The
battle for dominance in the streaming wars continues to heat up with AT&T’s
WarnerMedia announcing that it will be doubling its commissioning to focus on
streaming while diverting resources away from cable networks.
In Q4 2019, just over one quarter
of the WarnerMedia’s commissioning activity came from its cable networks, down
from over 90% in Q4 2018.
This rapid change illustrates the
relegation of Warner’s cable networks in preference to streaming services.
Streaming has also grown from 7% of commissions in Q4 2018 to 73% in Q4 2019.
HBO Max will be unveiled in the US market this May with an international rollout expected in 2021, according to a WarnerMedia press statement. Warner Media is targeting 75 to 90 million subscribers by 2025, including 25 to 40 million from outside the US. The company expects to spend about US$4 billion building HBO Max over the next three years.
Overall, WarnerMedia has more than doubled the
number of commissions in Q4 2019 (63 titles) as it did when compared to Q4 2018
(29 titles). WarnerMedia
is the third largest commissioner of new titles among US cable groups, behind
only Discovery and Viacom CBS, and second in the US scripted space.
In
Asia, WarnerMedia’s OTT app and service HBO Go is currently available in the
Philippines, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia and Vietnam.