Tag: Zee News

  • Zee News’ new brand philosophy is ‘Soch Badlo, Desh Badlo’

    NEW DELHI: “Soch Badlo, Desh Badlo” is the new philosophy of Zee News, stressing its “quest towards purposeful positive change, to balance thoughts and positive actions”.

    The journey from ‘Zara Sochiye’ to ‘Jazba Soch ka’ to ‘Soch Badlo, Desh Badlo’ has been a consistent one for Zee News, aimed at probing, practicing and initiating new thoughts and actions for a positive future, one which is in line with the thoughts of the buzzing democracy that India is today.

    Through this fresh initiative, Zee News not only asks people to have consistent and positive thoughts but also to go ahead and take affirmative action. “It is a more participatory and mutually contributory journey that Zee News wishes to undertake with its viewers. The viewers should move beyond the stage where they were mute spectators but to participate or precipitate change,” Zee News said.

    India has transformed into a thinking nation and the recent surge of responses and the mass activism has propelled Zee News’ involvement where action is also bundled with thoughts.

    Zee News CEO Alok Agrawal said, “‘Soch Badlo, Desh Badlo’ is the right step towards what we had set out to do with provoking the nation’s thought and in trying to be a catalyst in transforming India and the society. We will strive in Zee News to engage with our viewers more and cascade and translate our views into various actions with the public at large for bringing in positive perceivable change.”

  • Dehradun to host Australian film festival

    Dehradun to host Australian film festival

    MUMBAI: For the first time in the history of the capital city of Uttarakhand, Dehradun play host to the Australian Film Festival of India (AFFI) that kicked off today.

    A total number of 17 films including a retrospective on filmmaker Baz Luhrman and a documentary on anti-corruption activist Kiran Bedi will be screened.

    "Federation of Film Societies of India taking our Australian films to various cities across India is exactly the exposure Aussie cinema needs in India, a film market Australia has yet to tap, we are humbled by the huge response," said the festival‘s founding director Peter Castaldi in a statement.

    The festival which is the result of a tie-up between Zee News and An Australian Film Initiative (AAFI) will be screened in three cities followed by a 17 city tour through the Federation of Film Societies of India (FFSI).

    "Federation of Film Societies of India taking our Australian films to various cities across India is exactly the exposure Aussie cinema needs in India, a film market Australia has yet to tap, we are humbled by the huge response," continued Castaldi.

    AFFI is also using online registration, as well as social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter to increase awareness and generate interest in the festival.

  • ‘Future bright for only right TV news players’ : ZNL CEO Barun Das

    ‘Future bright for only right TV news players’ : ZNL CEO Barun Das

    It’s the festival of lights. And for many the festival of noise courtesy exploding fireworks. In the hope of reducing the number of those belonging to the latter tribe, we, at indiantelevision.com, decided to put a display of firecracker articles for visitors this Diwali. We have had many top journalists reporting, analysing, over the many years of indiantelevision.com’s existence. The articles we are presenting are representative of some of the best writing on the business of cable and satellite television and media for which we have gained renown. Read on to get a flavour and taste of indiantelevision.com over the years from some of its finest writers. And have a happy and safe Diwali!

    (Written By Sibabrata Das in 2012. He continues to write on the cable TV industry)

     

    Subhash Chandra could end his long wait to expand his television news empire in the two main language segments of the business. After slimming Zee News Ltd’s (ZNL) balance sheet by demerging the regional-language entertainment channels from the bouquet in 2010, he is now planning to launch an English general news channel towards the exit quarter of the fiscal.

     

    The main reason behind the timing: digitisation in the four metros by 1 November. ZNL, which runs a clutch of seven news channels, has also grown to a turnover of Rs 3 billion while its Ebitda stands at Rs Rs 533.5 million for FY’12.

     

    Shepherding ZNL’s growth has been Barun Das, the chief executive of the company. His key strategy: staying profitable while being true to the identity of the fourth estate.

     

    Das, thus, took the bold step of cutting ad cut the commercial time of ZNL‘s flagship Hindi news channel, Zee News, by 30 per cent from April while upping the ad rates by 40 per cent. The move followed the change in positioning of Zee News as it shed trivial news content to differentiate itself. His belief: viewership for serious news and ad rates will rise in tandem.

