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Dish TV Videocon: Building a DTH powerhouse of global reckoning

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MUMBAI: It’s a reflection of what’s hitting the corporate world globally – consolidate and build global scale. And scale is important in television distribution – whether cable, satellite or terrestrial or direct to home (DTH). Yesterday’s announcement of — what was speculated for nearly a year – the merger of India’s No 1 DTH operator Dish TV India with India’s fastest growing DTH player Videocon d2h – is a reflection of that trend and the building of a DTH powerhouse and pay TV operator.

The merger has created a pay TV behemoth unrivalled in TV  distribution in the Indian market (let’s discount the public service terrestrial broadcaster Doordarshan and its satellite service FreeDish). The next Indian private DTH provider is less than half the size of the merged entity’s  size in pure net subscriber terms.

A collective 27.6 million subs  for the combo firm Dish TV Videocon places it just behind the US-based DirecTV (which is now owned by AT&T) with its 37.6 million subs.  That’s a number which is hard to ignore. Much senior players such as Sky in the UK and dishnetwork in the US have just 21 million subs and 13.6 million subs, respectively.

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Of course, one may argue that ARPUs in India are wafer thin at about $3 or so per subscriber and revenues too are minuscule for the DTH operators.  ARPUs for Sky which is so much smaller than Dish TV Videocon are around pounds sterling 47 while these are at $111 at DirecTV which is far bigger.

Team Dish TV led by Jawahar Goel and his CEO Arun Kapoor have reason to celebrate. For the fusion of the two players has created an enterprise that probably has overtaken his elder brother Subhash Chandra’s Zee Entertainment Enterprises in terms of EBIDTA and in revenue.  And what must be even more pleasing is that Dish TV has been operational for fewer years than Zee Entertainment which has led the cable and satellite TV revolution in India since the early nineties.

Ditto for team Videocon d2h that is led by the executive chairman Saurabh Pradeep Kumar Dhoot and CEO Anil Khera. The last entrant in the DTH game, the merger has catapulted it into the leadership position in India.

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True, the market capitalization of Dish TV  (alone) is  Rs 9,321.1 crore  and Videocon d2h is being merged at an equity valuation of around Rs 7,200 crore and at an enterprise value of around  Rs 9,000-odd crore (as per reports) as compared to Zee Entertainment’s Rs 46,284 crore and Sun TV’s Rs 19,747 crore . The market capitalization value of  Dish TV Videocon has yet to be calculated at the time of writing but there’s no doubt it will skyrocket substantially post the completion of the merger in the next six to seven months.

What does the fusion mean for DishTV Videocon?

For one, lower costs. On almost every front.

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Imagine the negotiating power it will have with broadcasters on content pricing. Carriage and placement fees will end up being substantial. It  will be in a position to get better rates on hardware, middleware, ERP software, consumer premise equipment. And then, the two companies’ administration and sales teams could also be streamlined to form a formidable lean and mean sales force. Both have vast and deep distribution strengths. While Dish TV has 2,268 distributors, 244,688 dealers and 1090 service franchises across 9322 towns, Videocon d2h has 2280 distributors and direct dealers, 230,000 dealers/retailers and 320 direct service centres nationally. A consolidation of this could also yield cost benefits.

A PhillipCapital estimate to CNBC TV18 was that the synergy benefit at the EBIDTA level would be between Rs 300 crore to 350 crore from year two onwards.

The lower costs could allow Dish TV Videocon to also pass on the benefits to consumers and possibly start a price war, should it choose to, and thus attracting subscribers from cable TV or other DTH providers, in the process scaling up even further.

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Dish TV Videocon’s value-added services (VAS) will get a collective boost as these could be cross-promoted between the platforms. Its scale will allow it to negotiate better advertising deals for the two services opening screens, sponsorships and on TVCs.

Most importantly, the combined entity will end up with a robust financial report card with revenues of Rs 5,915.8 crore ($883 million) for the year ended 31 March 2016.  The figure for the first half of the current fiscal (H1-2017) is at Rs 3,100 crore. That means one can expect it to cross the $1 billion topline milestone either by end this year or mid next.

Dish TV Videocon’s EBIDTA margins too look  healthy at 31 per cent and absolute last-fiscal-year figures of Rs 1,826 crore ($274 million). The figure for H12017 is at Rs 1,040 crore. EBIDTA minus capex stands at a puny Rs 195 crore ($29 million) but that’s significantly higher than the Rs 116.5 crore of DishTV and Rs 78.5 crore of Videocon d2h, individually. In H12017, that figure had already climbed to Rs 190 crore. The merged entity will have a net debt load of Rs 2161 crore ($323 million). H1 2017, however,  saw that climb to Rs 2660 crore.

