Tag: TWC

  • Times Warner Cable FY-2014 operating income up 1.1 per cent

    Times Warner Cable FY-2014 operating income up 1.1 per cent

    BENGALURU: Time Warner Cable Inc (TWC) reported a 1.1 per cent growth in operating income in FY-2014 at $4632 million from $4580 million in FY-2013. For Q4-2014 (quarter ended 31 December, 2014, current quarter), TWC operating income at $1226 million was 4.5 per cent more than the  $1173 million in the corresponding quarter of last year.

     

    TWC revenue for FY-2014 at $22812 million was 3.1 per cent more than the $22120 million in the previous year. Q4-2014 revenue at $5970 million was 3.8 per cent more than the $5577 million in Q4-2013.

     

    Time Warner Cable chairman and CEO Rob Marcus said, “Our fourth quarter marked a strong finish to a really positive year for Time Warner Cable. As a result of record Q4 subscriber net adds and the investments we made all year in our plant, products and customer care, we enter 2015 with tremendous operating momentum.”

     

    Marcus added, “We continue to expect the Comcast merger to close soon; until then, we remain one hundred per cent committed to executing our plan.”

     

    Financial Highlights

     

    FY-2014 revenue grew 3.1 per cent year over year with Business Services revenue up 22.8 per cent, residential high-speed data revenue up 10.4 per cent and advertising revenue up 10.6 per cent.

     

    Fourth-quarter 2014 revenue grew 3.8 per cent year over year with Business Services revenue up 22.6 per cent, residential high-speed data revenue up 7.4 per cent and advertising revenue up 19.4 per cent.

     

    Full-year Adjusted OIBDA was $8.2 billion – up 3.1 per cent year over year. Operating Income of $4.6 billion increased 1.1 per cent y-o-y. Fourth-quarter Adjusted OIBDA was $2.1 billion – up 5.6 per cent year over year. Operating Income of $1.2 billion increased 4.5 per cent y-o-y.

     

    Full-year Adjusted Diluted EPS increased 14.4 per cent to $7.56. Diluted EPS increased 7.0 per cent to $7.17.  Fourth-quarter Adjusted Diluted EPS increased 11.5 per cent to $2.03. Diluted EPS increased 3.2 per cent to $1.95.

     

    Operational Highlights

     

    Fourth-quarter subscriber performance in each category: Total customer relationship net additions of 67,000. Residential high-speed data net additions of 168,000 and revenue from this segment grew 7.4 per cent to $1644 million in Q4-2014 from $1531 million in Q4-2013. FY-2014 revenue from this segment grew 10.4 per cent to $6428 million from $5822 million in the previous year.

     

    Residential voice net reported additions of 295,000, and a revenue decline of 4.7 per cent at $470 million in the current quarter from $493 million in Q4-2013. FY-2014 revenue from this segment declined 4.7 per cent to $1932 million from $2027 million in FY-2013.

     

    Residential video net subscribers declined 38,000, and revenue from this segment fell 2.8 per cent to $2464 million in the current quarter from $2536 million in Q4-2013. FY-2014 revenue from this segment fell 4.6 per cent to $10002 million from $10481 million in FY-2013.

     

    Residential triple play net additions were 273,000 says TWC.

     

    TWC says that full-year capital expenditures of $4.1 billion reflect the company’s accelerated investment in “TWCMaxx,” improved customer experience and network expansion.

     

    The roll out of TWC Maxx, including the “all digital” conversion and Internet speeds of up to 300 Mbps, was completed in New York City and Los Angeles during 2014. The company expects to complete the roll out in Austin, Texas in early 2015 and plans to expand TWC Maxx to Charlotte, Dallas, Hawaii, Kansas City, Raleigh, San Antonio and San Diego in 2015.

     

    TWC says that it deployed more than eight million new set-top boxes, digital-to-analogue converters and advanced modems in customers’ homes during 2014.

     

    It says further that during 2014, TWC added nearly 70,000 commercial buildings to its network, ending the year with connectivity to 930,000 commercial buildings. TWC claims that it achieved record “on-time” performance with technicians arriving at more than 97 per cent of customer appointments within the designated one-hour appointment window during the fourth quarter.

     

    TWC, the second largest US cable TV operator is being bought by the largest US Cable TV operator Comcast Corp in a friendly takeover for $45.3 billion subject to various approvals.

  • FCC: Dish Network resists Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger

    FCC: Dish Network resists Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger

    BENGALURU:  Citing irreparable harm to competition and consumers, and no discernible benefits, from the proposed union of the first and second largest cable companies in the nation, Dish Network Corp (Dish Network) filed its reply at the FCC to Comcast-Time Warner Cable’s (TWC) Opposition to the Petitions to Deny their proposed merger.

