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Streaming-TV Bills Stack Up With Disney, Apple, Netflix

Nor does this total include other services like Starz and Acorn TV, or sports offerings like MLB.tv or WWE.

Streaming-TV Bills Stack Up With Disney, Apple, Netflix
Tim Cook, chief executive officer of Apple Inc., smiles while speaking about Apple TV+ during an event at the Steve Jobs Theater in Cupertino, California, U.S. (Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- With all the new streaming-TV services about to make their debut, couch potatoes will be more tempted than ever to cut the cord and buy the services they prefer a la carte. But the menu is getting crowded.

New arrivals to the market, from Walt Disney Co. to Apple Inc., are pricing their streaming platforms ever-lower to squeeze into the monthly budgets of viewers who embraced online TV as an alternative to cable services. On Tuesday, Apple said it would charge $4.99 a month for TV+, a package of movies and shows with stars like Jennifer Aniston and Jason Momoa.

Here’s a look at how the monthly tab would look for a subscriber to some of the biggest names in streaming when Disney and Apple introduce their products in November, with the fees rounded to the nearest dollar for simplicity’s sake:

Cord-Cutter Bundle

Netflix (most popular plan)$13
Disney+/Hulu/ESPN+ bundle$13
Amazon Prime Video$9
HBO Now$15
CBS All Access/Showtime bundle$15
Apple TV+$5
Total bill$70

Keep in mind, that total doesn’t include the NBCUniversal service, due next year from Comcast Corp. And it’s still not clear what AT&T Inc. will charge for the upcoming HBO Max offering, which will throw in other WarnerMedia programming in addition to HBO shows sometime in 2020.

Nor does this total include other services like Starz and Acorn TV, or sports offerings like MLB.tv or WWE. Customers also could opt for only some parts of the Disney and CBS bundles, since not everyone will want, say, children’s movies and Major League Soccer games.

Even if you pay for five or six streaming services, you still might be getting a cheaper deal than cable. Comcast, the biggest U.S. cable provider, gets an average of $86 a month per subscriber for video service.

Undoubtedly, many of these companies aim to get viewers hooked on their shows and then methodically raise prices over time, just as Netflix has done -- and indeed, just as cable networks did for decades. That’s why Netflix and Disney shares fell Tuesday on Apple’s announcement. Investors worry that consumers will get choosy if they get enough entertainment from Apple TV+ to justify ending their Netflix subscription, for example.

Bottom line: Not all of these services are going to fit in a budget-conscious cord cutter’s plans. After the great rush to streaming, the great shakeout will be next.

To contact the reporter on this story: Crayton Harrison in New York at tharrison5@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Crayton Harrison at tharrison5@bloomberg.net, Nick Turner

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.