Multichoice Group, South African pay TV company has reported a 5 per cent drop in half-year profit, hit by weaker currencies in several markets, losses at its Showmax streaming business and a lower contribution from its home country.
The only real bright spot in MultiChoice’s financial results between April and September was that it added DStv Premium subscribers for the first time “in many years”, according to Moneyweb
This was very likely entirely due to the Rugby World Cup in France, which kicked off in September – such is the power of the Springboks.
Key will be whether MultiChoice manages to hold on to any of these probably ‘temporary’ subscribers.
The group, whose pay-tv business operates in 50 countries in sub-Saharan Africa, said it made core headline earnings of 1.9 billion rand ($105 million) in the six months ended Sept. 30, down from 2-billion-rand last year, according to Reuters.
Coming off high growth linked to the soccer World Cup in the previous six months, overall, 90-day active subscriber numbers fell 2% to 21.7 million, with a 5% drop in South Africa due to power cuts and the removal of non-revenue generating customers.
However, the number of premium customers in South Africa rose 5%, supported by the recent Rugby World Cup.
Overall group revenue rose 4% on an underlying basis to 28.3 billion rand but was down 1% on a reported basis due to weaker local currencies and pressure on consumer spending.
Subscription revenues rose an underlying 3% due to strong growth in the rest of Africa and the Showmax streaming service.
Reuters reported that MultiChoice has been investing billions of rand to fight off competition from streaming giants Netflix (NFLX.O), Amazon (AMZN.O) and Disney (DIS.N).
In the reporting period the group increased its spending on local content by 16% year-on-year.
The group said Showmax’s partnership with U.S. media conglomerate Comcast (CMCSA.O) was preparing to launch a new platform later in its financial year.
“This service … will enable MultiChoice to double its customer base and deliver an additional $1 billion revenue in the medium term,” the company said.
Showmax saw its active subscriber base increase by 13%, resulting in revenues surging 46%. However, higher operating costs due to investments resulted in trading losses rising by 500 million rand to 800 million rand.