     

    Das could possibly follow the Zee News model for the English news channel. He believes there is space for a less opinionated and more research-driven kind of reportage.

     

    He is optimistic about the future of TV news in India but cautions that “it is bright only for the right players”. He warns news broadcasters of not repeating the mistake of paying unrealistic carriage by masking it under placement fees in a digital environment.

     

    In an interview with Indiantelevision.com’s Sibabrata Das, the ZNL CEO also talks about the growth of regional news markets and the challenges that they face in each language space.

     

    Excerpts:

     

    Q. Will TV news broadcasters have to expand their bouquet to scale up revenues as growth engines of flagship news channels are aging across the sector?
    Yes, flagship channels are maturing in revenues. And it is difficult for established existing channels to post ad revenue growth beyond 10 per cent unless there is a repositioning or reinvention of the brand. Expanding the bouquet and strengthening it is key to a TV news broadcaster’s growth strategy.

     

    Q. Sources say ZNL is planning to launch an English-language general news channel towards the exit quarter of the fiscal. Are you waiting for digitisation to come into force in the four metros before you join the ring?
    We have been planning to launch an English general news channel for some time. The approval process is not yet formalised. Any launch plan will, however, be linked to digitisation as distribution cost will ease to a large extent with there being no capacity constraint on digital cable networks.

     

    Q. So ZNL is now in a position to take the load of a new channel that would consume large capital in the gestation period?
    After demerging the regional general entertainment channels from ZNL in 2010, we decided to consolidate before firming up big expansion plans. We did launch a few regional news channels just before the demerger, but then slowdown started biting the industry. Our focus was to stay profitable rather than build scale. Now that our balance sheet has grown in size and our turnover has touched Rs 3 billion, we are in a position to make heavy investments.

     

    Q. In the past interactions, you have always maintained that the prime business model that you follow is protecting the Ebitda margins. Will the English channel not erode the margins and make ZNL operate in the red for at least some years?
    We want to maintain the 18-20 per cent Ebitda margins. While growing in size, we have a guiding time target to return to those margins.

    ‘There are three-and-a-half English news channels. People may think it is a crowded space to be in, but we see it as an opportunity. With the kind of content that is being currently broadcast, we feel there is a lacuna and void for us to fill the gap and exist profitably. There is space for a less opinionated and more research-driven kind of reportage‘

     

    Q. But wouldn’t you require to make investments of Rs 3 billion over three years and wait for a longer break-even period?
    I wouldn’t like to comment on how much we plan to invest. But yes, the break even period of an English news channel is normally 4-5 years. But there is cash flow coming in before that. So it is not like we have to wait for that long to correct the Ebitda erosion. It is too early, though, for me to give a target date when we have not even launched. But there will be a significant drop in distribution payouts for all TV news broadcasters in a digitised environment. The other channels in the bouquet will also post growth. So it’s not red ink all over.

     

    Q. How much would you expect distribution expenses to fall for news broadcasters in a digitised environment?
    There is nothing set as a rule. But as per the former Trai chairman (JS Sarma), carriage should fall by 90 per cent. We are expecting a formalisation of that in a digitised environment.

     

    Q. That is a figure hard to digest. But when you launch your English channel, it is only the four metros (Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai) that would have digitised if the government sticks to the 31 October sunset deadline for analogue cable. How much of carriage payout is doled out by English news broadcasters to cable networks in these metros?
    It is tough to guess but it should be around 60-70 per cent of their distribution budgets. The focus of the English channels is the metros. Distribution expenses are bound to fall for these channels.

     

    Q. There are five English news channels jostling for a share in the Rs 5.5-6 billion ad market. So will it be a market share fight for you or there is scope for expanding the ad revenue size substantially?
    I don‘t know how you are coming to five English news channels. To my mind, there are three-and-a-half of them.

    People may think it is a crowded space to be in, but we see it as an opportunity. With the kind of content that is being currently broadcast, we feel there is a lacuna and void for us to fill the gap and exist profitably. The thumb rule in media, and even in TV news in every genre, is that the top three channels can be profitable. Even the fourth player can make money if run and managed efficiently.

