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| 17 May 2021
More bad news for the worldwide pay-TV industry has emerged from Digital TV Research which is forecasting that revenues in the sector in the key territories are to track down markedly over the next five years.
The Global Pay TV Revenue Forecasts report calculates that not only did global pay-TV revenues for 138 countries peak in 2016 at $201 billion but that are also set to decline in 77 of the territories between 2020 and 2026. Despite the number of pay-TV subscribers rising by 15 million, total market revenues are forecast to fall to $143 billion in 2026 from $173 billion in 2020.
The US is set to provide the pay-TV industry with the most dramatic fall by just under $23 billion. The study noted that US pay-TV revenues peaked at $104 billion in 2015 and that its total will drop from $80 billion in 2020 to $57 billion in 2026. The US will account for 40% of global revenues by 2026, down from 52% in 2015.
KERALA: SVOD subscriptions in India will almost triple between 2020 and 2026 to 155 million, thus representing 10 per cent of the world’s total, according to a report published in Digital TV Research. The report suggested that the total number of global SVOD subscriptions will reach 1.5 billion within the next five years, which represents a 65 per cent jump from the 2020
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James Brumley is former stockbroker with a large Wall Street firm, and a former trading analyst for a small, options-based newsletter. After twenty years of professional experience in and around the market, his approach is one that combines fundamentals, sentiment, and common sense. It s also an approach that respects this John Keynes reality: The market isn t always rational. Follow @jbrumley
Most investors spend a good deal of time searching for the next big story stock, or looking out for reasons to shed names they already own. And to be fair, these are important parts of investing.
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South African filmmakers move beyond apartheid stories
The actress Ama Qamata on the set of the soap opera Gomora during filming in Johannesburg on April 16, 2021. Films about South Africa once focused on apartheid, but a new generation of directors and producers is making hits about modern life and love for global audiences. Joao Silva/The New York Times.
by Christina Goldbaum
(NYT NEWS SERVICE)
.- One of South Africas top film producers squinted at a monitor as a hush settled over the crew. Cameras zoomed in on an actress playing a dealer of fine art chicly dressed in a pencil skirt made from bold African textiles who offered a coy smile as an old flame stepped into her gallery.