In my previous two blog posts, I discussed MASN’s financial
situation and the amounts that the Orioles and Nationals are projected to
receive from MASN in media rights fees and equity stake payments from 2012-2031.
In this post, I want to compare what the Nationals and Orioles are projected to
receive to what the Phillies, Astros, Rangers, Dodgers, Angels and Padres are
projected to receive in media rights fees and equity stake payments from their
deals.
The value of media rights are not the same for each team.
The value of media rights for teams that control large media markets is higher
than the value of media rights for teams that control small media markets. In
order to make valid comparisons, it is necessary to understand each team’s
media market.
Nielsen Media Research is one of the authorities when it
comes to determining media market size. Nielsen divided the United States into
210 unequal parts and called each one a designated media area (DMA). Nielsen then estimates how many standard,
cable and satellite TV subscribers are in each DMA.
The Business of Baseball blog posted a map showing where each team has broadcasting rights. Media Street Smarts produced a map
that shows the locations and sizes of all DMAs. Using the two maps mentioned
above, it is possible to determine which DMAs are in which media markets.
Finally, Dave Warner from the blog “What you pay for sports”
put together a spreadsheet that shows the number of cable and satellite TV subscribers in
any given DMA. With this information, it is possible to quantify each team’s media market.
ORIOLES AND NATIONALS MEDIA MARKET
ORIOLES AND NATIONALS MEDIA MARKET
As this Washington Post article states; the Orioles/Nationals media market encompasses all of Maryland;
Virginia; the District; Delaware; seven counties in West Virginia; 13 counties
and three cities — York, Lancaster and Harrisburg — in central Pennsylvania;
and most of central and eastern North Carolina. In addition, Comcast does not
license CSN Philadelphia to satellite TV providers. My understanding is that
satellite viewers in the Philadelphia DMA receive MASN as their home sports
station. Therefore, the Orioles/Nationals media market consists of the
following DMAs.
At first glance, MASNs media market looks large with 9.5 million
potential cable and satellite subscribers. The Orioles media market, which covers the Baltimore, Salisbury,
Harrisburg and Philadelphia DMAs, consists of nearly 2.3 million potential
viewers. The Nationals media market covers the rest of the region and consists
of roughly 7.2 million potential viewers. It’s not that simple.
Many potential subscribers in the Orioles/Nationals media market
do not have access to MASN. As shown in this article, Times Warner, the primary cable provider in North Carolina, has
refused to provide MASN to its subscribers. Times Warner has taken the position
that there is little interest in the Orioles or Nationals in North Carolina and
therefore showing MASN on basic cable would cause them to lose money. After years of lawsuits, the Fourth Circuit
Court agreed with Times Warner and MASN has conceded legal defeat. Negotiations are ongoing but have been
unsuccessful.
Likewise, MASN has been unable to convince Comcast to provide MASN
to subscribers in the Norfolk/Portsmouth DMA partly due to lack of subscriber
interest. While Cox and Verizon do provide MASN to subscribers in the
Norfolk/Portsmouth DMA, it is my understanding that Comcast is the major
provider. In contrast, Comcast does provide MASN to its subscribers in the
other DMAs listed above.
As a result, according to Grantland, MASN has 5.4 million subscribers instead of the 9.5 million
available in their market area. My understanding is that slightly more than 60% of the subscribers are in the Nationals territory while 40% are in the Orioles territory.
PHILLIES MEDIA MARKET AND MEDIA DEAL
Philadelphia’s media market consists of the Philadelphia,
Harrisburg and Wilkes-Barre DMAs. Here are the numbers.
Dave Warner proposes that if the escalator clause is 3.5% then Comcast will start paying the Phillies $64.14 million in media rights fees in 2016, $107.54 million in media rights fees in 2031 and $146.63 million in media rights fees in 2040. I will create a table with all the media rights fees information after I’ve discussed all of the deals listed above.
2014 Rank
|
DMA Name
|
State
|
TV Homes 2014
|
Cable Homes
|
4
|
Philadelphia
|
PA
|
2,963,500
|
2,347,092
|
43
|
Harrisburg-Lncstr-Leb-York
|
PA
|
725,340
|
468,569
|
54
|
Wilkes Barre-Scranton-Hztn
|
PA
|
584,870
|
343,318
|
Total
|
4,273,710
|
3,158,979
|
As stated above, satellite TV providers are not offered
access to CSN Philadelphia. Therefore, about 900,000 people who could be paying
subscription fees to CSN Philadelphia are not. Comcast sacrifices this
potential revenue to convince households in the Philadelphia region to be customers
of Comcast. According to CSN Philadelphia’s website, CSN Philadelphia has over
3 million viewers so I assume that all of the cable TV subscribers in these
DMAs receive CSN Philadelphia.