     

    Q. ZNL weighed the option of consolidating the English TV news market and even looked at swallowing NewsX. Why did the deal fall through during the due diligence process?
    The buyout would have given us a lead time of at least six months as it is a running channel. But we did not find it a viable proposition.

     

    Q. ZNL cut the commercial time of its flagship Hindi news channel, Zee News, by 30 per cent from April while upping the ad rates by 40 per cent. The move followed the change in positioning of Zee News as it shed trivial news content to differentiate itself. So will the English channel follow the Zee News model of serious news?
    Most definitely. However, I can’t talk about the positioning and other specific details now. We will work out those operational details when we have finalised the launch plan. But from a personal point view, I think there is space for a less opinionated and more research-driven kind of reportage. There is scope for significant differentiation to model upon and we hope that will make an impact in the marketplace.

     

    Q. Flagship channel Zee News is not in the top three even after changing its positioning to a serious Hindi general news channel. Now that you have also reduced the ad time, how long do you think it will take to drive in more viewership?
    The success criteria for a media product should not be the viewership rankings. The business of TV news is primarily about profitability while being true to the identity of the fourth estate. I am sure that in both these counts Zee News channel has significant lead over its nearest competitors.

    However, viewership raking numbers is also important which I believe we should be able to improve in the near future. We have also started rolling out content initiatives. The strategy seems to be working for us at this stage, albeit a bit slower than what we had expected.

     

    Q. Will you also scale back on commercial time for your other six channels?
    There is no such plan. The other channels are not under so much of inventory pressure.

     

    Q. Are you revamping Zee Business and isn’t slowdown in the financial services sector going to affect the Hindi business news channel?
    Zee Business is one channel with which we have never stopped our revamping work. I think that our content team will come out with at least one game changing idea in every 15 days. It is possibly the most dynamic news channel.

    There is undoubtedly a pressure on airtime advertising. But we are doing events and sponsorship programmes to tide over this tight situation. Besides, it is a strong subscription-driven channel.

     

    Q. Akash Bangla, the Bengali infotainment channel where ZNL holds 18 per cent stake, is loss-making and you had to provide for Rs 166.7 million. Will ZNL exit from the JV as it runs a successful channel, 24 Ghanta, in that market?
    Akash Bangla channel and our joint venture for 24 Ghanta are two different arrangements. We made strategic investment in Akash Bangla channel in 2009 and given the current circumstances, we decided to provide for that funding. 24 Ghanta is a strong No. 1 Bengali news channel with strong financial performance as well.

    Bengal, after all, is a news hungry market. The advertising size for TV news is around Rs 1.20 billion, and growing.

     

    Q. Isn’t the Marathi TV news market a sharp contrast?
    Unlike the GEC space, the Marathi news market has not yet not grown as per its potential. There is a lot of news consumption happening in English and Hindi. In fact, the Marathi TV news market is half the size of the Bengali market. The potential, though, is very high and it should catch up to the Bengal market sooner or later. We have Zee 24 Taas and are pushing it aggressively.

     

    Q. Won’t the Andhra market be the toughest for ZNL to crack as it is flooded with news channels?
    While it is the largest TV news market in terms of ad revenue, it is a weird market too. There are many politically motivated channels in that market and are, therefore, not run as typical business outfits. Thus, it is a difficult market, but we do have specific plans for that too.

     

    The advertising size is pegged at Rs 1.40 billion, and growing. Zee 24 Ghantalu has not yet steadied in that market but we hope that our positioning as a non politically aligned channel should work .

     

    Q. How is Zee News UP faring?
    It is the No 1 channel there, though it is a small market with combined ad revenues of around Rs 300 million. However, we are on course with our break-even target.
     

    Covering social issues of the area is important. Being close to Delhi, national news channels are an important part of television viewing in that region. So there is need for content differentiation.

     

    Q. When will ZNL’s new channels turn profitable?
    There are only two of them under the new channels category. We expect them to turnaround next year.

