Tag: Stephen Laslocky

  • MPA report: Content investment in seven APAC markets grew four per cent in 2023

    MPA report: Content investment in seven APAC markets grew four per cent in 2023

    Mumbai: Media Partners Asia’s (MPA) 2024 Asia Video Content Dynamics report offers a comprehensive analysis of content investment, engagement, and viewership across TV, VOD, and theatrical sectors in seven key APAC markets: India, Korea, Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.

    The report reveals that content investment in these markets reached $15.5 billion in 2023, marking a four per cent year-on-year increase. This growth, while positive, represents a significant slowdown from the 2021-22 period, reflecting a post-COVID normalization of budgets and a rationalisation of local content investment in streaming VOD. India led the charge with a robust 12 per cent growth, driven primarily by sports content, while Indonesia followed with a solid five per cent increase. Korea, the Philippines, and Thailand managed modest gains, whereas Malaysia and Vietnam experienced contractions due to challenging advertising markets.

    Korea and India continue to dominate the landscape, collectively accounting for 80 per cent of total content investment in 2023. Korea, a mature market, is expected to see flat overall growth, with expansion in streaming and film offset by TV’s secular decline. In contrast, India, with its relatively low 52 per cent TV household penetration, presents significant growth potential across all verticals through 2028. MPA projects that India will surpass Korea in total content investment by 2026.

    Looking ahead, MPA forecasts a 2.7 per cent CAGR in total content investment across the seven markets, reaching $17.2 billion by 2028. This growth will be predominantly driven by India, with Indonesia and the Philippines also expected to show decent growth rates. Korea and Thailand are anticipated to experience limited growth, while Vietnam faces the most challenges due to weak TV advertising and rampant piracy.

    The investment landscape is evolving, with TV (free-to-air and pay) still commanding the lion’s share at 64 per cent in 2023, followed by streaming at 26 per cent and film at 10 per cent. By 2028, TV is projected to retain over 50 per cent of industry investment, while streaming is expected to increase its share to 33 per cent, with film marginally growing to 11 per cent.

    MPA vice president Stephen Laslocky offered insights on the shifting content dynamics:

    “Korean content continues to lead the pack with world-class production values and compelling storytelling, though we’re seeing online original content costs inflate to as much as US$7 million per episode. Its extraordinary appeal is evident, accounting for over 30 per cent of content demand in Southeast Asia and Taiwan. The rise of streaming has significantly elevated storytelling and production quality, particularly in Thailand and Indonesia, where competition is intensifying. We’re seeing content from these countries, especially Thai titles, gaining traction across Asia.

    It’s become clear that many traditional TV drama producers are struggling to compete with higher-end streamed video content. In contrast, quality film producers have embraced the flexibility of streaming and adapted with greater ease. Over the past year, as some ad revenues have permanently shifted to digital and streaming behaviour has become entrenched, we’ve observed TV production margins contracting across most markets. For online originals, streamers have become much more disciplined in their approach to budgeting and content strategy.”

    The report also highlights significant trends in online video consumption. YouTube leads with over a billion monthly active users across the surveyed markets, with 732 million in India alone. TikTok has emerged as a formidable competitor in Southeast Asia, boasting 211 million total monthly active users across Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand.

    In the premium VOD space, Netflix maintains a strong lead in most markets, capturing between 40-70 per cent of viewership in Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines. However, it faces stiff competition in Thailand from TrueID and in India from Disney+ Hotstar and Jio Cinema. Local players like Indonesia’s Vidio are also making their mark, while regional platforms such as Viu are leveraging Korean content and strategic partnerships to strengthen their positions.

    The theatrical sector is still in recovery mode, with superhero franchise fatigue and Hollywood strikes delaying a return to pre-pandemic levels in most markets. India has already bounced back, with 2023 box office revenues exceeding 2019 figures. Other markets, excluding Korea, are expected to recover over the 2025-28 period. An emerging trend in film distribution sees a shift towards revenue-share models for internationally appealing titles, presenting new opportunities for Korean and Thai producers in particular.

    As the APAC content landscape continues to evolve, the interplay between traditional and emerging platforms, coupled with changing consumer behaviours, will shape the industry’s future. The MPA report underscores the dynamic nature of the market and the critical importance of adaptability and strategic investment in driving growth across the region.

  • India’s video content budget up by 14% in 2017: MPA

    India’s video content budget up by 14% in 2017: MPA

    MUMBAI: The video content expenditure for TV, movie and online video across India, Korea and Southeast Asia’s five biggest growth markets (Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam) has seen a growth of eight per cent in 2017 to reach $10.2 billion, according to the 2018 edition of Asia Video Content Dynamics from analyst firm Media Partners Asia (MPA).

    India’s video content budget soared by 14 per cent to $4.2 billion in 2017, purely driven by pay-TV. Content investment in India’s online video market is also growing rapidly, driven by competition among well-capitalised global and local platforms. This trend is expected to continue over the next three years.

    India is followed by Korea, where investment in video content increased by seven per cent over the year to approach $3 billion. The investment in Korea is also starting to accelerate and will continue to do so over the course of 2018-19. Growth here will likely accelerate when China eventually lifts its ban on Korean dramas, movies and talent.

    The biggest contributors to aggregate incremental growth in video content spend across the seven markets in 2017 were pay-TV (38 per cent) and online video (30 per cent).

    MPA VP Stephen Laslocky said, “In general, content investment dynamics are favourable with content investment growing. Pay-TV content costs in the surveyed markets grew five per cent, led by India and Korea, driven by local entertainment and sports.”

    Free to air content investment was up by six per cent in 2017. Scale and growth in free to air content investment are largely attributable to Korea, the Philippines, Thailand and Indonesia, driven by local entertainment.

    Film production budgets in the surveyed markets were up 10 per cent, driven by Korea and India. Online video investment is growing rapidly from a low base, up almost 80 per cent during 2017.

    Laslocky believes that rising competitive intensity is driving up online video content costs as rival platforms produce and acquire local series and movies, especially in India and Korea. “We expect online video content investment to also pick up in emerging markets across Southeast Asia, led by Indonesia and the Philippines,” he added.

    Malaysian market witnessed a decline in video content investment in 2017 mainly due to Astro cutting spend on international pay channels. The outlook for Malaysia could improve as new government policies bolster economic growth, broadening consumer spend and ad dollars.

    Growth in production spend across emerging Southeast Asia markets was generally satisfactory in 2017, according to the report.