PITTSBURGH, November 8, 2010 — In a new economic study released today, the
American Cable Association found that consumers over the next nine years will
pay at least $2.4 billion more for pay-television service as a result of
unrestrained pricing power that will flow from the combination of Comcast Corp.
and NBC Universal, an unprecedented media transaction awaiting regulatory
approval from the Federal Communications Commission and the Department of
Justice.
"It is clear that the Comcast-NBCU deal will send monthly cable bills higher by billions of dollars over the next decade, underscoring ACA's view that regulators must protect consumers and competition from a transaction whose benefits are vastly outweighed by its harms. Without meaningful and cost effective conditions on the Comcast-NBCU transaction, regulators also run the risk of crippling effective competition in the pay-TV distribution market," ACA President and CEO Matthew M. Polka said.
ACA's study was conducted by Dr. William Rogerson, professor of economics at Northwestern
University, who served as the FCC's Chief Economist for the 1998-99 academic year. Rogerson's study concluded that the transaction
will allow Comcast-NBCU to raise programming fees way above levels the two
would be able to command as separate and independent companies, and that these
fee increases will largely be passed through to subscribers in the form of higher
subscription prices. According to
Rogerson, the quantifiable consumer harm of the transaction ($2.566 billion) is
more than 10 times greater than the quantifiable consumer benefit ($204
million) claimed by Comcast-NBCU.
In his detailed
analysis, Rogerson found that the consumer harm will manifest itself in two
ways. The first is vertical harm arising from the combination of NBCU national
cable programming networks and NBC owned-and-operated broadcast television
stations with Comcast’s cable distribution assets. This alignment will permit Comcast-NBCU
to raise the fees it charges for NBCU programming to Comcast’s cable and
satellite rivals, including nearly 40 ACA member companies, such as RCN, WOW!,
Wave Broadband, Broadstripe, and SureWest.
The second harm is
horizontal, or control over key programming assets which will permit Comcast-NBCU
to raise prices from the market power derived by jointly negotiating NBCU’s
suite of highly rated NBCU national cable programming networks and/or NBC
O&O TV stations with Comcast’s key programming asset: Regional sports
networks (RSNs). This combination would
allow Comcast-NBCU to demand higher fees from all pay TV providers operating in
markets served by a Comcast RSN.
In breaking down the harms by category, Rogerson calculated the vertical harm at $1.43 billion and the horizontal harm at $1.14 billion over the next nine years. Of note, both types of harm are relatively equal in magnitude.
In breaking down the
harms by programming, Rogerson shows that the transaction will cause $1.6
billion of harm through its effect on the fees charged for NBCU national cable
networks, $651.2 million of harm through its effect on the fees charged for
Comcast RSNs and $355.6 million of harm through its effect on the retransmission
consent fees charged for NBC O&Os. Professor Rogerson’s analysis shows that by
not imposing conditions on NBCU’s national cable networks, the government would
leave nearly two-thirds of the transaction’s harms unaddressed.
Although the
quantifiable consumer harms of the transaction will be felt by consumers across
the country, locations hit the hardest will be those markets where Comcast has
a significant cable presence and owns the RSN in addition to the NBC O&O.
Markets matching that profile include Philadelphia, Chicago, San Francisco,
Washington, D.C., and Hartford, Conn.
Professor Rogerson – in his analysis of the quantifiable cost reductions Comcast could expect post-transaction – shows that Comcast has vastly overestimated the savings that it will realize through joint ownership of NBCU programming assets. Even taking into account savings from the reduction of double marginalization highlighted by Comcast’s economic experts, the truth is that any potential consumer cost reductions are swamped by the quantifiable vertical and horizontal consumer harms from the transaction that ACA has identified.
Unveiled last
December, the $30 billion Comcast-NBCU transaction is an unprecedented union of
key programming and cable assets, providing Comcast-NBCU with the incentive and
ability to use its control of "must have" content -- which includes
10 NBC TV stations, 9 Comcast RSNs and about 20 Comcast-NBCU national cable
networks - to reap windfall profits by manipulating and overcharging pay
television providers, including small and medium-sized operators who make up ACA’s
membership.
In August, ACA
unveiled an array of conditions designed to ameliorate the transaction’s
vertical and horizontal harms, especially for small and medium-sized operators who
have found baseball-style commercial arbitration unaffordable.
ACA conditions state
that:
"Comcast's
suggestion that because ACA has proposed similar remedies in prior program
access rulemaking proceedings, no form of these remedies could now be
transaction specific in a deal that involves vertically integration is
incorrect and self-serving," ACA's Polka said. "The FCC has never
applied such a standard. ACA's remedies
will be judged by the FCC based on their merit in lessening the documented
harms of the transaction."
About the American
Cable Association
Based in Pittsburgh, the American Cable Association is a trade organization representing nearly 900 smaller and medium-sized, independent cable companies who provide broadband services for more than 7.6 million cable subscribers primarily located in rural and smaller suburban markets across America. Through active participation in the regulatory and legislative process in Washington, D.C., ACA's members work together to advance the interests of their customers and ensure the future competitiveness and viability of their business. For more information, visit http://www.americancable.org/
![]() | Please use the information below to get in touch with the American Cable Association.
|