     

    Q. What is the future of TV news channels in India?
    Extremely bright, but for the right players.

     

    Q. What do you mean by right players?
    One thing which had ailed news channels to my mind is that we have consistently converted potential revenue sources into our cost heads. That is one of the first mistakes to be classified and corrected if you want to be the right player in the market. As an example, carriage is one of the largest cost heads for TV news operations while subscription is a miniscule part of that.

     

    Q. Aren‘t the news channels themselves to blame for burdening themselves with such high carriage costs?
    Possibly, I tend to agree with that. However, it is a long discussion that we can have later. Bye!

     

    Q. Just one last related question. Won‘t news channels replace carriage with what can be termed as placement fee in an addressable digital environment?
    I wouldn‘t like to answer this question. However, in general at a philosophical level, repetition of any mistake is an offence.

  • India TV in branding exercise

    MUMBAI: As digitisation becomes a reality in India, news channels have realised that a branding exercise is the need of the hour in order to catch the eye of the consumers. The latest to invest in this practice is Hindi news channel India TV which will be launching its first trade campaign named ‘Bharat se India Tak‘.

    The campaign, which will kick off next week, is conceptualised by Saints and Warriors with the objective of communicating its ability as a channel to “crossover to the right audiences across the length and breadth of the nation, audiences that are worthy target groups for a wide array of national & international brands trying to reach out to the vast and rapidly evolving Indian market.”
    The ‘Bharat se India Tak‘ will run for a month.

    India TV is trying to correct the wrong perception about its brand values. “One of the issues that came up in the conversations within the channel was that the actual reality of the audiences that view India TV is very different from the perception that people
     have. You keep hearing about the perceptions and it is troublesome as it is not what the actual audience measures tell you. These measures tell you that the channel has urban, semi urban and rural audiences. It has in fact very strong audiences in Delhi and Mumbai,” India TV strategist Paritosh Joshi told Indiantelevision.com.

    The campaign draws from the fact that India and Bharat are two words which are usually used to emphasise the rural-urban divide in the country. While India cues genteel, urbane and upwardly mobile, Bharat connotes the rustic and perhaps backward hinterland. Of course, reality is scarcely that simple and beneath the superficial contrasts, there are strong linkages that bind the two together. Through this campaign India TV aims to reinforce that it is one such common denominator.

    The campaign includes digital and print initiatives with trade websites and publications respectively. The first phase of the campaign will go on for a month, after which it will scale up. For now the channel intends to focus on B2B branding, but will also look at a B2C campaign in the long run.

    Recently, Zee News also drove a social media campaign promoting its new philosophy ‘Jitegi Aapki Soch‘. According to Joshi, this trend of news channel investing in branding is here to stay as the environment gets increasingly digitised. “In a digitised India, consumers will have ample choice and perception will matter. I believe a battle of brands will take place in every category as you have to be out there for the consumer to want you. News channels are no different,” he says.

  • Zee News issues Rs 1.5 bn defamation notice to Naveen Jindal

    Zee News issues Rs 1.5 bn defamation notice to Naveen Jindal

    NEW DELHI: Zee News has sent a Rs 1.5 billion defamation notice to industrialist Naveen Jindal, saying that he wrongly accused the news channel of blackmailing and extortion and attempted to deflect attention from his alleged role in the coal allocation scandal.

    In a statement on Saturday, it said: “Zee News has condemned and completely rejected the doctored evidence produced by Jindal. Zee News sees this as a deliberate attempt to malign the trustworthy (news) television network.”

    The news network further stated: “Zee News has granted a three-day time period to Naveen Jindal to withdraw all his unsubstantiated and defamatory allegations, failing which he would face civil and criminal actions initiated by Zee News.”

    It may be recalled that Jindal Steel and Power Limited (JSPL) has also filed a police case against Zee News.

    The Broadcast Editors’ Association (BEA) on Thursday suspended its treasurer and editor of Zee News Sudhir Chaudhary, who features in the Jindal video tapes, following a complaint by Jindal, who is also a Congress member of parliament.

