by Sotos » Thu Feb 23, 2006 12:14 am
miVision, CyTA’s digital platform, is seeking to strike new deals with content providers from Cyprus and abroad, as CyTA rushes to boost the total channels on its pay-TV digital platform from 36 at present to 60.
CyTA Chairman Stavros Kremmos told the Financial Mirror that the letter of intent signed with Lumiere TV Public Co. Ltd, according to which the programmes of subscriber channels LTV and Alfa will also be transmitted through miVision, in addition to the Multichoice subscriber platform, is not “an exclusive agreement aimed at hurting competition, but is open for other channels to utilise.”
Kremmos said that private TV stations like ANT1 and Sigma are more than welcome to engage in talks with CyTA to reach a deal.
“I can assure you that if they (ANT1 and Sigma) don’t come to us, we shall go to them to sign deals in order to boost our content,” he said.
He explained that miVision broadcasts 36 channels, of which 27 are active. Once the deal with LTV is operational, then the total will be 40, channels, but the objective is to boost miVision’s content to 60 and more, which means that more deals are in the pipeline with Cypriot and foreign providers.
Kremmos, who has come under harsh criticism for clinching the LTV deal, defended the decision, saying that as long as he is Chairman, “nobody can hold CyTA back and force us to rely on outdated means of securing our future revenues.”
What price?
Kremmos said LTV and Alfa currently boast the best content and this is why CyTA decided to ditch old differences and secure their programming content.
He brushed aside references in some media that over the next 15 years, CyTA may pay up to CYP 165 mln in fees to LTV.
“That is ridiculous, I don’t know who came up with that figure, but I can assure you that it is totally wrong and was probably made to distort public opinion,” said Kremmos, who nevertheless refused to go into financial details, citing a confidentiality clause signed with LTV.
He said, however, that while in the initial years, some payments will be made to LTV, after that the whole deal is based on revenue sharing.
Established since 1993, LTV boasts over 65,000 subscribers, of whom 15,000 have upgraded to the NOVA digital platform. It has an estimated 30% market penetration of all households in Cyprus.
miVision presently has 8.000 subscribers, but hopes that once its deal with LTV gets underway, this number will rise rapidly.
Reliable sources told the Financial Mirror that CyTA will need to pay CYP 5.5 mln to LTV over the next 3 1/2 years for use of its content, including live football from Cyprus, the UK Premiere League, UEFA, Greek Premiere as well as major European football, plus other popular sports, as well as access to the latest films and popular programmes like ‘Desperate Housewives’.
The same sources said the CYP 5.5 mln spread over the next 3 1/2 years is very competitive for the amount of content that LTV will give to miVision. After the the initial phase of the deal, the two sides will start sharing revenue based on the number of subscribers.
No link with Multichoice
Kremmos said CyTA is not involved in the dispute between Lumiere’s directors with the CSE-listed Multichoice.
The CSE suspended trading in Multichoice shares until mid-April to give time for MCC to react to the LTV decision to start joint transmission of its content on the miVision platform and from 2010 terminate its deal with Multichoice as well as dispose of its 27% direct and indirect stake in the company.
Quadro Play
The Financial Mirror has also learned that the miVision deal with LTV will see the debut of CyTA’s Quadro Play services as the telecom giant rushes to beat the competition now gearing up to offer Triple Play services.
CyTA knows too well that the days of deriving the bulk of its revenue from fixed line telephony are numbered and it needs to offer Cypriot households a single connection that will offer voice, mobile, Internet and data otherwise known as Quadro Play.
In any event, private TV stations need to change their transmission format to digital after 2010 according to EU directives as Brussels cuts back on the number of frequencies used by analogue providers, which is why CyTA is rushing to become the preferred digital platform for TV channels.
In addition to the popular TV stations like ANT and Sigma, the two main players likely to be affected by the move are PrimeTel, the strategic telecoms partner of the EAC and OTEnet Cyprus, the Cypriot arm of the Greek telecom giant OTE, both of which are rushing with plans to offer Triple Play and other technologically advanced services.
Officials from PrimeTel and OTEnet have promised to take the miVision/LTV deal before the Competition Commission as well as before the European Commission citing the fact that the two major players will stifle competition by setting up a monopolistic situation difficult to crack.