Latin America Emerges from Economic Turmoil Impacting Pay TV Sector, Faces Competition from SVOD Giants
The number of pay TV subscribers in Latin America will stay at 53-54 million. This is down from the peak of 73 million in 2017. Brazil lost 9 million subscribers between 2015 and 2023, but will “only” lose 2 million between 2023 and 2029 to total 7.8 million.
Mexico has more pay TV subscribers than Brazil despite having many fewer TV households. Mexico has lost subscribers since its peak year of 2016 (21 million), but will now settle at around 16 million.
The principal analyst of the study said: "Most Latin American countries - not all - are coming out of economic recessions and periods of social unrest, which adversely affected the pay TV sector. Pay TV also has to battle against the well-served SVOD sector, with the major US-based platforms all operational in Latin America."
Who should read this report?
Job Functions:
- Corporate development
- Strategy
- Analyst
- Researcher
Types of Companies:
- Content owners
- Broadcasters
- SVOD platforms
- AVOD platforms
- Telcos
- Pay TV operators
- TV equipment manufacturers
- Banks - Media analysts
- Consultancies - media analysts
- Satellite operators
Table of Contents
This 102-page PDF and excel report comes in two parts:
- Insight: Detailed country-by-country analysis in a 56-page PDF document.
- Excel workbook covering each year from 2015 to 2029 for 19 countries by household penetration, by pay TV subscribers, by pay TV revenues and by major operator. As well as summary tables by country and by platform.
Companies Mentioned
- Altice/Tricom
- Cable & Wireless
- Cabletica
- Cablevision
- CANTV
- Claro
- CNT
- DirecTV
- Dish
- Entel
- ETB
- Flow
- Intercable
- Liberty
- Megacable
- Movistar
- Sky
- Supercanal
- Telecable
- Telefonica
- Telefonica/Vivo
- Televisa cable
- Telsur
- Tigo
- TotalPlay
- TV Cable
- UNE
- VTR