• Subscribe to our Daily News Emails
  • Advertise
    • Media Info
    • Terms & Conditions for Advertisers
    • Mechanical Data

Broadband TV News

Independent. Since 2003

  • Home
  • News Line
    • Central & East Europe
    • People
  • TV
    • On Demand/VOD
    • IPTV
    • Cable
    • Satellite
    • Terrestrial
    • Distribution
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Events
    • Events Diary
    • BTN Events
    • Events Coverage
    • Submit the details of your event
  • Features
  • Resources
    • White Papers

Netflix impacts spending on movies and TV shows

February 26, 2016 09.30 Europe/London By Broadband TV News Correspondent

There is a clear correlation between launch of Netflix and decline in video spending, according to research by IHS, while spending on Netflix does not make up the difference.

Before Netflix launched its streaming service in the USA in 2007, spending on buying and renting movies and TV series on disc was falling by an average of 1.2% a year. Since 2010, the year in which Netflix access became ubiquitous across the US consumer electronics sector, spending has fallen by an average of 10.3 percent a year.

“The data shows that Netflix’s entry into a market has a noticeable effect on consumer behaviour, even in countries where they already had access to other streaming video services,” said Helen Davis Jayalath, senior researcher at IHS Technology.

“Movies and TV shows are not only the biggest draw for Netflix subscribers, they are also the backbone of the home entertainment industry, generating 80 percent to 90 percent of the business in most countries.”

In the UK, sales of movies on disc have more than halved since the first SVOD services launched in 2008, with the steepest annual decline (-14.5 percent) experienced in 2012, the year Netflix launched. The downturn in sales and rentals of TV series, traditionally an important genre in the UK market, has been even more significant. Not only have sales of box sets and other TV programmes on disc been falling by over 14 percent a year since 2012, but rentals of TV shows are down by almost 75 percent.

“The year before Netflix launched its streaming service in the USA, consumers spent $20.9 billion buying and renting movies and TV content, the most ever recorded,” Davis Jayalath said, “But by last year, total spending on these two key genres, including via transactional and subscription VOD services, was down by 17 percent to $17.3 billion.”

In the UK, Netflix’s arrival in 2012 was pre-empted by Amazon’s 2008 investment in (and subsequent acquisition of) local Streaming Video on Demand (SVOD) service LoveFilm, which was already taking its toll on physical video spending.

“British consumers have taken Netflix and SVOD to their hearts,” Davis Jayalath said. “Last year, they spent £1.8 billion on buying and renting movies and TV content, more than 26 percent of which was generated by SVOD services.”

Despite this, total spending is still £82 million a year less than it was before Netflix launched and down over 20 percent (£474 million) since Amazon’s investment in LoveFilm effectively kick-started SVOD in the UK.

The Australian market is similar to that of the US and the UK, so if Netflix puts the same emphasis on creating and acquiring local content, IHS expects it to be able to build a viable business. As seen in the US and UK, this is likely to negatively impact the physical sale and rental of movies and TV content.

“The key to success in Japan, however, is not US movies and TV shows, but domestic content,” Davis Jayalath said.

“If Netflix can invest enough in original Japanese anime content to tempt consumers away from DVD rental it will have achieved something that has so far eluded not only the Hollywood studios but also a dozen other SVOD operators.”

netflix_impactpng

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp

Related

Filed Under: Editor's Choice, Newsline, Research Tagged With: IHS, Netflix Edited: 29 February 2016 09:00

Latest News

  • BBC apologises as Trump  threatens to sue
  • EBU warns Polish PSM funding risks undermining media reforms
  • Sky withdraws Sky Live camera
  • Ziggo adds AI to voice search on Next boxes
  • DAZN folds PPV into new ‘Ultimate’ boxing tier

Most Popular

  • BBC apologises as Trump  threatens to sue
    BBC apologises as Trump  threatens to sue
  • BBC’s Davie and Turness quit after Trump Panorama edit row
    BBC’s Davie and Turness quit after Trump Panorama edit row
  • WBD streaming tops 128m subs as HBO Max prepares next European wave
    WBD streaming tops 128m subs as HBO Max prepares next European wave
  • Disney Jr to return to linear in the UK and Ireland
    Disney Jr to return to linear in the UK and Ireland
  • ITV confirms £1.6bn Sky sale talks
    ITV confirms £1.6bn Sky sale talks
  • Sky withdraws Sky Live camera
    Sky withdraws Sky Live camera
  • Ergen retakes EchoStar helm as group pivots from 5G build-out to SpaceX tie-up
    Ergen retakes EchoStar helm as group pivots from 5G build-out to SpaceX tie-up

White Paper

Virgin Media O2 turns to Starlink for UK-first ‘O2 Satellite’ service

Virgin Media O2 has struck a multi-year deal with Starlink’s Direct to Cell network to launch “O2 Satellite”, a handset-to-satellite service that will extend coverage into rural and coastal not-spots from early 2026. … [Download the White Paper ...]

Broadband TV News

  • Subscribe
  • About us
  • Contacts
  • Logos & Pictures
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Advertising

  • Media Info
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Mechanical Data
  • Video Services

News

  • Latest
  • Central & East Europe
  • TV
  • Tech
  • Streaming
  • Cable
  • Satellite
  • Terrestrial
  • IPTV
  • Business
  • People

Events

  • Events Diary
  • BTN Events
  • Submit the details of your event
  • Media Meet & Greet

Editorial

44 Telegraph Street
Cottenham, Cambridge CB24 3QF
news@broadbandtvnews.com

Commercial

Arundel View Cottage
Wepham
West Sussex
BN18 9RA
sales@broadbandtvnews.com

Connect with Us

 

Copyright © 2025 Broadband TV News LLP · Log in

 

Loading Comments...
 

    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.