    At a press conference on Thursday, Jindal showed a video recording of meetings with Zee TV executives and claimed this to be proof that they were trying to extort money from him. Jindal said the TV channel told his company’s executives that if they did not spend Rs one billion on advertising on the channel, it would run stories about how Jindal’s firm was allocated coal fields.

    Jindal said the “extortion attempt” was caught on a hidden camera and he released CDs of this footage to reporters. The ‘reverse sting’ was carried out between 13 and 19 September over four meetings in different locations in Delhi.

    But Zee News said that “it has always been the forerunner in exposing Naveen Jindal’s double standard as a politician and an industrialist in Coalgate scam. Zee News clearly understands that it is to suppress the coverage that Zee News was telecasting on Coalgate, that the corporate communications team from Jindal Steel and Power Limited first tried to bribe Samir Ahluwalia with Rs 250 million, which he declined straightway, and later was offered a Rs one billion advertising deal to stop the coverage of Coalgate scam.”

    It has also alleged that attempts by “right thinking media houses including Zee News to bring out the truth in the Rs1,860 billion Coalgate scam are being muzzled by Mr. Naveen Jindal by distorting the truth and defaming those on the righteous path.” It also cited the Comptroller and Auditor General report that has named JSPL as one of the beneficiaries of the allocation that was done bypassing auctions.

    “Zee News has always been in pursuit of seeking the truth in the Coalgate scam, and has had several interactions with Jindal and his officials. We accuse Jindal and JSPL of maligning the name of Zee News since they chose to display an edited/doctored CD where only selected portions were shown. Jindal has a history of unfairly targeting those who dare to confront him with the truth,” the statement said.

    The statement added: “We are of the view that similar false allegations have been made by Naveen Jindal and his officials against Zee News in a police complaint and we see it as subversion of the due process of law. Clearly, we see this as an attempt to prejudice and defame us and to overreach the investigation in this regard and have hence sent a defamation notice to JSPL and Naveen Jindal.”

    The statement goes on to assert that Zee News is undeterred by such diversionary tactics adopted by Jindal and JSPL and would stay focused on unraveling the ultimate truth in the Coalgate scam and have only taken this route to counter the allegations made.

  • Zee News Ltd Q2 net up 18% to Rs 70 mn

    Zee News Ltd Q2 net up 18% to Rs 70 mn

    MUMBAI: Zee News Limited’s (ZNL) consolidated net profit rose 18.2 per cent to Rs 70.2 million in the second quarter ended 30 September from a year earlier on the back of a 39.1 per cent rise in subscription revenues which more than offset a 9.7 per cent fall in its advertising revenue.

    ZNL, which had decided to reduce its advertisement air time by 30 per cent beginning in the first quarter, has seen its advertising revenue come down to Rs 439.2 million in the second quarter from Rs 486.5 million a year earlier.

    The news network’s subscription revenue increased to Rs 222.6 million from Rs 160.1 million a year earlier. In the first quarter, ZNL’s subscription income was Rs 176 million.

    ZNL’s consolidated revenues for the quarter fell 11.6 per cent to Rs 700.3 million from Rs 792.6 million in the year before period. The company’s operating expenditure fell 12.4 per cent during the quarter to Rs 621.7 million from Rs 709.4 million a year earlier.

    Consolidated Ebitda stood at Rs 78.6 million in the second quarter compared with Rs 83.2 million a year earlier.

    The company said it has established a wholly owned subsidiary in the name of 24 Ghantalu News Ltd for housing its Telugu News channel ‘Zee 24 Gantalu’ and has invested initial capital of Rs 0.5 million in the subsidiary.

    Earlier the company had decided to shutter Zee 24 Gantalu citing economic unviability as the reason.

    ZNL MD Punit Goenka said, “The media industry continued to face slowdown issues in the second quarter especially in the months of July and August. ZNL always has had subscription revenue stream supplementing the ad revenues which helps the company counter any slowdown in the advertising industry. However, we expect that the advertising would be quite buoyant in the coming quarters.”

  • Zee News wins the ECI National Media Award on Voters’ Education

    Zee News wins the ECI National Media Award on Voters’ Education

    NEW DELHI: Zee News has won the National Media Award on Voter Education of the Election Commission of India for its outstanding campaign towards creating voters’ awareness in the Assembly elections (January-March) 2012, especially in Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand.