CSN Philadelphia has nearly 60% of the subscribers that MASN
has but supports only one baseball team while MASN supports two. In addition, unlike the Orioles/Nationals
market which is geographically large, the Philadelphia market is geographically
smaller. Most people in the Philadelphia media market are interested in
watching the Phillies while the same may not be as true in the
Orioles/Nationals market. Therefore, CSN Philadelphia charges more money to
broadcast the Phillies than MASN does to broadcast the Nationals. Despite
bringing in less revenue, the Phillies market is more lucrative because CSN
Philadelphia only needs to support one team while MASN supports two teams.
The Philadelphia Inquirer states
the new deal with Comcast is a 25 year deal starting in 2016 worth 2.5
billion in media rights fees although the annual fee will start at a lower
number and increase over the length of the deal. The Sports Business Daily states
that Philadelphia will increase its ownership stake in CSN Philadelphia
to 25% and that the annual media rights fee will grow 3-4% each year.
Dave Warner proposes that if the escalator clause is 3.5% then Comcast will start paying the Phillies $64.14 million in media rights fees in 2016, $107.54 million in media rights fees in 2031 and $146.63 million in media rights fees in 2040. I will create a table with all the media rights fees information after I’ve discussed all of the deals listed above.
ASTROS AND RANGERS MEDIA MARKET
The Houston Astros and Texas Rangers share a media market of
nearly 12 million potential subscribers from Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico,
Louisiana and Arizona. The DMAs in this
region consist of the following:
According to this article, the Astros’s original media provider reached 9 million households and earned
$300 million in revenue in 2012. Forbes claims that the original media provider
only reached 8.1 million households. This is larger than the Nationals/Orioles
media market and therefore their rights should be more valuable.
ASTROS MEDIA DEAL
The first thing to keep in mind when discussing CSN Houston
is that CSN Houston is applying for bankruptcy. Dave Warner explains the
reasons for that in this article. Houston failed to be competitive last year and by doing so
angered their fans. Many fans felt that if Houston was unwilling to spend money
on the team that they were unwilling to spend money on the team as well. This
emboldened other carriers to not carry CSN Houston at the requested rates
because of limited demand by their customers and therefore limited customer
pressure. Indeed, some customers pressured their cable providers not to carry
CSN Houston. As a result, CSN Houston didn’t receive as much revenue as they
were projecting and therefore declared bankruptcy.
The Astros and CSN Houston agreed to a twenty year media deal, in which the Astros were to receive $1.6 billion in media
rights fees starting in 2013 in addition to a 45% equity stake in CSN Houston.
Forbes claims that the deal was valued at $3.2 billion and the Astros would
collect $1.6 billion in media rights fees over the twenty year period thereby
implying that the equity in CSN Houston as well as the equity rights fees would
be worth $1.6 billion over the twenty year period. According to this article
from the Houston Chronicle the Astros were supposed to earn media rights fees of $55,572,454
in the first year which was 2013. These rights were supposed to adjust upwards
in subsequent years.
Based on these numbers, it would appear that the upward
adjustment was by roughly 3.75% per year. The first year payment and the total
payment are known. All that is necessary to determine the annual rate of
increase is to determine which standard rate of increase results in the sum
equaling $1.6 billion. According to these numbers, the Astros were expected to receive
$62 million in media rights fees in 2016 and $107.67 million in 2031.
RANGERS MEDIA DEAL
As stated earlier, the Rangers share the same media market
as the Astros. According to the Dallas News,
the Rangers signed a deal for twenty years and $1.6 billion in media rights
fees. Forbes notes that the total value of the deal is $3 billion and begins in 2015. Not
only does it have $1.6 billion in media rights fees but it also offers an
upright payment of $100 million and gives the team a 10% equity stake in Fox
Sports Southwest. I am unable to determine how much the Rangers are expected to
make in media rights fees in 2015 and therefore am unable to determine how
their deal might look. Given that the deal starts in 2015 and pays a similar amount as the Astros deal, then it stands to reason that the deal is similar to but less lucrative than the Astros deal. This is because media deals pay more in future years than current years.
ANGELS AND DODGERS MEDIA MARKET
The Angels and Dodgers both share the Los Angeles media
market which consists of the Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, Bakersfield, Las Vegas
and Honolulu (shared by all West Coast teams) DMAs. Here are the numbers.
