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FCC Report: DBS Remains Cables Top Competitor

Due to competition from direct broadcast satellite (DBS), cable operators have seen their share of the U.S. market for multichannel video programming distribution (“MVPD”) services decline from 100% a decade ago to about 75% today, according to the FCC’s newly released “Tenth Annual Report on Competition in Video Markets.” A decade ago, federal regulators expected local exchange telephone companies (“LECs”) to launch video systems and become the primary competitors to cable systems. Significant LEC entry into the video marketplace has failed to materialize. The most notable exception is BellSouth, which currently operates overbuild cable systems in 14 franchise areas, passing 1.4 million homes. Nevertheless, a number of incumbent LECs are planning to offer video services over their existing phone lines. Over 100 municipal utilities have also entered the market for multichannel video. However, these competitors, along with others using more diverse delivery technologies (i.e., overbuilders, wireless cable systems, private cable systems), only serve a proportionately small number of subscribers and only in limited geographic areas. The FCC report also finds that Internet video is still not seen as a direct competitor to traditional video services. The predominant challengers to the cable operators remain the two DBS providers. Some highlights of the report:

http://www.fcc.gov

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