I’ve been waiting to see if any analyst would slam News Corp’s decision to launch Fox Sports 1, the national general sports makeover for the company’s Speed channel. You can make a compelling case that the pay TV sports bubble is about to pop, especially if cable and satellite companies follow through on their threats to cut high-priced sports channels from the basic cable bundle. But the investment pros continue to bet that the current system will remain intact, and that Fox Sports 1 will be a winner. Several raised their target price for News Corp stock. The consensus view is that pay TV distributors will agree to pay about $1 a month for each subscriber — up from the the estimated 22 cents the company currently collects for Speed — raising affiliate revenues to $1.1B a year from $312M. News Corp will have several opportunities to push for higher rates: about 30% of its current pay TV deals expire by mid 2014, and another 40% will be due the following year, Barclays Equity research’s Anthony DiClemente notes.
The big question, then, is whether Fox Sports 1 can hold the line on costs. Based on the plans unveiled yesterday there’s “not enough programming to fulfill a Murdoch-sized aspiration,” Bernstein Research’s Todd Juenger says. “They will need more.” That’s why many will be watching to see whether News Corp agrees to pay more than $500M for a 12-year deal to broadcast college basketball’s Big East, the new conference of seven Catholic schools including Georgetown. Credit Suisse’s Michael Senno says he expects an announcement “soon.” Meanwhile Macquarie Equities Research says that it’s “not entirely impossible” that Fox will try to buy rights to the Thursday night NFL games that now run on the league’s NFL Network. And Juenger notes that Murdoch may bid aggressively for NBA games — the “next big property up for grabs” beginning in 2016. If that happens then “there will be a period of several years of losses (at least),” he says.


Thank you Newscorp!
More bloated sports channels with unsustainable
budgets will speed up the OPTIONAL SPORTS TIER
even faster so that ESPN et al shatter from subscriber revolt.
The analysts are willfully ignoring the established trend of 30 and unders using internet as their primary source of viewing because it’s way cheaper.
Shaving off one third of the cable bill without sports is too powerful a draw for for cable and satellite to ignore. Keep those bloated sports channels coming, the crash will be fun indeed!
Josh K.
NBA on FOX, I like it.
Where is this startup going to be based? NYC or LA? They won’t be a player until they attract the best in sports journalism. The bread and butter of the network will be its sports news show.
Please be LA. I can’t stand ESPN’s constant slurping of the Yankees/Red Sox/Jets/Patriots. It’s boring for the rest of the country. At least an LA based net will focus on the rest of the country because everyone in LA is from somewhere else.
Yeah, but will they report the actual scores or the scores they think their viewers want to hear?
How would we know which is which?
They’ve already failed once.
I hope Fox Sports 1 acquire the NBA rights. The NBA on Fox does sound good.