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Satellite TV orbits closer to cable:
The
number of cable TV subscriptions will be lower in 2002 than
the year before, ending nine straight years of growth, the
Federal Communications Commission predicted in a recent report.
A worsening economic climate and lower consumer spending
contributed to what "may
be the first year in which the industry as a whole has had a net loss of subscribers," the
FCC said in its "Ninth Annual Report on Video Competition."
A
percentage of customers leaving cable companies are turning
to satellite TV providers, such as DirecTV, which grew at
a "significantly higher (rate) than cable subscriber
growth," the FCC said. The number of people subscribing
to satellite TV companies increased from 19.3 million to
21.1 million, a 9 percent jump, during the first half of
2002, the report showed.
The
number of cable TV subscribers, on the other hand, increased
from 68.6 million to 68.8 million households, a growth rate
that's "basically flat" when compared with the
same time period in 2001, the FCC said.
The
findings should give the cable TV industry more incentive
to make 2003 the year to "reposition itself and win
back the subscribers it's lost" by adding perks, such
as bundling broadband Web services, that satellite providers
can't or have yet to offer, said Lydia Loizides, a senior
analyst at Jupiter Research.
"We're
coming off a year where cable companies have been hit really
hard, both from the landscape of their subscribers and Wall
Street," she said. "Many are struggling to show
profitability while shrinking net subscriber adds."
Comcast,
the nation's largest cable TV company, declined to comment
on the FCC report.
A
spokesman for The National Cable & Telecommunications
Association, the trade group that speaks on behalf of the
cable TV industry, said he "won't dispute the FCC's
findings," although most cable operators won't report
their final 2002 figures until next month. Ben Charney -
CNET NEWS.com
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