Time Warner Shareholders Say “Yes” to AT&T

Time Warner Shareholders Say “Yes” to AT&T

As we noted yesterday, Time Warner (TWX) shareholders met yesterday to decide on the $86 billion merger with AT&T (T). As expected Time Warner shareholder approved the proposed merger and coming out of that meeting, Time Warner anticipates the transaction closing before the end of 2017.

Time Warner’s CEO Jeff Bewkes said in a statement that “78% of our outstanding shares” voted in favor of the merger, “and of the shares voted, 99% were cast in favor of the proposal.”

Pretty much a non-event, but one that removes one more hurdle in the proposed merger. We remain fans of the combination as it moves Connected Society AT&T into the Content is King tailwind, and we’ve seen how that investment theme has benefited Tematica Select List’s Disney (DIS) as well as Comcast (CMCSA) following its acquisition of NBC Universal.

  • With merger and synergy details from the proposed merged companies still pending, we continue to rate T shares a Hold, with a $45 price target. All things being equal, we’d look to revisit our rating on the shares below $40.
Apple to get into the Content is King theme

Apple to get into the Content is King theme

Apple and the iPhone have been at the forefront of our Connected Society investment theme and Apple Pay lands the company in our Cashless Consumption theme as well. For a long time, Apple has held off creating original content preferring instead to be a platform via iTunes and its app ecosystem for others to distribute their content (Netflix on iPads, iPhones and Apple TV as an example). With the battle for the device consumer heating up, Apple is taking a page out of Content is King companies Disney (DIS) and Comcast (CMCSA) and moving into content to shore up its competitive position. We’ve seen Netflix do this and Amazon (AMZN) is charging ahead as well. From a thematic sense, if Apple can get the programming right, three thematic tailwinds are better than one or two.

Apple Inc. is planning to build a significant new business in original television shows and movies, according to people familiar with the matter, a move that could make it a bigger player in Hollywood and offset slowing sales of iPhones and iPads.These people said the programming would be available to subscribers of Apple’s $10-a-month streaming-music service, which has struggled to catch up to the larger Spotify AB. Apple Music already includes a limited number of documentary-style segments on musicians, but nothing like the premium programming it is now seeking.

Source: Apple Sets Its Sights on Hollywood With Plans for Original Content – WSJ

Look out DirecTV Now, here comes Hulu’s live TV streaming service complete with ESPN

Look out DirecTV Now, here comes Hulu’s live TV streaming service complete with ESPN

The race to replace broadcast TV with streaming services has become even more competitive with Hulu tossing it’s hat in the ring alongside the soon to be launched DirecTV Now from AT&T that is likely to benefit from the announced Time Warner acquisition. To drive viewers, it’s all about the content and increasingly proprietary content like we’re increasingly finding at Netflix and Amazon. While the Disney relationship brings ESPN into its fold, it sounds to us like Hulu needs to get that balance sheet going.

Hulu said today it has partnered with Disney and 21st Century Fox for its upcoming live TV streaming service, launching next year. The deals involve Fox’s news, entertainment, sports, and other properties, along with Disney’s portfolio of networks from is ABC Television Group and ESPN, among other things. In total, the two agreements will bring more than 35 TV networks to Hulu’s live TV service.What this means for consumers who are considering cutting the cord with pay TV is that they’ll gain access to two of the top broadcast networks, Fox and ABC, on Hulu’s new streaming platform.In terms of sports, the two deals will include Fox Sports networks (Fox Sports 1 and 2), BTN, ESPN networks, including ESPN1, ESPN2, ESPN3, ESPNU, ESPN-SEC, and Fox’s regional sports networks in dozens of markets. Meanwhile, other popular cable TV channels will also be included, like Disney Channel, Disney XD, Disney Junior, Fox News, Fox Business, Freeform, FX, FXX, FXM, National Geographic and Nat Geo Wild.

Source: Hulu’s live TV streaming service will have channels from Fox & Disney, including ABC, ESPN & more | TechCrunch

PwC Data Confirms Our Content is King Investing Theme

PwC Data Confirms Our Content is King Investing Theme

We’ve touched on this aspect of our Content is King investing theme before, but nothing like data from PricewaterhouseCoopers to confirm it and the theme itself!