     

    “Everyone who likes to watch high-quality online video has particular reasons to worry about the proposed merger,” said Dish Network senior vice president and deputy general counsel Jeff Blum. “More than 54 per cent of the country’s high-speed broadband connections would be controlled by the combined company, and all online video distributors would be at the mercy of Comcast-TWC.”

     

    Some of the key points of Dish Network reply include:

     

    Comcast-TWC will be able to destroy OVDs with impunity. And destroy them it will: Dish’s experience based on the business case for Dish World and Dish’s soon-to-be-launched domestic OTT service demonstrates that an OTT could still turn a profit if it were to suffer foreclosure at the hands of a standalone Comcast, but not if the effects of the foreclosure spread across both of the Applicants’ systems. Based on his analysis of that business case, Dish’s expert economist Professor David Sappington concludes that, while foreclosure conduct on the part of Comcast today is probably survivable for an OVD such as Dish’s new OTT service, the same conduct would be lethal if undertaken by Comcast-TWC.

     

    As the petitions and comments demonstrate, high-speed cable broadband connections are the lifeblood of over-the-top (“OTT”) video services that typically target national audiences. For that reason, among others, the relevant geographic market for this transaction is national. Furthermore, the relevant product market should include only those services capable of supporting the robust online video services that consumers demand, which requires a household to have actual and consistent download speeds of at least 25 Megabits per second (“Mbps”). If approved, the combined Comcast-TWC would control more than 54 per cent of the broadband pipes in the United States that have speeds of at least 25 Mbps, and will be on a path to virtual dominance of the high-speed broadband market given that the combined company will pass nearly 70 per cent of pay-TV households in the US.

     

    Use of the Commission’s own method for estimating actual departures of a rival’s subscribers due to temporary foreclosure with a time horizon of six months leads to the conclusion that Comcast-TWC can reap eye-popping gains from denying its competitors NBCU programming. This will affect competition in a number of ways. It will cause subscribers to leave the competing distributor in favour of Comcast-TWC; it will cause dissatisfied Comcast-TWC subscribers to stay put instead of losing their access to NBCU; and it will let NBCU extract higher prices for its own programming by leveraging the fear of foreclosure.

     

    The merger’s claimed benefits, if any, cannot outweigh the merger’s harms. In the Opposition, the Applicants devote hundreds of pages to extolling the purported benefits of the merger. Many of these benefits are illusory or speculative—characteristically, the Applicants offer no more precise quantification than “hundreds of millions of dollars.” Many of the benefits are also not merger-specific. The upgrade of TWC systems, supposedly made possible thanks to the merger, is a prime example. Public documents show that TWC had planned to complete this transition itself as a standalone company. This means that large portions of the claimed benefits attributed to TWC upgrades (again left unquantified) should be disallowed in their entirety.

     

    Conduct conditions would fail to address the merger’s many harms. Conduct conditions did not work for Comcast-NBCU, and they would not work for this transaction, which poses substantially greater risks of harm. There is little reason to believe that Comcast will alter its pattern of repeatedly breaking promises. Moreover, the complexity of the gatekeeping function over the Internet choke points alone promises a myriad of technicalities that would likely allow circumvention of, and/or interpretive debate over, any conditions. Ultimately, if the Commission approves the merger believing that conditions are sufficient to address all the harms, there is no going back. The consequences of getting it wrong are too great, the risks too high. The public deserves better.

  • Al Jazeera America set for TWC

    Al Jazeera America set for TWC

    MUMBAI: Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks are set to begin offering Al Jazeera America to their customers in the coming months, bringing the news network to almost 55 million homes.

     

    The network will roll out on basic digital tiers on the two platforms in markets such as New York City, Los Angeles and Dallas. Time Warner Cable executive VP and chief video and content officer Melinda Witmer said, “Now that the channel is live, we think that it would be of value to our customers and are pleased to make it available.”

     

    Al Jazeera America’s interim CEO Ehab Al Shihabi added: “It has been a pleasure working with TWC over the past few months as their executives evaluated our programming and commitment to fact-based, in depth reporting. We appreciate the vote of confidence that Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks have given to our brand of unbiased journalism and look forward to working with them as Al Jazeera America continues to grow.”

     

    Time Warner Cable dropped Current TV following its sale to Al Jazeera at the beginning of this year.

  • Weinstein Company to distribute ‘Macbeth’

    Weinstein Company to distribute ‘Macbeth’

    MUMBAI: The Weinstein Company has closed a deal for distributing a new version of Macbeth that will star Michael Fassbender and Marrion Cottilard. It is being directed by Justin Kurzel that has the original lines but the visual will be scaled up.