The Angels and the Dodgers share a media market consisting
of nearly 6.5 million cable and satellite subscribers. Like the Philadelphia market, the reason why
this market is so strong is because so many people live in the Los Angeles DMA
proper. Those fans are more likely to be fans of the Dodgers or Angels and have
more interest in watching Dodgers or Angels games than a person living in
Virginia would in watching an Orioles game. As a result, while there are a similar amount of potential subscribers
in the Los Angeles and Nationals/Orioles market, the Los Angeles market is considerably more
lucrative.
DODGERS MEDIA DEAL
Currently, the Times Warner and SportsNet LA only have 1.55
million Los Angeles subscribers.
According to the Review Journal, no providers in Southern Nevada have agreed to carry the channel.
It isn’t clear whether any providers in Southern Nevada are expected to agree
to provide the channel. Times Warner is hoping that when other carriers in
California are shut out of the market that their customers will either
subscribe to Times Warner or that these carriers will give in and pay between
$4.50 and $5 per month to subscribe to SportsNet LA.
The Bloomberg article above claims that the Dodgers and Time
Warner Cable agreed upon a 25 year deal that pays the Dodgers $8.35 billion in
media rights fees. According to the LA Times,
the annual fee that Time Warner Cable will pay to the Dodgers starts at $210
million in 2014 and increases dramatically through the life of the contract. If
the fee increases by a standard rate then the increase is about 3.625% per
year. This means the Dodgers are projected to receive $225.5 million in 2016,
$384 million in 2031 and $493 million in 2038. Given that MLB and the Dodgers
have agreed that fair value for the deal is $140 million for 2014 the Dodgers
will only have to contribute $47.6 million into revenue sharing for 2014. They
will be able to keep $162.4 million from their media rights deal in 2014. If
Times Warner is able to convince other providers to pay the carriage fee for
SportsNet LA, then the Dodgers will be in an advantageous position for the next
twenty five years.
ANGELS MEDIA DEAL
The LA Times reported that
the Angels deal was worth $2.5 billion over 17 years starting in 2012. Forbes reported
that they signed a 17-year, $2.5 billion deal that pays an average $95 million
rights fee with a 25% equity stake in Fox Sports West. If so then they would receive $1.615 billion over a 17 year period in media rights fees. I do not know how much they
made in 2012. If they receive a 5.5% annual increase then they will receive $60 million in 2012, $74 million in 2016 and $141 million in 2028.
If they receive a 3.7% standard increase per year then they will receive $70
million in 2012, $81 million in 2016 and $125 million in 2028.
PADRES MEDIA MARKET AND MEDIA DEAL
The Padres media market covers the San Diego, Yuma-El
Centro, Las Vegas, Tucson, Albuquerque and Honolulu DMAs. Here are the numbers.
The Padres media market consists of nearly 3.2 million
possible subscribers. However, there are
no providers in Albuquerque that carry Fox Sports San Diego. In addition, Cox
Cable is the only cable provider that offers Fox Sports San Diego in Tucson or
Las Vegas. It is unclear whether Times Warner will start providing Fox Sports San Diego in either Tucson or Las Vegas as a result of their recent agreement. As a result, their media market is the smallest of the ones we’ve
discussed and therefore their deal is the least lucrative.
Forbes claims that the deal is worth $1.4 billion and that the Padres will receive $1 billion in
media rights fees. According to Inside the Padres,
the deal pays the Padres $30 million for media rights fees in 2013 and grows to a number
between 65 and 70 million in its final year. The percentage increase in rights
fees will not be the same each year.
If the deal grows by 5.5% in the first ten years and 4.5% in the last ten years then the deal will be worth $37.2 million in 2016 and $74.7 million in 2031.
A COMPARISON OF ALL THE MEDIA DEALS
With the exception of the Angels, all of the deals cover at least 2016-2031. In order to get an idea of what the Angels deal might look like if it lasted past 2028, it is possibly to multiply the 2028 numbers by the standard increase per year. The following table shows how the deals compare to each other from 2016-2031.
Year
|
Nationals
|
Phillies
|
Astros
|
Dodgers
|
Angels 1
|
Angels 2
|
Padres
|
2016-2031
|
1356.60
|
1345.08
|
1325.94
|
4389.68
|
1724.84
|
1831.56
|
873.35
|
Despite having a weaker market than the Phillies or Astros,
the Nationals/Orioles are projected to receive more from 2016-2031
than either of those teams in media rights fees. Given that the Rangers are expected to receive a similar amount in rights fees (but starting two years later) to the Astros, the
Nationals/Orioles should receive more than them as well. It appears that comparing
the first year of the MASN deal to the average amount in the Phillies or Astros
deal does not provide an accurate picture of the future. While a significant
part of each teams deal is the equity that they receive in their network, it is
likely that each of these deals are similar in value.
