
ViacomCBS is forecasting
more than $7 billion in annual revenue globally across its streaming services by the end of 2024, CEO Bob Bakish said during the company’s annual shareholders meeting Tuesday.
The
forecast includes targeting 65 to 75 million paid subscribers and 100 million to 120 million average monthly active users (MAUs) for free, ad-supported Pluto TV, he said, per The Hollywood
Reporter.
In its earnings call earlier this month, ViacomCBS reported adding 6 million streaming subscribers across its new Paramount+ and other paid services during this year’s
first quarter, to reach 36 million subscribers globally.
It also reported that Pluto TV’s MAUs rose 15% versus Q4 2020, to 49.5 million.
The CEO pointed to the diversified
content of the new Paramount+ streamer — which offers both live sports and news programming — as a key competitive differentiator.
He also stressed that ViacomCBS is one of the few
companies that has all three of the keys to succeeding in streaming: an extensive library and original content production capabilities; broad distribution; and the financial wherewithal to invest in
significant amounts of new content.
The company expects to exceed the cost reductions it forecast when Viacom and CBS merged in December 2019, according to Bakish.
In addition to $350
million in savings last year, it is on track to realize $800 million in “annualized run-rate merger-related cost synergies by year-end 2022, before consideration of one-time costs to achieve
them,” he said.