     

    The film is produced by Iain Canning and Emile Sherman. Fassbender comes off from 12 Years a Slave while Cottilard replaced Natalie Portman this year for the role of Lady Macbeth.

     

    TWC had been bidding for it against Fox Searchlight. Shooting is to commence early next year. Jacob Koskoff and Todd Louiso have written the script. The Shakespeare drama has been made several times.
     

  • Three million homes have no CBS service via TWC

    Three million homes have no CBS service via TWC

    MUMBAI: As Time Warner Cable and CBS continue their negotiating deadlock, Starcom MediaVest researcher Sam Armando has discovered how widespread the blackouts are individually in the New York, Los Angeles and Dallas markets. TWC has refused to make the figures available.

     

    Armando writes in a blog post that 17 per cent of homes in both New York and Dallas are without the local CBS station, while the figure climbs to 26 per cent in the Los Angeles market.

     

    On a national level, the number of homes with CBS-owned local stations blacked out is around 3.2 million, according to CBS. Showtime is off the air across TWC’s national footprint, as TWC and CBS continue to battle over terms of re-upping a carriage deal. The blackouts started 2 August.

     

    CBS has called on talent to encourage TWC customers to switch providers and on Monday brought the Manning brothers into the fold. A newspaper ad in New York might suggest CBS thinks the blackouts could continue until 15 September.

     

    “You could miss this historic matchup,” the ad reads, referring to the New York Giants vs. Denver Broncos game on that Sunday, with Peyton and Eli Manning facing off.

     

    The ad also suggests viewers could miss the much-anticipated college game between Alabama and Texas A&M on 14 September “featuring Heisman winner Johnny Manziel.” That copy could become moot any day now as Manziel is under NCAA investigation for receiving payments for his autograph; he could be suspended for the game.

  • CBS-TWC in a tiff over digital services

    CBS-TWC in a tiff over digital services

    MUMBAI: The blackout dispute between CBS and Time Warner Cable has shifted from the TV set to the tablet.

    In their latest heated exchange, TWC claims that CBS wants to charge higher fees while shortchanging it on digital programming rights that it “has provided to others.”

    CBS contends that the cable-TV outfit is aiming to get digital rights for free or inhibit licensing deals with newer online rivals like Netflix and Amazon.

    The battle between the two companies, which has left CBS-owned TV stations dark in New York and other cities, underscores how the demand for digital rights, including the ability to watch shows on tablets and other mobile devices, is overshadowing the traditional cable bundle.

    On Monday, TWC honcho Glenn Britt offered to end the five-day blackout and pay a higher rate – $2 a month per subscriber, up from $1 now – in exchange for video-on-demand and digital rights to CBS and Showtime programming under the terms of their old contract.

    In response, CBS head Les Moonves argued that the terms of the 2008 deal no longer apply.

    “Those terms and conditions, better known as rights, were established in 2008,” Moonves wrote in his rebuttal. “That was before the introduction of the iPad. Netflix was still doing little but mailing out DVDs. Amazon was known simply for selling books.”

    Moonves wants to protect future digital revenue and doesn’t want TWC limiting his ability to sell shows such as The Big Bang Theory to whomever he sees fit.

    For its part, TWC wants to protect its turf. It doesn’t want CBS giving Amazon preferential treatment to air shows such as miniseries Under the Dome if it’s paying huge fees to carry CBS, according to those familiar with the talks.

    As one cable executive told The Post, “The program guys want all the Amazon revenue to be incremental, and the cable guys are saying we’re not doing that anymore. We want to compete and offer the same experience.”

  • Revolt TV finalises national carriage deal with TWC

    Revolt TV finalises national carriage deal with TWC

    MUMBAI: Revolt TV, the upcoming cable network led by Sean Combs, has finalized a national carriage agreement with Time Warner Cable (TWC), it was announced today. Together with previously announced distribution, this will make Revolt one of the largest launches in cable TV history when it goes live this fall.

    Revolt TV will be available to TWC customers when it launches in the fall. This broad reach is especially significant for Revolt TV in gaining early traction in major urban markets across the US. Envisioned as a maverick television channel with an emphasis on music programming, live content and a robust social media component, Revolt TV is scheduled to launch in Fall 2013.

    “This is a landmark distribution deal that demonstrates Time Warner Cable‘s commitment to bringing a platform for music artists and fans to their subscribers,” stated Revolt TV founder and chairman Sean Combs. “It positions Revolt to come out of the gate strong, and we look forward to igniting the passion of initial audiences across the US.”