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Sunday, 26 May 2013

Dish TV subscription revenues grow 15%

This story first appeared in DNA Money edition on Thursday, May 23, 2013.

Dish TV, India's top direct-to-home (DTH) company, has reported a 6.5% year-on-year rise in operating profit for the quarter ended March at Rs 120 crore and a 7.6% increase in standalone operating revenues at Rs 555.4 crore.

The company, a market leader with a 24% share, recorded 15.3% on-year growth in subscription revenues at Rs 500.1 crore.

Operating profit margin for the quarter stood at 21.6%. Reporting first full year of positive free cash flow this fiscal, Dish TV's net loss for the January-March quarter was down to Rs 43.6 crore against a loss of Rs 49.02 crore a year ago. The company said losses continued to be influenced by depreciation and write-off policy.

On future potential, Subhash Chandra, chairman, Dish TV India, said, “In the media sector, digitisation, though not fully up to speed, holds big potential for the industry. DTH platforms, in particular, look forward to a level-playing field, contributing to meaningfully higher ARPUs and stickier subscriber base over time. Dish TV’s industry leading initiative, to hike acquisition and pack price is likely to be a catalyst to achieve that.”

The company added 0.2 million net subscribers in the March quarter, touching a total of 10.7 million net subscribers. Its subscriber acquisition cost at Rs 1,996 was down compared with Rs 2,201 in preceding December quarter. Higher winbacks reduced average churn for the quarter to a low of 0.8% per month compared with 1% in the previous quarter.

Consolidated total income was up 10.66% to Rs 2,166.80 crore in fiscal 2013 from Rs 1,957.93 crore in the previous fiscal. Consolidated net loss halved to Rs 66 crore from Rs 133.14 crore in the previous fiscal.

Jawahar Goel, managing director, Dish TV, said, “Fiscal 2013 saw most players in the Indian DTH industry evolve to the next level. Under Dish TV’s leadership, the industry pulled off a significant increase in the acquisition price over the last several months, thereby reducing the effective cash burn per subscriber. While the resultant decline in industry gross additions is marginal, it is expected to be well compensated by quality of subscribers. There was no respite though, from the multiple taxation which the DTH industry is reeling under. Uncertainty on the rollout of Goods & Services Tax (GST) continues to be an overhang on the earnings potential of the industry.”

The ARPU for the quarter at Rs 157 was down compared with Rs 160 in the immediately preceding quarter. “However, on a like-to-like basis, ARPU for the quarter would have been Rs 160, considering that revenue is recognised over a 90-day period in the fourth quarter compared with 92 days in the third quarter. On the expenses front, a 5.1% year-on-year increase in content cost for the fiscal remained well within the guided range of 10-12% hike,” said Goel.

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