Box-office markets over the next few years are expected to grow more quickly abroad than in North America, where receipts have been relatively flat and are forecast to expand only modestly. That dynamic already is changing the way movies get made in Hollywood, as studios focus on big-tent productions like superhero epics that play across borders, or find story lines they know will fly in censorious countries.The Wall Street Journal used analysis by PricewaterhouseCoopers to give a fuller picture of the five fastest-growing box-office markets around the world.

Source: A Look at the Five Fastest-Growing Markets for Movies – WSJ

Video Arcades Trump Most Amusement Parks, Not Disney or Universal

Video Arcades Trump Most Amusement Parks, Not Disney or Universal

What do you get when you mash together aspects of our Connected Society  and Content is King investing themes? One answer is gaming.

Add in our “Death of the Mall as You Know It” view and we are not surprised by the return of video arcades. These 21st-century arcades are filled with high-end 3D games and simulators that are chomping more than just a few quarters. But that’s where our Cashless Consumption theme comes into play as a player uses a topped off game play card that also keeps track of  prize tickets. While we still love our roller coasters, we can understand how the quasi-addictive nature of gaming. Add in some friends and some adult beverages a la our Guilty Pleasure investing theme and <boom> there is your Dave & Buster’s Entertainment (PLAY) business model.

For those of you who miss the old stand-up games of Galaga and Defender, there were more “amusement arcades” in 2014 than in 1998, according to the Census Bureau.

The amusement park has been on a roller coaster ride for two decades, one that—as the chart shows—is fundamentally headed downward. In some years, more parks opened than shut, but the small upticks have been wiped out by the near-regularity of a free fall. There were 48 percent fewer amusement parks in the U.S. in 2014 than in 1998.

Among these, the smaller parks which depend on local or regional customers, and often just during summer, are having the hardest time. Even such a well-loved brand as Lego met industry skepticism as it seeks to build a chain of regional parks. On the other hand, huge amusement and theme parks that double as vacation destinations are still going strong.

Source: Americans Are in Love With Video Arcades Again – Bloomberg

Disney Seeks to Cater to China’s Growing Middle Class

Disney Seeks to Cater to China’s Growing Middle Class

Rising disposable incomes in the emerging economies and especially in China have led to a trade up in diets, a thirst for the branded products and now travel and entertainment. This is already starting to influence content decision at the major movie studios and airline destinations,  and this will only accelerate as the influence grows.

Walt Disney Co. has hosted over 600,000 visitors at its first theme park in mainland China since trial operations started early May, and its “enormous potential” has already prompted Disney to expand the resort, said Chief Executive Officer Robert Iger.

The government has predicted China’s $610 billion tourism industry will double by 2020, spurred by a growing middle class. DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc. plans to open its $2.4 billion DreamCenter and Haichang Ocean Park Holdings will unveil what’s slated to be China’s biggest marine park next year. Six Flags Entertainment Corp. is due to open its first park outside North America in 2019.

Source: Disney Sparks Theme-Park Battle to Entertain China’s Middle Class – Bloomberg

China will be bigger for the movie box office in 2017 than the US 

China will be bigger for the movie box office in 2017 than the US 

Whether its characters from Disney’s Marvel, Star Wars or Pixar stable, or even DC’s own Batman and Superman, people will flock to the movies to quench their content thirst. Increasingly the international box office is becoming a bigger and bigger factor in movie decisions. Some film, like Expendables 3, are being made solely because of foreign demand, and the same goes for streaming content from Netflix and Amazon. What this tell us is content is truly king, but it also means content companies are likely to pivot to satiate local preferences. 

China — not the U.S. — is projected to be the leader in box office revenue in 2017, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers.If true, it will mark the first time that the U.S. has not been the top revenue driver in an entertainment and media segment. The Chinese box office is expected to generate $10.3 billion next year, while the U.S. will be at $10.1 billion. By 2020, the Chinese box office will reach $15.1 billion versus just $11 billion in the U.S.

Source: China will be bigger for the box office than the US next year: PwC