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Netflix tops Apple in US online movies

June 4, 2012

Recent findings from analytics provider IHS suggest that riding a tidal wave of growth for subscription video on demand (SVoD) has enabled Netflix in 2011 to surge past Apple to become the largest US online movie service in revenue terms.

The IHS Screen Digest Broadband Media Market Insight Report suggests that Netflix’s share of US online movie revenue soared to 44 per cent in 2011, up from less than 1 per cent in 2010. This caused the company to rise to first place in 2011. Meanwhile, Apple’s share of total revenue declined to 32.3 per cent last year, down from a 60.8 per cent in 2010, despite enjoying strong revenue growth.

“2011 marked a sea change in the online movies business that saw the balance of consumer spending shift from a DVD-like transactional model to more TV-like subscription approach,” said Dan Cryan, research director for digital media at IHS. “The online movie business more than doubled in 2011 to reach $992 million and it is expected to double this year as well.

In the United States, revenue from SVoD services—which give consumers access to movies in return for a regular, recurring fee – reached $454 million in 2011, growing by more than 10,000 per cent from $4.3 million in 2010. As a result, SVoD became the largest segment of the US online movie business in 2011, surpassing the other major parts of the market, transactional VOD and electronic sell-through. This change can be attributed to two factors, acording to his Screen Digest: Netflix’s decision to start charging directly for online access, and the major growth in the number of people using online SVoD.

Meanwhile, transactional VOD expanded to $273 million in 2011, up 75 per cent from $155 million during 2010. In contrast to SVOD, transactional VOD services like iTunes require consumers to pay a separate fee to rent each individual movie. Electronic Sell Through (EST) grew by just 2.4 per cent to reach $236 million.

“We are in the midst of a significant change in the way people pay to consume movies online,” Cryan said. “All the significant growth in revenue in the US online movie business in 2011 was generated by rental business models, which provide temporary access, not permanent ownership. Rental delivers unlimited consumption with a low monthly fee for older titles as well as cheap rentals of new releases, providing the kind of value that online consumers want. In contrast, EST, which is much more profitable for studios on a per-transaction basis, is stuck in the doldrums,” he suggested.

IHS Screen Digest suggests that whatNetflix and iTunes have in common is that both services are focused on the hardware side of the business. Netflix is available on a very wide range of connected devices, while iTunes can take advantage of Apple’s soaring device sales growth.

Nevertheless, comparisons between the two services have their limits. IHS research reveals that it’s not unusual for 70 to 80 per cent of titles consumed through a transactional service to be new releases. However, SVoD services are overwhelmingly used for older titles.

“Effectively the market has split,” Cryan said. “Netflix and Apple are competing for some of the same consumer time and money. However, the core value proposition of the two services is actually very different.

The firm suggests that to understand the relative positioning of Netflix and Apple, it is revealing to compare each service to its closest competitor.

While Netflix rules the SVoD market, its closest competitor – Hulu – is less than 10 per cent of its size. Apple’s iTunes continues to dominate the transactional segment, accounting for 63.0 per cent of revenue in this area, which was only down slightly from 64.6 per cent in 2010. At the same time, the big growth story of 2011 was Walmart’s Vudu, which captured 8.2 per cent of the growing transactional market, up from 2.8 per cent last year. Most of this growth has been achieved by using a Netflix-like device strategy and has come at the expense of other providers, not Apple.

However IHS Screen Digest suggests that the stunning growth in SVoD revenue seen in 2011 is not likely to continue at the same rate in the future, with Netflix’s customer transition now complete. And while its effect will be felt into 2012, which will be the first full year of paid streaming, Netflix’s US digital customer base is likely to expand at a slower rate, in keeping with premium pay-TV channels. Consequently, IHS expects transactional VoD to experience stronger growth than SVOD after 2012 unless there is a significant market entry, such as a standalone HBO streaming subscription or a full-fledged pay-TV subscription service delivered over the open Internet.

 

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