 30 to 35 per cent more.

    According to media reports, it’s for the first time that India`s space agency is putting into space a two-tonne class satellite. Equipped with 12 high-powered KU band transponders, the 2,180 kg spacecraft is designed for a mission life of 10 years.

    On 22 December, last year, Isro had successfully placed Insat 4A in the Geostationary orbit with the Launch provider Ariane. 

    Launcher Ariane 5G also carried Meteosat weather Satellite for Eumetsat along with Insat 4A. This also marked Ariane the only commercial launcher in service capable of simultaneously launching two payloads.

    At present, besides DD Direct Plus managed by the pubcaster Prasar Bharati, the Subhash Chandra owned Dish TV and the soon to launch Tata-Sky service from the Tata-Star consortium, has leased all 12 Ku-band transponders on the Insat 4A satellite enabling to provide about 150 channels.

  • Sun TV to bank on pay revenues and radio biz for growth

    Since Kalanithi Maran started his media business 13 years back, he has been fighting against one rival: himself. Now, after years of staying almost unchallenged in the southern region, he is setting himself up for battle in newer markets.

    He has an expanded war chest of Rs 6.03 billion which he raised through an initial public offering (IPO) of Sun TV Ltd (STL) to pledge his new bet on private FM broadcasting. Also in the pipeline is a direct-to-home (DTH) service through Sun Direct TV, a privately held company.

    Holding 90 per cent stake in STL, Maran is worth Rs 78.28 billion. And the market cap of STL has hit Rs 86.98 billion in a brief span of two weeks, enjoying a 44 per cent premium over its IPO price. In media business, only Subhash Chandra‘s Zee Telefilms has a higher market cap with Rs 110.9 billion.

    Indiantelevision.com takes a close look at the ambitious plans Maran has to grow his media empire and the challenges that lie ahead of him as he heads a listed company.

    Concern for topline growth

    At question is Maran‘s ability to counter slow growth from his traditional revenue lines – advertising sales and broadcast fees. To squeeze more out of matured channels who enjoy a very high level of audience share can turn out to be a challenging task.

    Ad revenues have stayed flat for two years, sitting at Rs 1.55 billion in FY04 and Rs 1.56 billion in FY05. Broadcast fee (time slots that Sun sells to content producers on its channels) has also seen small change, going up from Rs 458 million to Rs 495 million during this period.

    Maran has attacked this somewhat in FY06. Advertising income was up 24.7 per cent to Rs 889 million in the first half of the fiscal, as against Rs 713 million a year ago. This was the period when Sun‘s combined audience share for all its Tamil channels (Sun TV, Sun News, KTV and Sun Music) went up from 60 per cent in FY05 to 70 per cent in the first half of FY06. In Kerala, the company‘s aggregate audience from its Malayalam channels (Surya TV and Kiran TV) rose from 29 per cent to 34 per cent during this period.

    The growth could escalate for the year-period (Sun has not yet announced its FY06 results), fuelled by a rate increase for Sun TV channel by seven per cent in September 2005. This is the first rate hike the channel has come up with in the last three years.

    Analysts also expect Surya TV to put up a better show in FY06, estimating its revenues to touch Rs 450 million. The Malayalam channel, facing stiff competition from Asianet, was raking in close to Rs 300 million. Other channels like KTV have also the potential to stimulate marginal growth.

    But several content producers and marketing agents associated with Sun network feel the potential to exploit more ad revenues from existing channels is limited. “With such a dominating viewership, Sun has been commercially exploiting its slots to the optimum. There is very little scope to raise ad or auction slot rates. This is particularly true of Sun TV, the Tamil flagship channel. And in case of Surya TV, the main Malayalam channel, Maran has to take into consideration the presence of Asianet as a strong competitor,” they say on request of anonymity.

    For speeding the growth engine, Maran has a multi-pronged strategy. In the short run, he expects pay-TV revenues to climb significantly once he takes flagship channels Sun TV and Surya TV pay. And in the medium-term period, the radio operations should be able to generate substantial cash flows to drive the company‘s topline growth. Also adding to the kitty will be the three yet-to-be launched channels and rise in international revenues with new alliances in overseas markets.

    “A master tactician, Maran has protected himself adequately from any slowdown in growth. Topline growth can see faster growth if Sun gets into movie production as well. Pay revenues will also fatten Sun‘s profitability,” an analyst in a leading equity firm says.

