Analysis: Pay-TV penetration declines worldwide
November 18, 2021
As fibre adoption accelerates globally and consumers increasingly turn to alternative forms of entertainment online, multichannel operators, particularly telcos, are beginning to reconsider their video strategies, according to analysts at Kagan, a media research group within S&P Global Market Intelligence.
In a blog post, they note that multichannel households have continued to grow globally in 2021 and are expected to reach a total of 1.10 billion by year-end for a weak 0.5 per cent year-over-year increase, as subscriber gains in emerging markets barely make up for accelerated cord cutting in North America, Western Europe and advanced markets in Asia-Pacific.
However, a growing number of operators are choosing to shut down traditional services and migrate customers to own or third-party virtual multichannel or other streaming services. Multichannel penetration of TV households is therefore expected to decline to 58.8 per cent by end-2021 after peaking at 60.6 per cent in 2018, continuing to decline to 56.6 per cent by 2025.
Despite the expected multichannel penetration decline worldwide, the global number of pay-TV subscribers will continue to grow in the next five to 10 years, with all regions except North America experiencing growth. Kagan forecasts that nearly 1.15 billion homes worldwide will have a pay-TV subscription by the end of 2025.
Although cable remains the largest pay TV platform on a global scale, accounting for slightly over half of the total multichannel homes in 2021, its market share and the number of subscribers are expected to continue declining in the next five years, with subscriber losses concentrated in North America, Western Europe and Asia.
In 2020, IPTV overtook DTH to become the second-largest multichannel platform worldwide, with an estimated 284.1 million subscribers at the year’s end. IPTV is forecast to grow globally as well as in every region except North America, accounting for 28.9 per cent of global pay-TV homes by 2025. The DTH segment, however, is modelled to stagnate on the global scale, declining in the Americas and Western Europe.
Mainland China, India and the US have remained the largest multichannel markets by far, which should collectively claim 56.8 per cent of the global subscriber total by the end of 2021. China and India alone claim just over half of the global market.
The global multichannel economy is modelled to generate $191.18 billion (€168.62bn) in video service revenues by the end of 2021, representing a 3.5 per cent year-over-year decline compared to 2020, with losses exacerbated by declining annual video service revenues per user in North America. This trend is expected to continue as global video service revenues decline at a negative 2.4 per cent CAGR from 2020 to 2025 due to rapid pay-TV household losses in the US and Canada. Video service revenues are modelled to continue growing in other global regions, with Eastern Europe posting the highest CAGR in that time period at 3.9 per cent.