The growth of Disney+, which launched a year ago, has far exceeded the expectations of both Wall Street and the company itself.
The growth of Walt Disney Co.’s streaming service in India and Indonesia has been staggering, with the countries now accounting for more than a quarter of its 73.7 million customers globally.
What’s less staggering is
the price most of the subscribers pay: Even the premium plan is just $20 a
year. That’s a fraction of the $70 that U.S. customers shell out and
illustrates the challenge the company faces as it takes its streaming platform
to more countries.
The growth of Disney+,
which launched a year ago, has far exceeded the expectations of both Wall
Street and the company itself. It was a bright spot in Disney’s latest
quarterly results, released Thursday. But keeping up its pace will mean tapping
markets with less spending power.
“If you get enough sheer
volume, you can make it work even at a relatively low price per subscriber,”
said David Heger, an analyst at Edward Jones.
The company serves India
and Indonesia with a product called Disney+
Hotstar, a rebranded platform born out of a business acquired from Fox last
year. Those two developing countries now represent 18.4 million Disney+
subscribers.
Hotstar was rechristened with
the Disney+ name on April 3 in India. The product launched in Indonesia in
September. Since the streaming platform had 33.5 million subscribers globally
at the end of March, that means the two countries accounted for almost half of
new customers over the past six months.
India, with its massive
population, has the potential to become the biggest market for Disney+, Heger
said.
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