    The Hindi daily ‘Amar Ujala’ has also been selected for a Special Award for its remarkable contribution towards voter education and awareness in the aforementioned elections.

    This follows a decision taken by the Commission and announced during a Media Convention on 23 January 2012 that the Media House with the best campaign on Voter Education and Awareness would be awarded.

    The Award would be presented during the 3rd National Voters’ Day on 25 January 2013 at New Delhi.

    The Commission has now decided to constitute separate awards for electronic and print media for all the forthcoming elections.

  • Broadcasters get breathing space as Tdsat stays Trai’s ad cap rule

    Broadcasters get breathing space as Tdsat stays Trai’s ad cap rule

    MUMBAI: Broadcasters have earned a five-week vacation from the upsetting regulation of limiting ad time on their networks, as Tdsat has stayed the Trai notification till the hearing comes up on 17 July.

    For a while, broadcasters will at least not have their ad revenues hanging by a thread, its future determined by a 12-minute ad cap per hour fixed by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai). Stressed by a slowdown in the ad economy and anxious about the implementation of cable TV digitisation, the least they want to do is cut down on commercial time and take up the troublesome task of upping advertising rates.

    True, none of the broadcasters are willing to obey the Trai order as they feel that the broadcast watchdog is overreaching its powers by regulating TV ad time.

    Still, the Tdsat’s stay order comes as a major source of relief at a time when the least that the media industry wants is more headaches.

    “We got a stay from the Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (Tdsat) today. The hearing is due mid-July,” says Star India chief executive officer Uday Shankar.

    News broadcasters have horrible woes. If there is a way for them to wriggle out of the mess that they have themselves created by coughing out high distribution costs, cutting ad rates amidst competition amongst themselves and living under high staff costs, it is by giving more commercial time to advertisers.

    Hindi TV news, the most fragmented of the lot, dedicates on an average 20-24 minutes of ad time per hour. Even with this abundant supply, news broadcasters find their ad revenues crawling at below 10-per cent growth and their profitability under attack.

    Zee News Ltd (ZNL) chose a different path to tread this year, cutting the commercial time of its flagship Hindi news channel, Zee News, by 30 per cent while upping the ad rates by 40 per cent. However, the ‘Maximum News, Minimum Break‘ journey from 2 April has been a bumpy one.

    “The ratings have not seen much impact. And we have ended up producing more content. Perhaps, this experiment needs more time to yield results. We will wait for a couple of quarters more before we take a call on whether we want to go back to our old route,” says Zee News Ltd chief executive Barun Das.

    Let‘s not forget that Zee News’ slash in ad time of eight minutes for every half-hour slot is still above the ceiling of Trai’s prescription of 12 minutes of commercial time per clock hour. So imagine the misery news broadcasters will be in if they have to swallow Trai‘s medicine!

    In the tangled financial problems that the news broadcasters face, it is the timing of Trai’s regulation that comes under question. News channels need more time to weed out the ad inventory flab that they have created due to economic compulsions, much to the irritation of the TV audiences.

    Says TV Today Network CEO Joy Chakraborthy, “Trai’s so-called radical step would jeopardise the business models of news channels. Less ad time would mean more content costs. Besides, scaling back on ad inventory by 40 per cent (from our average of 20 minutes per hour to 12 minutes) would mean demand outstripping supply and, hence, higher costs. This will discourage small and local advertisers, who form a fair bulk of clients for news channels, to come on board. These steps suggested by Trai should come when the digitisation rollout is complete. We can’t fight on all fronts.”

    The ad time on news channels varies from month to month.TV Today Network, for instance, offered 22 minutes of commercial time per hour in March. This came down to 18 minutes in April.

    News and sports broadcasters consider another regulation by Trai as retrograde at this stage of maturity: the ban on part-screen and drop-down advertisements.

    “We use scrolls on a positive sense. For Olympics, we, for instance, will run scrolls. We earn Rs 120-140 million from the part-screen and drop-down ads,” says Chakraborthy.

