Foxtel was struggling to survive before COVID-19 but the lack of sport is speeding up its demise
By Andrew Robertson
Thanks to the pandemic, Foxtel's biggest drawcard, sport, is gone.
With the AFL, NRL and other leading sports all shuttered, there's nothing to show.
"They always had a problem in the summer, because they didn't have good sports coverage in the summer," Mr Cox saidLong-time media and telco analyst Paul Budde believes it's a potentially terminal issue for Foxtel.
He says within three years, Foxtel will have to completely change its business model.
The biggest immediate threat comes from Foxtel's majority shareholder, News Corporation, which owns 65 per cent. Telstra owns the other 35 per cent.
The two owners recently kicked in nearly $900 million to keep Foxtel afloat, with $700 million coming from News Corp.
So, what may decide Foxtel's ultimate fate is how long Rupert Murdoch is willing to keep bailing it out.
A decision Mr Cox says will come in the next two years.
"They have to make the decision," he said.
"Do they cut and run and lose the billion dollars plus they've got invested in the business, or do they stay in there and keep on putting hundreds of millions in there, if not another billion dollars for its survival?"
In the meantime, Foxtel is sweating on the NRL leading the sporting world back onto the field, and viewers back to their screens.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-05...ore-covid-19-lack-of-sport-more-pain/12217094
Probably more for the Media Watch forum, if so, mods...
By Andrew Robertson
Thanks to the pandemic, Foxtel's biggest drawcard, sport, is gone.
With the AFL, NRL and other leading sports all shuttered, there's nothing to show.
"They always had a problem in the summer, because they didn't have good sports coverage in the summer," Mr Cox saidLong-time media and telco analyst Paul Budde believes it's a potentially terminal issue for Foxtel.
He says within three years, Foxtel will have to completely change its business model.
The biggest immediate threat comes from Foxtel's majority shareholder, News Corporation, which owns 65 per cent. Telstra owns the other 35 per cent.
The two owners recently kicked in nearly $900 million to keep Foxtel afloat, with $700 million coming from News Corp.
So, what may decide Foxtel's ultimate fate is how long Rupert Murdoch is willing to keep bailing it out.
A decision Mr Cox says will come in the next two years.
"They have to make the decision," he said.
"Do they cut and run and lose the billion dollars plus they've got invested in the business, or do they stay in there and keep on putting hundreds of millions in there, if not another billion dollars for its survival?"
In the meantime, Foxtel is sweating on the NRL leading the sporting world back onto the field, and viewers back to their screens.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-05...ore-covid-19-lack-of-sport-more-pain/12217094
Probably more for the Media Watch forum, if so, mods...