What Cord Cutting? Cable Sector Hiked TV Prices 40% In Last Five Years

from the blind-deaf-and-dumb dept

We’ve noted time and time again that the cable and broadcast industry could compete with cord cutting by lowering prices, it just chooses not to. Even with last quarter seeing the biggest quarterly defection by paying subscribers ever recorded, time and time again you’ll see sector sycophants proclaim that cord cutting either doesn’t exist, or has been violently over-hyped and isn’t worth taking seriously. In fact, most sector executives still believe that the shift away from traditional cable will magically end once Millennials start procreating (protip: it won’t).

As such, they’ve continued to raise cable TV rates at an absurd rate in the belief that they can keep milking the legacy cable TV cash cow in perpetuity. And while broadcasters certainly take the lion’s share of the blame for raising the cost of programming, you’d be hard pressed to find a cable TV provider that isn’t making things worse by also saddling consumers with misleading fees for nothing and soaring cable box, modem, and other hardware rental costs.

The end result is users paying 40% more for cable TV than they did just five years ago. In fact the average cable bill is now $103.10 per month, an increase of 4% in the past year. And while the cable sector is quick to proclaim that this just reflects the “increased value” of cable TV, the reality is that most cable ops are trimming back overall channels to try and offset the bloated, soaring cost of sports programming.

While it remains true that the vast majority still subscribe to cable TV and cord cutting is a slow trickling phenomenon, last quarter saw 800,000 pay TV customers leave for cheaper pastures. And things are actually a little worse than that when you remember that cable TV subscriber totals aren’t scaling with a rebounded housing market. In other words, millions of people are not reconnecting cable after they move:

“About 82% of households that use a TV currently subscribe to a pay-TV service. This is down from where it was five years ago, and similar to the penetration level eleven years ago,” said Bruce Leichtman, president and principal analyst for Leichtman Research Group, Inc. “The rates of those exiting the category, or intending to leave, are actually similar to recent years. The decline in penetration is also due to a lack of those who are coming into the category, and the industry not keeping pace with movers and related rental housing growth.”

A different study this week predicted that TV providers could lose nearly $1 billion in revenue as another 800,000 customers cut the cord over the next 12 months:

The study, which is based on an online survey of 1,119 U.S. customers, estimates that pay-TV providers lose about $1,248 per cord-cutter annually. That?s because the average cord-cutter saves $104 a month?about 56% of their bill–from dropping cable TV…?The consumer is discovering they don?t need the mean, evil cable company to get the content that they want, and they can get it for a better deal,? said Steve Beck, managing partner at cg42. A $1 billion loss of revenue is small for the entire pay TV industry, but it is a warning sign.

And it’s a warning sign that’s going to continue to be ignored by the cable and broadcasting industry. It’s abundantly clear that beyond lip service to “innovation,” the cable sector doesn’t plan to do the one thing that would stop cord cutting dead in its tracks: lower rates. Instead, knowing full well they hold a monopoly over the broadband last mile, they’ve decided to raise rates on broadband via usage caps and overage fees. Should customers continue to cut the cord, skyrocketing broadband usage surcharges will simply let them grab their expected pound of flesh in a different way.

Filed Under: , ,

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “What Cord Cutting? Cable Sector Hiked TV Prices 40% In Last Five Years”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
34 Comments
JBDragon (profile) says:

I cut the cord about 6 years ago after paying for cable for 18 years. I couldn’t justify it anymore. Currently I have a basic bundle which includes HBO because that was cheaper then Internet ONLY. I got a cheap TV Cable box I haven’t hooked up because I’m still using my antenna. I get my HBO using the HBO Now App, though Comcast doesn’t allow it to work on TIVO so I have to use it on the ROKU or AppleTV. Pretty lame of them. So I pay about $66 a month.

Anonymous Coward says:

Not just cable providers.

Out here in Phoenix our electric utility provider has increased the rates to the point that rooftop solar is economically viable. We have companies leasing and selling panel systems now. When faced with lower revenues the utility lobbied for a connection fee using the logic that solar customers unfairly benefit when there is no sun. The language of the change spurred a new work around. We are seeing battery packs that charge at night during non-peak times to power the house during the day.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

If it is one of the big ISP’s I would not be surprised to see within six months suddenly that $37 discount become $60 in extra fees because they conveniently forgot to tell you about it being a limited time deal.

That is what they tried to pull on me. A double speed increase, but when i pressed for details they finally relented and let me know that their amazing price was only for three months and required one of their most expensive TV packages. If I signed on it would have been a high sticker shock.

Anonymous Coward says:

They are darn desperate for sure. I just got a call the other day from Comcast offering me to double my internet speed for only an introductory price of $30 more than I am paying now per month! Of course no mention of the final price and it also required a full cable subscription with a full movie package subscription. So yah…no way would I pay that.

