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Now That Trump's Gone, Media Companies Will Have to Figure Out How News Fits Into Streaming Future

  • Most streaming services don't include live news as part of their offering.
  • Live TV news may be better monetized as separate streaming services from entertainment products.
  • Both print and TV news are transitioning to digital businesses, allowing consumers to potentially buy subscriptions to a bundle of TV and print services for the first time ever.
  • There's been a significant shift in leadership in many U.S. newsrooms in the past six months, opening the door for new thinking.

It's time to start thinking about a new business model for news.

In the past year or so, nearly every media company has launched a subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) service. Most haven't incorporated their full news divisions into the products, which are dominated by entertainment.

AT&T, WarnerMedia's HBO Max doesn't include linear CNN. Comcast-owned NBCUniversal's Peacock includes a bespoke online service, NBC News Now, and other broadcast news, but it doesn't include live cable programming from MSNBC or CNBC. Disney's Disney+ doesn't include ABC News and Hulu didn't until the pandemic hit in March.

Only ViacomCBS's soon-to-launch Paramount+ includes all of CBS's local and national news content on a live basis. ViacomCBS doesn't own a cable news network.

For decades, TV news -- both local and national -- has been a major beneficiary of the pay-TV bundle. Relatively cheap to produce, live TV news served a public good and filled up air time. Broadcast channels CBS, NBC and ABC spend multiple hours each day airing local and national news. CNN, Fox News and MSNBC air news and related programming all day and night. The networks make billions of dollars by charging affiliate or retransmission fees to pay-TV providers and advertising time to brands.

Today, media executives are planning for a future where there are only 50 million U.S. pay-TV households -- down from about 75 million today. News will almost certainly stay in the traditional pay-TV bundle for as long as it survives. But as eyeballs drop, the underlying business will get progressively worse.

"The linear bundle will evolve into a mostly live offering of sports, news and events," MoffettNathanson analyst Michael Nathanson wrote in a note to clients this week. "News consumption has started 2021 off on a surprisingly strong footing, but we obviously worry about sustainability and compares over the year. How much longer can news hang on given such a strong 2020? It is hard to see sustained momentum to match 2020 levels."

It's unclear how news fits into a streaming world

Simply folding news into entertainment-based streaming products makes little sense because audiences for news aren't very big, said Rich Greenfield, a media analyst at LightShed Partners.

"News doesn't have that many viewers, and there's nothing that's going to change that," Greenfield said. "News won't go away. Local news will exist. Cable news will exist. They'll just all be smaller businesses."

Last month, CNN, Fox News and MSNBC all drew about 1.3 million viewers during the day -- and January was a lively month for news, with the Capitol insurgence and presidential inauguration. During the month, about 2 million households watched an average 6 pm or 11 pm local news broadcast in New York, the largest U.S. market, if you add up all of the networks (ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX and CW), according to data from the TV Bureau of Advertising.

Adding a few million subscribers to a streaming platform won't impress Wall Street. Disney's goal for Disney+, for example, is 260 million global subscribers by 2024.

It's still possible Disney, WarnerMedia and Peacock will eventually just package in live news with their existing streaming services. But news has outsized advertising value because it's watched live and commercials can't be skipped. Simply packaging news into SVOD services seems like a wasted opportunity to monetize valuable programming that's sought after by advertisers.

Media companies should focus on making standalone news operations profitable, said Christy Tanner, executive vice president and general manager of CBS News Digital.

"There is no reason why any media company cannot have a successful have a successful news operation by any key performance indicator," Tanner said. "It is not a far-fetched concept for a news business to be self-sustaining, profitable, growing, innovative and successful."

So far, digital news products have been tangential to live linear programming. Fox Corp. sells Fox Nation, a spinoff of Fox News, for $5.99 per month. WarnerMedia is considering beginning a CNN-focused streaming service. ViacomCBS's CBSN, a free, ad-based streaming product separate from CBS's linear news, is profitable, Tanner said.

