Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

More Canadians Scrapping Cable Packages Or Never Signing Up: Report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Apr, 2015 11:50 AM
    TORONTO — More Canadians are choosing to cancel their cable TV and satellite packages and a new report suggests there's no sign of the migration slowing down.
     
    The Convergence Consulting Group says about 95,000 fewer households had a cable TV or satellite subscription at the end of 2014, compared with 2013, as the number of viewers who have decided to forgo traditional TV services grew sharply.
     
    By those estimates, more than 21 per cent of Canadian households or 3.09 million homes did not have a cable TV or satellite TV subscription at the end of last year.
     
    "These are very strong drops in TV," said Brahm Eiley, president of Convergence Consulting, a Toronto-based firm that collects extensive data on the North American cable and phone industries.
     
    "It's a very big deal in Canada. Everybody talked about this before, but if you go back a couple years ... we had been adding TV subscribers."
     
    Growth in the Canadian TV market was steady from 2007 to 2011, with annual subscriber additions averaging about 220,000 households, Eiley said.
     
    But in 2013, a change in direction started to emerge, with the number of TV subscriptions falling by 13,000.
     
    This year, Eiley expects the industry will lose another 97,000, as the shift away from paying for traditional TV services continues at a stronger clip.
     
    Several factors are at work in the decline, Eiley suggested. Some younger households never signed up for TV services, which pulls down net subscriber numbers, while more households who once paid for cable are putting their cash towards video streaming services like Netflix instead.
     
    The report estimates Netflix subscribers grew to 3.9 million last year in Canada, an increase from three million in 2013.
     
    The big telecoms have been fighting back, with competing services like Shomi from Rogers and Shaw, and CraveTV from Bell and its partners, including Telus, Bell Aliant and Eastlink.
     
    "Netflix until recently was the only subscription option available to Canadians without a linear TV subscription," Eiley said.
     
    "We expect there will be more alternatives available to Canadians in the years to come."
     
    The study also found more Canadians are becoming comfortable watching content through other Internet platforms, whether it's through the web platforms of TV channels like CTV and CBC, or illegal downloads through torrent websites.
     
    Eiley said it's surprising how quickly Canadians have adopted the limited number of alternatives to traditional TV, especially considering that U.S. viewers have been slower on the take-up despite a wider array of streaming video options.
     
    Most recently both HBO and U.S. network CBS launched "over-the-top" streaming video packages, which mean they buck the cable operators with a direct-to-consumer subscription model.
     
    "Now that the American programmers are more comfortable going over-the-top themselves, it will be very interesting to see what happens in terms of what they do here in Canada," he said.
     
    "If things go well in the States, it will be very interesting to see what happens here in future contract negotiations between programmers and access providers (cable and satellite companies)."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Say One Dead After 'Suspicious' Richmond House Fire

    Police Say One Dead After 'Suspicious' Richmond House Fire
    Firefighters responded to the blaze at about 2 a.m. Monday (in the 10,000 block of Cornerbrook Crescent). Police say the cause of the fire is not yet known but officers are treating it as suspicious.

    Police Say One Dead After 'Suspicious' Richmond House Fire

    Fans And Foes Of Indian Prime Minister Modi Await Three-day Visit To Canada

    Fans And Foes Of Indian Prime Minister Modi Await Three-day Visit To Canada
    Balpreet Singh, spokesman for the World Sikh Organization of Canada, said the group is calling on Modi to address escalating attacks on minorities including Christians and Muslims in India. The group also wants the two governments to address attempts to marginalize Canadian Sikhs as extremists and denial of visas for Sikhs in Canada

    Fans And Foes Of Indian Prime Minister Modi Await Three-day Visit To Canada

    Cleanup Efforts Continue Sunday On Vancouver Oil Spill

    Cleanup Efforts Continue Sunday On Vancouver Oil Spill
    VANCOUVER — Efforts were progressing Sunday to remove the remaining globs of oil that spilled into Vancouver's English Bay last week as the Coast Guard continued to answer criticism of how it responded to the situation.

    Cleanup Efforts Continue Sunday On Vancouver Oil Spill

    John Koopmans Found Guilty Of Second-degree Murder In Triple Shooting

    John Koopmans Found Guilty Of Second-degree Murder In Triple Shooting
    PENTICTON, B.C. — A majority of the 12 jurors who on Saturday convicted John Ike Koopmans of two counts of second-degree murder believe he should serve consecutive prison sentences of at least 15 years.

    John Koopmans Found Guilty Of Second-degree Murder In Triple Shooting

    Beaches Focus Of Vancouver Spill Cleanup After Fuel Removed From Water

    Beaches Focus Of Vancouver Spill Cleanup After Fuel Removed From Water
    VANCOUVER — Crews shifted focus on Saturday to cleaning the shoreline after the toxic spill in Vancouver's English Bay, as questions continued about whether the city's shuttered coast guard station could have meant a speedier response.

    Beaches Focus Of Vancouver Spill Cleanup After Fuel Removed From Water

    B.C. Treaty Process Too Slow, But What's Next For Governments, First Nations?

    B.C. Treaty Process Too Slow, But What's Next For Governments, First Nations?
    VICTORIA — There is easy agreement between First Nations and the British Columbia and federal governments that treaty negotiations are languishing, 

    B.C. Treaty Process Too Slow, But What's Next For Governments, First Nations?