Dish TV and Tata Sky, the country's two direct-to-home (DTH) companies, are expected to post losses in excess of Rs 1,400 crore for 2007-08 in their quest to expand the market by offering set-top boxes at subsidised rates.
The companies have over five million subscriber homes across the country collectively.
With three players all set to enter the DTH sector this year (with new technology offerings), the companies expect losses to go up further this financial year. Big TV (Reliance ADAG), Bharti and Sun Direct will bring in MPEG 4 set-top boxes, which provide higher quality pictures.
"Dish TV, the largest DTH company, is expected to incur a loss of Rs 300-350 crore, while Tata Sky is set to post Rs 1,100 crore-plus loss," industry sources said. Tata Sky, however, declined to comment on its financials and projections.
At present, DTH companies incur a loss of Rs 1,600-2,300 on each new subscriber they acquire, which includes the cost of the MPEG 2 set-top box and other hardware and installation costs.
However, with new players offering MPEG 4 boxes, the subsidy will go up even further and the loss for acquiring new customers will rise by at least 30 per cent.
The problem might get even more complicated as existing players might have to upgrade their old boxes to the new technology in order to guard against the churn of customers. This will obviously impact their bottom line.
For consumers, more DTH service providers will mean cheaper DTH connections with more value-added