    A drag on the company‘s profitability, Maran has hived off his cable distribution business ahead of the IPO. Kal Cable, which operates under the SCV brand, was separated from 1 April 2005. In FY2005, SCV‘s revenues stood at Rs 156 million while costs were at Rs 301 million. The FY06 results will, thus, exclude the financial performance of Kal Cable.

    A result of this: net profit has surged to Rs 614 million in the first half of FY06, up from Rs 322 million a year ago. Rich profits have always been the strength of STL. On a turnover of Rs 2.9 billion for FY05, net profit stood at Rs 778 million. In fact, net profit as a percentage of total income has averaged 27.6 per cent over the past five financial years.

    “STL, the dominant broadcaster in the South Indian languages of Tamil and Malayalam, enjoys a phenomenal net profit. With a slot auction model for the main channels, programming expenses are in any case low,” says an analyst at a brokering firm.

    So how do the revenues pile up? Several estimates by analysts are available, ranging from Rs 7.5 billion to Rs 8.4 billion by FY08. Conservative estimates put it at a little over Rs 6 billion. Net income is also estimated to jump to over Rs three billion in FY08.

    A lot of these projections, however, will depend on how much growth takes place from pay-TV revenues and on the success of Maran‘s FM radio expansion.

    Sun to ramp up pay revenues

    Keeping flagship channels Sun TV and Surya TV free-to-air, STL has clocked pay-TV revenues well below its potential. In FY05, it stood at Rs 398 million, up from Rs 325 million a year ago.

    Maran wants to change all this by turning Sun TV and Surya TV into pay channels. Currently, it has three pay channels – KTV, Sun News and Sun Music. But in Chennai which is a conditional access system (CAS) market where consumers can view pay channels through a set-top box (STB), all these pay channels are free-to-air.

    Sun is yet to ramp up its pay-TV revenues. Analysts estimate revenues from pay-TV to go up progressively from Rs 500 million in FY06 to Rs 1.1 billion in FY07 and Rs 1.7 billion in FY08. This calculation is based on Sun TV going pay in the middle of this year and Surya TV converting from the free-to-air mode later in the year.

    “There is going to be a definite and substantial upside for Sun TV Ltd‘s pay revenues. Sun can scale up its pay-TV revenues by converting flagship and new niche channels to pay mode. The number of cable households, paying subscribers and pay channel rates are also expected to go up,” an analyst says.

    Sun TV, which is expected to be priced at Rs 15-20, is expected to ramp up STL‘s current 2.8 million paying subscriber base. Taking Surya TV pay, however, will be a difficult task if Asianet decides to stay free-to-air.

    STL‘s pay revenues will also come from its content contracts with direct-to-home (DTH) operators. Revenue from DTH consumers is estimated at Rs 260 million, putting the company‘s subscription revenues in the neighbourhood of Rs two billion by FY08 at the optimum level.

     

    Radio to tune in growth

    FM radio will be Maran‘s first media vehicle to have a national footprint, taking him outside the southern language market. He will operate 46 stations across the country through Sun TV Ltd‘s two subsidiaries, Kal Radio and South Asia FM.

    The investment required: over Rs 3.3 billion. Kal and South Asia FM will, in fact, require an approximate of Rs 1.83 billion towards acquisition of broadcasting equipement (FM transmitters, FM antennas, payment of common infrastructure), setting up of local offices and radio studios.

    But Maran realises this is where his big leap in revenues for Sun TV Ltd will come from. Though profitable, the revenues from the four operating stations are small. In Tirunelveli, for instance, Sun earned revenues of Rs 28 million in FY05 and Rs 13 million in the first half of FY06. And in Coimbatore, the income stood at Rs 56 million and Rs 32 million during this period.

    Some analysts, however, expect radio operations to contribute to 20 per cent of Sun‘s total revenues by FY08, compared to around five per cent in FY05. Sun‘s radio revenues are expected to leapfrog from Rs 147 million in FY05 to Rs 1.97 billion in FY08. In the southern language markets, Sun has the advantage of dominating ownership of movie rights which it can leverage for its radio business. But it remains to be seen how successful he can be in new markets outside the southern region.

