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PROBABLY SINKIES WHO GET LEEPLACED BY FT, LOST THEIRS JOBS HAVE TO CUT DOWN ON SPENDING. FT MORE INTERESTED TO SAVE EVERY CENT SO THAT CAN GO HOME LIVE LIKE A KING!
StarHub loses 11,000 payTV subscribers
These subscribers have completed their contract, pulling profit down by 27.6%.
StarHub's mobile and pay-TV businesses continued to be under pressure while residential broadband and fixed enterprise businesses have progressed sideways. The telco giant lost around 11,000 pay-TV subscribers, the fifth consecutive quarter of sequential contraction. As UOB Kay Hian noted, StarHub said that a larger-than-usual proportion of its pay-TV subscriber base completed their contracts. It also faces competition from alternative viewing options, such as OTT video services.
This has badgered its overall bottomline, which reported a 27.6% YoY decline to $86m.
Meanwhile, the brokerage firm noted that both its post-paid and pre-paid revenues have suffered contractions, with overall mobile revenue falling 3.6%.
"Post-paid ARPU declined by 2.8% yoy to S$69 due to reduced contributions from roaming and iDD. Pre-paid ARPU declined by 11.1% yoy to S$16 due to lower usage for voice and iDD," UOB stated.
On the other hand, its residential broadband segment's recovery has reached a plateau, with the paltry 2,000 subscriber gain at a flat ARPU at $37.
"23,000 subscribers migrated to fibre broadband but it did not have a visible impact on ARPU. The penetration for fibre broadband expanded by 4.6ppt to 73.9% in 3Q16," UOB explained.
StarHub loses 11,000 payTV subscribers
These subscribers have completed their contract, pulling profit down by 27.6%.
StarHub's mobile and pay-TV businesses continued to be under pressure while residential broadband and fixed enterprise businesses have progressed sideways. The telco giant lost around 11,000 pay-TV subscribers, the fifth consecutive quarter of sequential contraction. As UOB Kay Hian noted, StarHub said that a larger-than-usual proportion of its pay-TV subscriber base completed their contracts. It also faces competition from alternative viewing options, such as OTT video services.
This has badgered its overall bottomline, which reported a 27.6% YoY decline to $86m.
Meanwhile, the brokerage firm noted that both its post-paid and pre-paid revenues have suffered contractions, with overall mobile revenue falling 3.6%.
"Post-paid ARPU declined by 2.8% yoy to S$69 due to reduced contributions from roaming and iDD. Pre-paid ARPU declined by 11.1% yoy to S$16 due to lower usage for voice and iDD," UOB stated.
On the other hand, its residential broadband segment's recovery has reached a plateau, with the paltry 2,000 subscriber gain at a flat ARPU at $37.
"23,000 subscribers migrated to fibre broadband but it did not have a visible impact on ARPU. The penetration for fibre broadband expanded by 4.6ppt to 73.9% in 3Q16," UOB explained.