    Trai’s ad regulation will also pinch hard the sports broadcasters. According to the broadcast regulator’s prescription, the ads during live broadcast of a sporting event should be only during the breaks in the sporting action.

    A clock hour measurement system, however, does not suit this genre of channels as live content is seasonal and limited to a specific period.

    Entertainment TV networks have also objected against the capping of ad duration on their channels.

    “It looks like Trai is linking digitisation to shrinkage of advertisement space. There is no logic in this and it is very untimely,” says the head of a broadcasting company on condition of anonymity.

    Trai’s control in ad diet is something that TV viewers would, indeed, love to have. Broadcasters, however, feel that the best route to maturity is self-regulation in content and ad inventory management.

    “Trai’s order is ridiculous. It is like putting the camel’s nose in the tent. Every independent player should decide on what course of action to take. Market forces know best how to play the balancing role,” says Times Television Network MD and CEO Sunil Lulla.

  • Zee News Ltd’s Q4 Ebitda stays strong, slips into net loss due to Akash Bangla

    Zee News Ltd’s Q4 Ebitda stays strong, slips into net loss due to Akash Bangla

    MUMBAI: Zee News Ltd (ZNL) has slipped into net loss in the fiscal-fourth quarter due to an old investment made in Akash Bangla, but its Ebitda has stayed healthy and beat forecast expectations.

    ZNL has provided for Rs 166.7 million towards diminution in value of strategic investments and provision for doubtful advance share application money given to Akash Bangla. ZNL holds around 18 per cent stake in Akash Bangla, the Bengali infotainment channel.

    The company has posted a consolidated net loss of Rs 39.51 million for the three-month period ended 31 March 2012 compared to a net profit of Rs 66.49 million a year ago. In the trailing quarter, ZNL’s consolidated net profit stood at Rs 99.7 million (after minority interest), even as its advertising revenue had degrown marginally compared to the year-ago period.

    Ebidta for the quarter rose to Rs 184.1 million from Rs 138.3 million, representing a 33 per cent increase. Margins stood at 21.3 per cent.

    The company’s net sales from operations climbed to Rs 859.81 million for the quarter, an increase of 13.8 per cent over the year-ago period.

    ZNL CEO Barun Das said, “We have come out of the economic slowdown stronger than most. Our focus on ad revenues from non-traditional streams has helped us post a better growth compared to the industry which is expected to stay flat or show early single digit growth.

    ZNL’s advertising revenue stood at Rs 562.9 million, up 0.4 per cent YoY. Subscription revenue grew 8.1 per cent QoQ to Rs 208.3 million on better collections by Media Pro.

    “The real growth in subscription revenues was higher as they were booked net of expenses which were necessitated due to formation of Media Pro, which pays subscription revenues to Zee net of expenses,” ZNL said.

    The company reported fourth quarter consolidated revenues of Rs 863.6 million, an increase of Rs 104.42 million over the earlier year. Revenue from other sales and services was at Rs 92 million. This mostly includes the value of inventory of programmes and films of Zee Tamil transferred to Zee Entertainment.

    The company’s total expenses for the quarter under review rose 9.4 per cent to Rs 679.5 million as against Rs 620.9 million a year ago.

    Cost of operations went up from Rs 159.85 million to Rs 200.8 million even as employee benefits cost remained flat at Rs 176.42 million compared to Rs 174.14 million in the corresponding quarter of the same fiscal.

    The revenues for Zee News, Zee Business, Zee 24 Taas, Zee Punjabi, and 24 Ghanta grew at 15.5 per cent for the quarter to Rs 822.3 million from Rs 711.8 million, with Ebidta margins of 28.1 per cent.

    The new business loss for the quarter came down to Rs 47 million for the last quarter from the loss of Rs 108.2 million in the same period last year due to discontinuance of Zee Tamil.

    Subsequent to discontinuance of Zee Tamil, the company has transferred part of inventory of programmes and films related the channel to Zeel of Rs 198.47 million for FY’12.

    Full fiscal performance

    ZNL has posted consolidated full-fiscal revenue of Rs 3072.2 million, an increase of 11 per cent over the earlier year.

    Advertising revenue grew 2.2 per cent to Rs 2 billion during the fiscal while subscription revenue rose just one per cent to Rs 742.7 million.