    The structure that Maran has outlined for FM radio looks somewhat like this: Kal Radio (where Sun TV owns 89 per cent) will operate in the southern language states, while South Asia FM (Sun has 94.91 per cent equity) will take up stations beyond the Southern markets.

    Maran has not bid in Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata, leading to speculation in the market that he may have some understanding with Astro (Sun has a JV with Astro for launching language channels). These are the cities where Red FM, which was acquired by a consortium of NDTV, Value Labs and Astro from Living Media Group‘s Radio Today, operates. But no official confirmation is available on this and it may be a matter of pure coincidence.

    Maran‘s plan is to consolidate the radio assets. The existing licenses of the four operational radio stations are, thus, being transferred to Kal Radio. While Suryan FM has licenses and operates in Chennai, Coimbatore and Tirunelveli. Udaya TV Pvt Ltd. runs Vishaka FM in Visakhapatnam.

    Analysts say Sun‘s design to operate the FM radio business through subsidiaries is to separate radio from other segment revenues for licence fee computation (4 per cent of gross revenues). Besides, Sun will have the flexibility to rope in a joint venture partner.

    Sun‘s ownership of rights of a vast number of films in various South Indian languages will provide it with a unique advantage to grow its radio revenues and earnings strongly over the next few years.

    Flexing muscles for cable distribution in South India

    Maran may be the king of content but he realises the importance of having distribution in his winning mix. Which is why he wanted to acquire Indian Cable Net (formerly RPG Netcom), the largest multi-system operator (MSO) in Kolkata, ahead of launching Bengali channel Surjo.

    Maran was so confident of the deal sailing through that in an earlier interview with Indiantelevision.com he admitted he was “on the verge of closing it.” But, as events rolled out, Subhash Chandra beat him to it and Siticable snapped up Indian Cable Net. Surjo‘s launch was shelved and the media king of the south is yet to gat a foothold into the northern market.

    No major investments have been made into the cable business for over a year. Maran did try to expand GCV‘s presence in Hyderabad but without much success. He even explored talks with Siticable to work together in that market but nothing conclusive came up. Sources say Siticable, which doesn‘t have signals from Star and Sony, is finalising plans on how to revive its network independently as it has lost market share in the city to Hathway Cable & Datacom. Maran will, thus, have to come out with a different formula even as he nurses ambitions to spread GCV‘s tentacles across Andhra Pradesh.

    In Tamil Nadu, the story is entirely different. SCV dominates cable TV operations, so much so that chief minister Jayalalitha introduced legislation in the state assembly that would allow the state to acquire and take over bigger cable TV networks in Tamil Nadu, including MSOs and optical transport systems. Though controversial, a lot of how things shape up will depend on who wins the assembly elections.

    Control of the distribution chain has put Maran in a unique position in Chennai, a conditional access system (CAS) market. The low offtake of set-top boxes (STBs) has meant that CAS has more or less been killed in this market. Sun has indirectly benefited by the virtual blackout of all the English-language channels like Star World, Star Movies and HBO. Hindi channels, in any case, did not have much of viewing in this southern-language market.

    “All the other channels have lost their business models here. Sun with its strong language content channels have become more powerful in this market,” the head of a large broadcasting company says.

    In a corporate restructuring, Sun has terminated its cable TV distribution agreement with Kal Cable from 1 April 2005. The reason: cable was losing money. “Unlike MSOs operating in the Hindi belt, SCV will have very less carriage fee. For digital to get a push, Sun TV has to go pay in the Chennai market,” says an analyst.

    Gearing up for DTH

    It is a slice of the business many players are keen to lay their hands on. In India, it doesn‘t matter if you run cable TV or IPTV operations. DTH promises to bring about addressability and better quality of service in a distribution chain that has been dominated by an unorganised cable TV industry.

    Maran hopes to kickstart DTH operations this year even as Insat 4C launches in July. Having booked space on the satellite, he is negotiating with the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) for eight Ku-band transponders. Initially, he had asked for five transponders on the satellite which could later be ramped up to nine.

    Sun Direct will join the race after Tata Sky launches its service. Already in existence are Dish TV and Doordarshan‘s DD Direct Plus, which offers subscribers free-to-air (FTA) channels. Soon to follow will be Anil Ambani‘s Blue Magic service, which has also booked space for its own DTH plans.

