
As competitors ramp up their
advertising video-on-demand (AVOD) options for their streaming/digital platforms, growing connected TV inventory is expected to “outpace demand near term,” says Bernstein Research.
This will result in continued downward pricing “adding deflationary pressure on eCPM [effective cost per thousand pricing] in the foreseeable future,” writes Laurent Yoon,
media analyst for Bernstein Research.
According to estimates from eMarketer data and Bernstein analysis, current CPMs (cost per thousand viewer prices) show that Netflix
is at a $48 CPM, with Disney+ at $46, Peacock at $40 and Hulu coming in at $25.
Near term, Bernstein projects that the new low-cost consumer advertising options of
streaming platforms will face challenges -- including those of Netflix and Disney+.
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The long-term picture looks better, however -- especially for Netflix, says Yoon,
because it has the highest subscriber engagement (viewing) which means more ad revenue for its year-and-a-half-old advertising option.
Amazon Prime Video's decision
earlier this year to start up a Prime Video advertising-option caused some alarm among media executives about a massive decline in CPMs.
Initial reports cited Amazon's
starting CPM price in the mid- to-low $30 range. Bernstein now believes that it will be closer to $20.
Amazon, along with its potential 157 million Prime monthly
subscribers (where they have access to the Prime Video streamer) is expected to continue to flood the market with new streaming advertising and put significant pressure on CPMs.
Due to its default option for Prime Video where subscribers automatically switch to AVOD tier is expected to result in 115 million monthly users -- around 75% of overall Prime
subscribers.
One positive side, according to Bernstein, “Amazon’s AVOD minutes will be constrained by lower engagement per user, with the average user
consuming 19 minutes/day compared to Netflix’s 50 minutes.”