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SVOD subs overtake pay TV in the UK, Ofcom reports
Subscriptions to OTT TV services Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and Now TV have overtaken traditional pay TV services in the UK, according to figures compiled by media and telecom regulator Ofcom.
According to Ofcom’s latest Media Nations report, which covers major trends in UK television, pay TV revenues also declined last year after a period of sustained growth, although pay TV still generates far greater revenue in total – £6.4 billion against £895 million for OTT TV services.
The report also found that spending by UK broadcasters with public service remits – namely, the BBC, ITV,Channel 4 and Channel 5 – on new UK-made television programmes fell to a 20-year low last year.
According to the Media Nations report, subscriptions to the leading OTT services – Netflix, Amazon and Sky’s Now TV – reached 15.4 million in the first quarter of this year, exceeding the total for pay TV – 15.1 million – for the first time.
However, 71% of those with an SVOD subscription also took a traditional pay TV service in Q1 2018, down only one percentage point on the figure for Q1 2017. The report found that ‘cord shaving’ is more prevalent than cord-cutting, with 36% of SVOD subscribers cutting down their pay TV spend, compared with 14% who have cut the cord altogether.
Pay TV revenues slipped by 2.7% after years of growth last year, while spending on streaming subscriptions grew by 28%. Televsion advertising income dropped by 7% to £3.9 billion.
The Ofcom report found that spending by the UK’s four main broadcasters on UK-made programming fell to a record low of £2.5 billion last year, 28% less than the 2004 peak of £3.4 billion. Genres including children’s programming – down 18% last year – UK comedy – down 5% since 2016, and first-run drama – down 7%, were disproportionally hit.
Increased funding from third parties for programmes made by the BBC, Channel 4 and Channel 5 grew to £338 million – up from £147 million 10 years ago – to partly mitigate the decline. This included co-production funding, deficit funding and tax credits.
The Ofcom report also found that the amount of time spent by UK viewers watching broadcast television on the TV set has continued to decline and, in 2017, stood at an average of 3 hours 22 minutes a day, down nine minutes on 2016, and 38 minutes since 2012.
Among children and viewers aged 16-34, the decline was steeper, leading to the over-65s watching four times as much broadcast television as children in 2017.
Total daily viewing time across all devices stands at five hours one minute, of which three hours 33 minutes or 71% was of broadcast content, and one hour 28 minutes of non-broadcast content. Among 16 to 34-year-olds, total daily viewing time in 2017 was four hours 48 minutes, of which only two hours 11 minutes or 46% was of broadcast content, while just under an hour per day was spent watching content on YouTube.
Despite the decline in broadcast viewing, the Ofcom report found that confidence in public service broadcasting remains high. Of those who watch public service channels, 75% say they are satisfied, and 84% of people considered trusted news to be the most important feature of their output.
“Today’s research finds that what we watch and how we watch it are changing rapidly, which has profound implications for UK television,” said Ofcom CEO Sharon White.
“We have seen a decline in revenues for pay TV, a fall in spending on new programmes by our public service broadcasters, and the growth of global video streaming giants. These challenges cannot be underestimated. But UK broadcasters have a history of adapting tochange. By making the best British programmes and working together to reachpeople who are turning away from TV, our broadcasters can compete in the digital age.”