    So how will Maran stand out in this crowded market? He may come out with a specific south language package, keeping the pricing low. Along with this basic bundle, he can add sports and the other language channels to consumers who want more. Tata Sky and Dish TV as national players will find it difficult to compete in a target-specific market. Even if they match the pricing, they may not be in a position to offer all the south channels due to lack of transponder space.

    For broadening the menu to South Indian audiences, Maran will have to create more niche channels. Also necessary is to have Sun TV and Surya TV as pay channels by then. For those subscribers he fails to tap in DTH, he will try to retain through his cable network. But whatever DTH plans he has, no information is coming out from the company.

    Finding favour in the stock market

    Some analysts feel STL is an expensive buy with the stock price quoting at around Rs 1260 per share. But there are several indicators one should consider before taking a final view.

    a) There is a scarcity premium on the stock. With Maran offloading just 10 per cent stake, there is a chase among buyers.

    b) Sun enjoys a clear leadership position and there is no credible competitor emerging to challenge this status. Asianet is a strong contender but only in the Malayalam market. Maran is adequately protected with his breadth of channels. He has also developed extensive programming assets and holds rights for 2,650 movies (60 per cent are Tamils and 40 per cent Malayalam). He is in an ideal position to exploit content across all platforms including DTH.

    c) There is a growth trajectory in radio and pay-TV business. The success in these two areas is crucial to STL‘s future earnings and valuations.

    d) Profitability is the most attractive element in Maran‘s business and this is likely to continue

    e) Launch of kids and documentary channels will further add to STL‘s topline growth. Maran is in talks with Hungama TV for partnership in the kids space. While he will take care of the distribution infrastructure, the programming and other support for the southern version of the channel with initial focus in Tamil language will be handled by Hungama TV.

    f) Maran can also create a slew of channels for DTH which will allow him to increase bandwidth.

    g) These fresh investments run the risk of facing failure in the marketplace. But investors are currently betting on Sun more for its strategic than growth value.

    h) Maran has the flexibility to do a private placement and get in a strategic investor. The Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB), in fact, has formally cleared STL‘s application for issue of preferential allotment of shares to foreign investors. No allotment has been made so far.

    i) Sun can also expand internationally through a $25 million joint venture agreement with Malaysia‘s Astro All Asia Network. The JV plans to collaborate in content creation for filmed and other entertainment products in Indian languages including Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Hindi and Bengali for distribution to international markets.

    j) The market expects Maran to merge Gemini and Udaya at some stage with STL. But these are speculations and could prove to be wrong. Incidentally, Maran consolidated his ownership position by buying out entire stakes of Sharad Kumar and Dayalu Ammal (wife of DMK president M Karunanidhi). In Gemini and Udaya, he still has minor partners.

    k) When actor-cum-politician Sarath Kumar quit DMK to join AIADMK, speculation was rife that wife Radhika would walk her production house Radaan Mediaworks out of Sun TV. Since Radaan is the leading producer for Sun network with popular shows like Chithi and currently Chelvi, this would have an impact on STL. Nothing has happened so far and Radaan has not started making shows for Jaya TV. If it does, then it can‘t make content for Sun as Maran has a policy that disllows production houses from making shows for rival broadcasters. Will that be a severe blow for Sun? Analysts feel broadcast platforms have far higher long term strengths than production houses, particularly when competing channels are so far behind.

    Sun’s IPO may set the trend in the South

    Sun‘s IPO may have a ripple effect in the southern region, inspiring several broadcasting companies to tap the market.

    A strong case in point could be Asianet, though it has not expressed its intent to get listed so far. But Hyderabad-based Maa TV, which has been struggling to raise funds, is considering taking this route. Even Raj TV is closely observing the market trend.

    “We realise we have to add up channels so that we grow to some size. For our expansion, we require funds. We have been trying to raise private equity but have failed. We may plan for an IPO,” says a senior company executive.

    South-based listed companies like Radaan, Telephoto Entertainment and Pentamedia have actually spoilt the market with their poor financial performance after the IPO. A healthy company like Sun can open up the capital market for other players to step in.

    The problem is that companies of the size of Maa TV may not attract investor confidence unless they work out better business models. And those like Raj TV may not want to change the way they run their closely held business.

    But a transition in culture may well be on the way. Media organisations will have to keep pace with the changing times if they have to grow and flourish.