Disney
is matching Netflix's standard plan and marketing the service $3
below its rival's premium version, which lets subscribers and their
family members watch on as many as four devices at once.
Business
Standard
: Walt Disney Co. is pricing a new bundle of streaming services at a
surprisingly low $12.99 a month, challenging Netflix Inc. with a
package that includes family programming, live sports and a deep
library of television shows.
The
entertainment giant announced the combined pricing for Disney+, ESPN+
and Hulu on a conference call Tuesday with investors. It will debut
as part of the November launch of the Disney+ service and represents
a near 30% discount to their individual prices.
Disney
is matching Netflix’s
standard plan and marketing the service $3 below its rival’s
premium version, which lets subscribers and their family members
watch on as many as four devices at once. But two of the Disney
services, ESPN+ and Hulu, carry advertising, while Netflix is
commercial-free.
The
company’s crusade to become a streaming giant has been a costly
one. Investments in new online services led to a $553 million loss in
Disney’s
direct-to-consumer division, part of generally disappointing results
released on Tuesday. And that deficit is expected to rise to $900
million in the current quarter.
But
Disney’s trove of films and TV shows from its Marvel, Pixar and
Star Wars brands will make it a formidable competitor, said Ivan
Feinseth, chief investment officer at New York’s Tigress Financial
Partners LLC.
“Disney
has powerful content,” he said in an interview with Bloomberg
Television.
The
aggressive pricing could also create headaches for HBO Max, a
streaming service from AT&T Inc. that’s scheduled to launch
next spring. That package also will offer family programming and
original shows. The cost for that package hasn’t been announced
yet. But HBO alone costs $14.99 a month, suggesting that it will be
hard to compete with Disney’s price.
Disney
is betting online services will counter the loss of conventional TV
viewers for flagship channels like ESPN, ABC and the Disney Channel.
Earlier this year, the company spent $71 billion acquiring the movie
and TV assets of Fox to bolster its future offerings.
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