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How Dish TV Videocon will service this higher debt – whether it will be through internal accruals or through an external cash infusion – is a question. Both the firms have to also grapple with subscriber acquisition costs  – at around Rs 1500 for Dish TV at the end of March 2016 and at Rs 1,869 for Videocon d2h at the end of 30 September 2016. But, the good part is that both have generated net profits and free cash flows.

The combined entity will end up with close to 2.8 million HD subscribers, which is around 10 per cent of the overall subscribers. These higher ARPU customers are also growing rapidly, forming around 50 per cent of the net adds.

Now, one does not know the ambitions that the Goel and Dhoot families are harbouring. Will they go for further scale in a few years once the merger gets digested? Will they acquire other Indian DTH players as competitive forces compel further consolidation? Will they go outside and look for opportunities elsewhere in more mature and developed pay TV markets?

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It appears as if  the road to that journey may have just begun.

Also read:

http://www.indiantelevision.com/dth/dth-operator/videocon-d2h-to-merge-with-dish-tv-create-leading-cable-satellite-distribution-platform-in-india-161111

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DTH

DD Free Dish e-auction revenue dips to Rs 642 crore as slot sales fall

Revenue dips as revised norms reshape bidding in 94th round

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NEW DELHI: Prasar Bharati’s DD Free Dish has closed its 8th annual, and 94th overall, e-auction for MPEG-2 slots with total collections of Rs 642 crore for the period April 1, 2026 to March 31, 2027.

That is lower than last year’s Rs 780 crore haul, with 55 slots sold compared with 61 in FY25–26. The softer topline reflects both a slimmer inventory and a recalibrated auction framework.

This was the first auction conducted after amendments to the e-auction methodology, including tighter eligibility norms and a revised reserve price structure for MPEG-2 slots. The stated aim was greater transparency and more serious participation. The immediate outcome appears to be more measured bidding in certain categories.

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Day one set the tone. Eight slots were sold, six in the premium Bucket A+ and two in Bucket A. The strong early action in A+, which typically houses Hindi GECs and movie channels, reaffirmed the enduring appeal of mass Hindi programming on the platform.

Among the broadcasters securing slots in the initial rounds were Zee Entertainment Enterprises, Sony Pictures Networks India, Viacom18’s Colors network, Sun Network and Shemaroo Entertainment. Their continued presence signals that, despite the pull of digital platforms, Free Dish remains a strategic must have for legacy networks chasing scale in price sensitive markets.

The final bouquet of 55 channels leans heavily towards Hindi news, movies, devotional fare, Bhojpuri and regional programming.

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In Hindi news, familiar heavyweights such as Aaj Tak, ABP News, India TV, News18 India, Republic Bharat and Zee News made the cut. Entertainment and movie offerings include Colors Rishtey, Star Utsav, Dangal TV, Sony Pal, Shemaroo TV, Goldmines, B4U Movies and Zee Biskope. Devotional viewers will find Aastha, Sanskar and Sadhna Gold among the selected channels.

Regional representation includes Sun Marathi, Fakt Marathi, PTC Punjabi and GTC Punjabi.

Equally telling were the absences. Broadcasters such as Big Magic, Filamchi Bhojpuri, India News, Bharat Express, Movieplex Maithili, TV9 Marathi, Shemaroo Marathibana, Zee Chitra Mandir and Satsang did not participate. The pullback is particularly visible across Marathi, Bhojpuri, Maithili and spiritual programming. Industry observers point to the revised reserve prices, tighter eligibility norms and a reassessment of commercial viability as possible factors.

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DD Free Dish continues to beam into over 40 million homes, largely in rural and semi urban India. For advertisers and broadcasters alike, it offers efficient access to Bharat markets where pay TV penetration remains uneven and OTT subscriptions are limited.

The moderation in revenue this year may be read as a pause rather than a retreat. Fewer slots, a reworked auction playbook and evolving broadcaster strategies have clearly shaped outcomes. Yet premium Hindi entertainment retains its pull, and the platform’s mass reach remains hard to ignore.

As the FY26–27 line-up settles in, the mix of winners and walkaways will define the private satellite channel landscape on DD Free Dish for the year ahead.

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