Ninja (profile) says:

A $1 billion loss of revenue is small for the entire pay TV industry

It’s like that small bleeding that won’t stop and slowly increases everyday. Once they realize it’s bad it will be in full blown hemorrhaging and too late to fix. Which is why broadband is in serious risk since the same content producers/deliverers are the same company. If the Govt doesn’t act the future will be dark to the internet users in the US.

It’s about time ISPs are forbidden from offering anything other than connectivity.

DigDuggery says:

Re: Re:

Force breakups between content providers and content delivery.
Make all infrastructure common-carrier.
Disallow “limits” on any of the common-carrier infrastructure, including cell towers.
Mandate “minimum” data rate plans, rather than “up-to” data rate plans.
Advertised rate is the absolute minimum you will get, 60 * 60 * 24 x 7 * 365.25 a year. Prorate when outages occur.
No overages allowed, ever.

TheResidentSkeptic says:

And the Death Spiral Begins...

The Strategy of raising rates to meet wall street revenue growth targets will rapidly reach a tipping point (read that: sheer cliff) – using the formula of

(target revenue / # subscribers) = monthly bill

will reach a point where no remaining subscribers can afford it. That will be fun to watch.

Kal Zekdor (profile) says:

Re: Re: And the Death Spiral Begins...

No, you’re fairly correct on the first one. As the number of subscribers approaches zero, the monthly bill required to maintain revenue approaches infinity.

As the cost of service increases, they lose subscribers, which increases the cost of service, which loses subscribers, et cetera ad nauseam. It’s a self-reinforcing cycle, and if they don’t do something about it right now (such as accepting lower revenue rates, or improving customer experience) they have no chance of avoiding the forthcoming point of criticality which starts the runaway chain-reaction.

rdking647 (profile) says:

i cut the cord in may. I had cable internet and phone thru time warner. every couple of months my bill would suddenly jump and i would have to spend 45 minutes on the phone with them until they agrred to lower my bill back to where it was. then 2 months later it would jump again. finally i said im done with this crap. dropped tv and phone and lowered my bill from $200 to $95 (for 200 mb internet)

i used HBO Go for game of thrones and cancelled it 15 minutes after the season ended. I use netflix and amazon prime for everything else along with an HD antenna..

the cable companies can go to hell

AnonCow says:

Textbook

How does a monopoly respond to customer defections? Raise prices.

How does a monopoly respond to new technology? Legislate against it.

The only reason for a monopoly is if a service would not be provided by the market due to the high cost. That is not the case today, so why does cable television/broadband remain a monopoly in most US markets?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Ahh another victim of the entire agreement clause. A lovely clause built into many large company contracts that basically says the sales rep can lie to your face because what you sign is the actual agreement. So unless that one year price fix was specifically written in the contract you signed it meant nothing. Not sure if your agreement has it but chances are it does.

My favorite encounter with this was with an alarm company (or was it pest control? I forget). They promised a similar price fix and no ETF if I broke the contract within a month (we were in a cellular dead zone and they could not guarantee their alarm system would actually work until it was installed and tested). So I told him to write it on the contract. He said he could not, but he had a separate official looking paper he wrote on. I told him to reference that in the contract and sign the separate document. He would not he said it was just as binding, even if he didn’t sign it because that is what he promised. I showed him the entire agreement clause. He shrugged and left. I went with a different company.

Anonymous Coward says:

Not just cost savings

I suppose that you’d call me a Millennial… and guess what, I have kids. My kids went for several years before they were somewhere that had ‘Cable TV’. They we’re thrilled for about 7 whole minutes… they the yelling started.
Neither of them knew what a commercial was, so they yelled at each other for changing the channel… then my wife and I tried our best to explain what was going on, but they kids just wouldn’t accept it (they even, thought we we’re trying to trick them into watching something else)
Then they kids realized that they couldn’t pause whatever they were watching (“Daaaaaaaad! the remote is broken!”).
But the part they hated the most was not being able to start whatever show they wanted when they wanted. They didn’t want to watch any of the ‘On-Demand’ shows offered by Xfinity, they wanted something else…

So, even if Cable TV in my area cost half of what I was paying for Netflix + Hulu(and Add-ons) and Crunchroll, we wouldn’t want it.

Sorry Cable, even if you take cost out of the equation, you still don’t compete.

Whatever says:

MIssed problem

Good story, except you failed to do the obvious, which is look into WHY the prices have gone up. They aren’t raising them randomly.

The price increases represent almost exclusively increased fees paid to the various services and channels they provide. Huge increases in costs for everything from CNN to over the air channels is a huge issue.

it’s pretty easy to figure out: The cable companies haven’t grown their bottom lines by 40% (or more, as in theory any increase for a profitable company would go directly to the bottom line). Rather, they end up paying out the increases.

Cable companies are actually a bit of the victim in this situation – and they pass that pain on to consumers. It’s not the cable companies milking the golden cow to death, it’s the content providers making it too expensive for people to buy the content.

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...