Optus pounds Foxtel into submission

Leith van Onselen, March 6, 2020

A few years ago, Foxtel lost the broadcasting rights for the English Premier League to Optus Sports. And now Optus Sports looks set to steal the rights to televise rugby from Foxtel:

Optus is favoured to become the new home of rugby…

Current broadcast partners Fox Sports have not signed RA’s nondisclosure agreements and will not, leaving Optus as the lone digital option…

Knowing Fox Sports is no longer in the mix, having already had a $40 million-a-year offer rejected by RA late last year, insiders expect Optus to come in with a dramatically lower figure given the lack of options…

Losing Rugby to Optus Sports would be another body blow to Foxtel’s beleaguered Kayo Sports, whose subscriber base sat at just over 370,000 as at February 2020, down from more than 402,000 in November 2019. This is less than half the 800,000-plus subscribed to Optus Sports in February.

The importance of securing the rugby broadcasting rights was explained recently by sports commentator Roy Masters:

RA will take to broadcasters a guaranteed package of more than 400 games a season, aware that the game’s predominantly wealthy followers will pay to have access to everything from the British and Irish Lions tests to GPS schoolboy matches, even if they only watch a mere fraction of these games…

Optus Sports has 825,000 subscribers, while Fox’s Kayo service numbers 334,000. Essentially, the RA package is one which Fox won’t want to lose and Optus will want to win.

With Foxtel’s traditional cable television and regular streaming businesses fighting a losing battle against lower-cost video-on-demand (VOD) services like Netflix, Stan and Amazon, Foxtel’s only perceived competitive advantage is in sports via its Kayo offering. However, even here Foxtel is losing the battle to Optus Sports, which will soon become the home of both soccer and rugby.

Slowly but surely, Foxtel is losing the subscription television war to the internet.

Latest News
Australian housing affordability has never been worse
Macro Afternoon
Trump wins elections for globalists
How the Australia Institute transformed into immigration propagandists
Use pensioners, not migrants, to plug labour shortages
Iron ore into the tariff shock
Report: Greens’ housing policies would worsen rental crisis
China doubles-down on coal use
Australian dollar dummy of a child president
Gas reservation will be the election’s biggest loss
Stocks abandoned
Macro Morning
International student “exports” are one big lie
Australia bet its economy on housing and lost
Macro Afternoon: 29 April 2025
Market tells RBA to cut fast and deep
Australian road user charges need overhaul
Hartnett: Sell
ABC and Guardian are a form of “hate media”
Victorians drown in taxes and debt
Stop subsidising private car purchases
Iron ore meat into trade war sandwich
Dislikeable Dutton sends Coalition to new low
Stocks party with the child president
Macro Morning
“Lawless” universities devalue Australia
Plunging buyer demand stalls housing market
Australian dollar pain to turn agony for investors
MB Radio: DeepT and NG – interest rates, housing construction & Sisyphean struggle
RBA tipped to cut again and again