    Total expenses rose 8.3 per cent to Rs 2.54 billion on account of increase in cost of good & operations and employee cost increasing 19.5 and 7.5 per cent to Rs 703.7 and Rs 744.8 million respectively.

    Commenting on the results, Das said: “Our Ebidta has stayed strong. We continue to be committed to long term growth in all aspects of business. Being on a healthy growth path post demerger of GECs, a series of strategic initiatives are on the cards which will be implemented in due course of time.”

  • News channels ask Trai to sort out carriage before capping ad time

    News channels ask Trai to sort out carriage before capping ad time

    MUMBAI: The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India’s ad review policy will have a devastating impact on the television news industry which is already going through a rough patch due to muted revenue growth and rise in overall costs, the News Broadcasters Association has said.

    The NBA is of the opinion that there should no restriction on the duration of ads that a channel can air in between a show, contending that ad revenue continues to be a key revenue source for news broadcasters and any curtailment in that revenue stream will have adverse impact on their business models.

    The body also said that it was in favour of “self-regulation” on ad time rather than being regulated externally.

    The association has warned that Trai’s regulation will result in closure of small news channels and loss of jobs on a mass scale and has requested it to reconsider the issue in the larger interests of the news broadcast industry.

    While lauding Trai’s efforts for facilitating the process of rolling out digitisation of cable networks in the country, the NBA said that the authority should first try to address more serious issues like carriage fees and cap on channels pricing, which have been the bane of the news television industry.

    The NBA also criticised Trai for over reaching its authority by attempting to regulate TV ads by asserting that the issue is beyond its scope and authority. It also wondered how Trai could forget its own submission to the Tdsat that it had no role in advertising minutage rules.

    The news broadcasters’ body also opinionated that there is inherent “self-correcting” mechanism which is efficient enough to keep a check on transgression’s by news broadcasters. Furthermore, it stated that in News Broadcasting Standards Authority it had a robust mechanism to deal with the issue, should the self correcting mechanism fail to address grievances.

    A classic example of the “self-correcting” mechanism is the recent move by Zee News Ltd. to slash its ad air time by 30 per cent while increasing the ad rates by 40 per cent as part of its ‘Maximum News, Minimum Break‘ positioning.

    The NBA also highlighted the fact that the Trai’s ad review does not specify the bifurcation between time for commercial advertisements and self promotion.

    “Television viewing is a function of rating, which is a function of consumer viewing experience. If the advertisements are more than what is preferred by consumers, the ratings will drop and the channel will have to reduce its advertising. This “self-correcting” mechanism ensures that Trai or anyone’s intervention in regulating advertisements is unnecessary,” NBA secretary general Annie Joseph said in response to Trai’s consultation paper on the subject.

    It added, “The NBA has a robust mechanism – News Broadcasting Standards Authority – and we have not received any specific complaints so far against one or more channels, for excessive advertising.”

    The NBA also questioned the regulatory body if the government was willing to offer subsidies to news broadcasters should the consumers be unwilling to pay more for ad-free viewing. “If consumers are not willing to pay more, will the government, in public interest, offer subsidies/tax benefits in lieu thereof to make the business model economically viable for news channels,” Joseph questioned.

    The news body also pointed out that no less than Supreme Court had ruled in favour of newspapers when the government had tried to curtail advertisement space.

    “The mere fact that the newspapers would be “exposed” to “financial loss” was held by the Supreme Court to be an infringement of right to freedom of speech and expression under Article 19 (1) (a),” NBA further added.

    “The importance of advertising revenue for the electronic media (especially news channels) is exactly the same, if not even more grave, as that for print. The restriction sought to be placed upon the “advertising airtime” is exactly in pari materia with the restrictions on “advertisement space” considered by the Supreme Court in the foregoing cases.”

    The notion that ads are a nuisance is incorrect, the NBA said adding that advertisements play a significant role in informing and educating the public about products and services which can enhance their lives. Any reduction in ad inventory will also result in scarcity of FCT which in turn would result in rise in ad cost and would make it out of reach for small and medium enterprises.