
Direct-to-consumer (D2C) TV businesses -- new premium
streaming TV platforms -- have driven public TV companies stock prices up by nearly 167% since November. But one research firm now believes some of this is over the top.
Macquarie Research
says its downgrading Discovery Inc and ViacomCBS to underperform. Both companies recently launched new D2C consumer businesses: discovery+ and Paramount+, respectively.
Senior analysts Tim
Nollan and Sean Kumar write there is a tradeoff with many of these businesses -- trading lower profit-margin businesses (D2C) for high-margin businesses (linear TV).
“We expect D2C on
balance to restore low- to mid-single digit revenue growth overall. But this will likely lead to lower operating margins through 2024 for some, as the cost of content investment weighs. D2C operations
are likely lower margin businesses even over the long period.”
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They add: “We are downgrading [Discovery and ViacomCBS] from neutral to underperform, both purely on valuation
grounds. Both companies have made bold moves in D2C and been rewarded with outsized share price moves.”
The future of linear TV doesn’t look good: “Flat at best, and more
likely will deteriorate ... given the investments needed in D2C now, we do not expect meaningful earnings growth to resume until 2023.”
Deterioration comes from traditional pay TV
subscribers, which were down another eye-popping 7.5% in the fourth quarter. Long-term, this trends means declining affiliate fees from 2022 onward.
In addition, it also means flat advertising
revenues, at best “even with the promise of advanced TV advertising efforts sustaining pricing as ratings continue to fall.”
Macquarie estimates cable affiliate revenues at
zero growth, then dropping after 2022 by 1% per year. On the plus side, it sees broadcast retransmission revenue at 10% growth through 2022. It hasn’t yet factored in big sports programming from
the NFL. The league is in the process of long-term renewal with TV networks.
They also believe content-licensing revenues could slow as TV companies consider retaining programming for their
own use on premium streamers.