What MASN is offering the Nationals/Orioles appears to be
far inferior to what the Dodgers are receiving from SportsNet LA until one
considers that the Dodgers received no equity in their deal. The Dodgers deal is
still the most lucrative but by less than it may appear on first glance. The Angels are also receiving more in media rights fees
than the Nationals/Orioles and will receive roughly the same amount from 2016 to 2028 that the Nationals/Orioles will receive from 2016 to 2031. Given the strength of the Los Angeles market, this
should be expected.
The Padres are receiving less money in media rights fees than all of the other clubs in this post. Given
that their market is easily the smallest this should come as no surprise.
CONCLUSION
To sum up, MASN has a similar but less lucrative media
market to most of the other teams listed in this comparison especially when
factoring in the fact that it controls the rights for two teams. Despite this,
the amount that they are paying the Nationals and Orioles from 2016-2031 is
projected to be slightly larger than the amount that the Phillies and Astros
are receiving from their deals and considerably larger than the amount that the
Padres are receiving from their deal.
So, why were the Nationals asking for between $100 million and $120 million in 2012?
Especially if it’s true as Forbes states that MASN’s revenue will likely be under
$200 million in 2012, obviously not nearly enough to support $100 million
rights fees for the Nationals and Orioles and have any money to reinvest back
into the RSN. After all, the Nationals are receiving a fair amount in media rights fees and if MASN goes
bankrupt they’d lose their equity stake. Furthermore, if the Nationals are being offered a fair deal then why is MLB giving them money to make up for their current deal?
Part of the reason is that the current deal presumes a 7.7%
increase each year. It may be questionable to expect a 7.7% increase annually
in 2026 when the deal is on par with the deals that the Phillies, Astros and
Angels received. Another part is that the Nationals position really hasn’t been explained clearly in the media and as
a result there are a number of misconceptions. In Part 4, I will explain the
Nationals position in the dispute between them and MASN.
6 comments:
I'm not sure what your sources are, but as a resident of the Norfolk/Portsmouth area I can assure you that MASN is available throughout the area, and that Cox, not Comcast, is the primary cable provider in the region.
Joe - Thanks for the correction.
I assumed that since Comcast is the main provider in most of the Baltimore/Washington/Virginia area that they were in the Norfolk/Portsmouth DMA also.
I think you might have misread the colors in that map because I'm pretty sure New Mexico is Rockies territory, not Padres.
Horse Hockey from a naive Orioles fan defending what he has know is a terrible ownership group. The Nationals can only own at most THIRTY THREE PERCENT of MASN! Right now its at THIRTEEN PERCENT! And by your own admission the Nationals territory is larger both in terms of population and area. Plus? There's the obvious higher income bracket associated with fans in DC and the surrounding areas!
You continue to refer to the Orioles and Nationals as a single team? What damned planet are you from that you would have the unmitigated gaul to do that? Are you a relative of Angelos? Because if you aren't you are ONLY hurting yourself because he sure as heck IS NOT funneling as much as you claim back into the franchise. Clearly he is keeping most back for he and his family dude! C'mon!
Here's what Kilgore and the Washington Post wrote:
"MLB has broached the possibility of restructuring the MASN deal to increase the Nationals’ ownership stake in the network. The Nationals currently own 13 percent of MASN, with their share scheduled to go up roughly one percent each year until it reaches 33 percent. The Orioles have pushed back against that idea, again digging in to defend the original deal.
The news about the Dodgers should only intensify the Nationals’ desire for a new deal. Receiving $45 million per year from their television would put the Nationals at a stark competitive disadvantage to comparable markets. The Los Angeles market is far larger than Washington, but the Nationals’ market, which includes the large surrounding suburbs, is substantial. The lucrative tide caused by the Dodgers’ deal, the Nationals will argue, should raise all boats."
Albuquerque is one of those DMAs that belongs to multiple teams. It very well could be that the Rockies also broadcast games there. The Padres definitely share it.
The Astros and thus presumably Rangers also broadcast in New Mexico.
http://blog.chron.com/sportsupdate/2013/02/astros-debut-thursday-on-csn-houston/
Thanks for commenting Peric!
I use Nationals/Orioles because they both make up the MASN market and receive the same amount in media rights fees.
BTW, your article is from November 2012. It's not 2012 at the moment.
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