Over time, as pay-TV bundle subscribers continue to decline, the standalone news-based subscription video products will likely duplicate the same broadcast and cable programming.

A new approach: Bundling TV and print news

Print news and television news have always existed as two separate businesses. Now both are becoming digital products.

In the coming years, it's highly likely streaming services will rebundle akin to a cable TV package. We've already seen the first hint of it with ViacomCBS's partnership with Apple TV+ -- a $9.99 per month bundle of Apple TV+, CBS All Access and Showtime. These bundles will almost certainly grow in content offerings and in price.

What if news products did the same thing? Consumers could pay for a streaming entertainment bundle and, separately, a news bundle.

For the first time ever, a consumer could conceivably buy a subscription to CNN, Fox News, The Washington Post and The New York Times for a discounted price. The model won't be as profitable as the cable bundle, because subscribers will still only be news consumers, rather than the entire populace of TV watchers.

But a news bundle could expand subscribers for historically print publications looking to grow digital subscriptions while also creating a larger audience for TV news outside of the cable bundle.

The Washington Post or the New York Times would probably only opt in to a bundle where the unit economics were either similar enough so that current customers wouldn't have to cancel existing subscriptions, or massaged so that existing subscribers could convert to a bundle. The New York Times said this week it has 6.7 million digital-only subscriptions. Its stock is up more than 300% in the last five years. A current New York Times digital subscription costs $8 per month for a year and $17 per month thereafter.

Offering a bundle of print and TV news may also be a step toward fighting off disinformation, said Helen Lee Bouygues, founder of The Reboot Foundation, which aims to combat fake news and to help improve critical thinking.

"The best way to combat disinformation is to consume a variety of quality sources of information -- the best of which you have to pay for," Bouygues said. "A bundle would be great, but is there demand for it?"

Hard to focus on the future

"Figuring out a new business model for news is the challenge of our time, and one I have been trying to figure out," said Mosheh Oinounou, the president of Mo Digital, who helped launched CBSN and now consults news organizations on their streaming strategies.

The concept of a bundle may be too futuristic for executives who need to get their financial houses in order before they start thinking about new business models.

"That's not to say it wouldn't work," said Tanner. "But there are steps every news organization need to take before doing something that creative."

The first step may be to increase the desirability of digital news for advertisers.

Oinounou estimates the news frenzy around Donald Trump's presidency allowed news companies to delay any dramatic shifts to their business models for five years. Trump's consistent appearances on Fox News and the daily swirl of controversies and news boosted ratings for every news network and kept media companies focused on the status quo.

Digital advertising continues to net pennies on the dollar compared to TV spots. Media executives are focused on where the money is, and it's still not in digital, Oinounou said.

"The fundamental economics of digital versus cable does not incentivize any of these guys to put their best stuff outside of the bundle," Oinounou said. "The reality is all these companies should be devoting the majority of their resources, time and attention to figuring out digital. But it is 2021, and it is still not happening."

The moment may be right to think about new distribution methods. There's been a wave of new leadership at many of the largest news organizations in the past few months. Meredith Kopit Levien took over as the The New York Times CEO in September. L.A. Times executive editor Norm Pearlstine stepped down in December. The Washington Post's executive editor Marty Baron is retiring. CNN head Jeff Zucker said Thursday he plans to leave at the end of the year. Stephen Adler, editor-in-chief of Reuters for the past decade, announced he would be retiring in April.

Last week, James Goldston, the president of ABC News for the last 17 years, announced he would be stepping down on March 31.

"I've decided this is the right moment to move on as this incredible era of news ends and another begins," Goldston wrote to his colleagues.

What he didn't say was this past era was incredible in part because TV executives didn't have to worry about making money. The next era's leaders may not be so lucky.

Disclosure: Comcast-owned NBCUniversal is the parent company of CNBC.

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