The satellite TV network is struggling to keep subscribers from fleeing. But it could be too late.
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Not long ago, Charlie Ergen was the scourge of cable TV. By offering bargain prices and competing head-on with struggling cable operators, his Dish Network (DISH) satellite company snatched away millions of subscribers and nearly caught up with its bigger rival, DirecTV (DTV). Now, Dish is losing altitude faster than a dying satellite, and Ergen is looking like an also-ran.
Ergen declined to comment, but not much is going right these days. Having added fewer subscribers than analysts projected in the first quarter, Dish could shed at least 37,000 of its 13.8 million customers this quarter, says Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. (AB) analyst Craig E. Moffett. That would be the first time a satellite TV player has lost subscribers since the industry began its growth spurt a decade ago, he says. Meanwhile, AT&T (T), which accounts for a big chunk of Dish's new subscribers by bundling video with its phone and Web offerings, recently said it plans to ditch the company by yearend and possibly hook up with DirecTV. "Dish," Moffett says, "is between a rock and a hard place."
CEO Ergen says he "wasn't as aware of the operations" as he should have been
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Not long ago, Charlie Ergen was the scourge of cable TV. By offering bargain prices and competing head-on with struggling cable operators, his Dish Network (DISH) satellite company snatched away millions of subscribers and nearly caught up with its bigger rival, DirecTV (DTV). Now, Dish is losing altitude faster than a dying satellite, and Ergen is looking like an also-ran.
Ergen declined to comment, but not much is going right these days. Having added fewer subscribers than analysts projected in the first quarter, Dish could shed at least 37,000 of its 13.8 million customers this quarter, says Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. (AB) analyst Craig E. Moffett. That would be the first time a satellite TV player has lost subscribers since the industry began its growth spurt a decade ago, he says. Meanwhile, AT&T (T), which accounts for a big chunk of Dish's new subscribers by bundling video with its phone and Web offerings, recently said it plans to ditch the company by yearend and possibly hook up with DirecTV. "Dish," Moffett says, "is between a rock and a hard place."
CEO Ergen says he "wasn't as aware of the operations" as he should have been
Full Article