Archive for August, 2010

QuStream (Pesa) Returns to Profitability in Q2 as Revenue Climbs 19%

broadcast technology market research, Broadcast technology vendor financials | Posted by Joe Zaller
Aug 31 2010

Broadcast routing switcher and pro-AV vendor QuStream (aka Pesa) reported that its revenue for the second quarter of fiscal 2010 was US $4.3 million compared to US $3.6 million in the same period in fiscal 2009, a 19% increase.  Gross margins for the quarter were 52%, a decrease from the 62% margins achieved a year ago on lower revenues.  The company attributed the decrease in gross margins to increasing inventories. 99% of the company’s revenues in Q2 came from the United States.  

Revenue for the six months ended June 30, 2010 was US $6.0 million compared to US $6.0 million in the same period last year. 96% of revenue in 1H 2010 was from the United States. Gross margins for the first six months were 52% compared to 10% for the same period last year. The company says that this increase in gross margin was mainly due to a decrease of net inventory provision of $2m, and a higher margin on the new products sold.

 Net earnings for the second quarter of fiscal 2010 was US $0.5 million or $0.02 per share compared to a net loss of US $0.4 million or ($0.02) per share for the same period last year. Net loss for the six months ended June 30, 2010 was US $0.4 million or ($0.02) per share compared to a net loss of US $5.0 million or ($0.22) per share for the same period last year.

Commenting on the resultsm QuStream president and COO Chuck Tillett said that during Q2 the company “saw a return to profitability in a challenging and competitive environment. Tillet further stated that “The Company remains focused on executing its strategic initiatives to return to growth and profitability.”

You can read the full QuStream Q2 press release here.

You can read the QuStream Q2 Financial Statements and Management’s Discussion & Analysis here.

DG FastChannel Lowers Guidance Due to Seasonality, Announces Share Buyback. Stock Crushed.

broadcast technology market research, Broadcast technology vendor financials | Posted by Joe Zaller
Aug 30 2010

Digital media services and advertising delivery provider DG FastChannel today issued guidance for the third quarter and full year.

The company expects its Q3 revenue to be in the range of $51-53m and EBITDA of $23-24m.   For the full year the Company is comfortable with revenues of approximately $230 to $234m and EBITDA of approximately $105 to $107m.

The stock market did not like the news.  Analysts had been expecting Q3 revenues to be about 20% higher at $61m, and full year numbers about 7% higher at $246m.  Analysts had also been anticipating higher EBITDA numbers.

The stock is down more than 30% this morning, after falling almost 10% late last week.

Commenting on the results, company Chairman and CEO Scott Ginsburg said “While DG FastChannel’s pricing has remained stable and the HD business is strong, we are seeing normal seasonality in our SD volumes following a particularly strong Q2. This seasonality is being exaggerated by the strong rebound in spending from the second to third quarter in 2009, which masked the normal seasonality. In addition, the shift in our customer mix as we transition the Company’s Pathfire long-form platform from a wholesale to a full service business model has put short term pressure on revenues, but we expect that our new customer acquisitions will start to contribute in the fourth quarter. We remain confident that for the full year 2010, the Company expects to report approximately 22% year-over-year revenue growth and approximately 36% EBITDA growth.”

The company also announced a $30m stock repurchase program.  According to Ginsburg “this share repurchase program is a good use of our cash, reflecting our strong belief in the value and opportunity for DG FastChannel.”

You can read the full DG FastChannel press release here.

Value for Money Rankings of Broadcast Technology Vendors — The Top 30 Globally

broadcast industry technology trends, broadcast industry trends, broadcast technology market research | Posted by Joe Zaller
Aug 27 2010

This is part of series of posts about the how the brands of broadcast technology vendors were ranked by respondents to the 2010 Big Broadcast Survey (BBS).

Each year as part of the Big Broadcast Survey (BBS), a global sample of broadcast professionals are asked to rank their opinion of a number of technology vendor brands on a wide range of metrics.  This information is used to create a series of reports, which through benchmarking and industry “league tables” enable these vendors to understand their competitive position in the market.

More than 5,600 people in 120+ countries participated in the 2010 BBS, making this the largest ever and most comprehensive study of the broadcast industry. In addition to measuring a variety of broadcast industry trends, more than 100 vendor brands (in 27 separate product categories) were evaluated by respondents.

.

Recently, posts which rank broadcast technology vendors include:

 . 

This post looks at how respondents ranked broadcast technology vendors for what is perhaps the most subjective driver we measured in the 2010 BBS — value for money.

.

For some respondents value for money might mean low price, for others it might mean superior price/performance, while for others it could mean peace of mind in mission critical environments, regardless of the price.

Whatever the definition of value, the combination of a poor economy over the past few years and customer budget constraints have made many broadcast professionals more value-conscious than ever.  As a result, broadcast technology vendors must respond by continually delivering more value for less money.  This drives innovation in the broadcast supply chain as vendors are forced to compete on multiple levels.

Respondents were asked to rank broadcast technology vendor brands for “Value for Money” on a scale of 1-10 — with 10 being best in the market, and 1 being worst in the market.  The top 30 ranked brands for overall opinion are shown below for the global sample of all respondents.

.

In all cases, these results are shown in alphabetical order, NOT in the order in which they were ranked by respondents to the survey. 

.

Value for Money – The Top 30 Globally, Alphabetical Order

.

There are a wide variety of vendors on this list, including large & small companies and those who produce audio & video products.  In order to better understand what drives the perception of value, we need to look at some of the factors behind these results.  These include the number of products produced by each vendor, the geographic location of the each vendor, and the types of product produced by the top 30 value companies.

 .

.

Number of products per vendor

When reviewing these results it’s important to understand how many products are produced by each vendor on this list.  This will help us to understand if whether reliability comes from small focused companies, or large multi-product vendors. 

The 2010 BBS evaluated 27 separate product categories.  In the previously published top 30 quality rankings, and top 30 reliability rankings, single product companies (those who were covered on only one product category in the 2010 BBS) completely dominated the rankings with about 2/3 of all positions.

A breakdown of how many product categories are produced by each vendor on the top 30 value list is shown below:

.

.

Just over half of the vendors in the top 30 value rankings produce a product in only one BBS category (out of 27 measured).  This is slightly less concentrated that other findings, such as reliability where there were 21 single product companies in the top 30.

In the case of value, there is a mix of large and small, and single and multi-product companies.  It’s worth pointing out here that much of this list is made up of the industry’s largest multi-product vendors.  For example Grass Valley (10 categories), Evertz and Miranda (5 categories each), Sony (4 categories), Ross Video (3 categories), Apple, Black Magic Design, Cisco, For-A, Harmonic, Ikegami, Panasonic, and JVC (2 categories each).

 .

.

Geographic Location

Another factor to consider is the geographic location of each company on the list.  By this measure, companies headquartered in the Americas are the clear value for money leaders, while companies based in the EMEA and Asia trail the pack. 

.

.

Keep in mind that when looking at geography, it’s important to remember that many of these firms are truly global, with offices all over the world, regardless of where they are headquartered.

.

.

Product Categories

Finally, let’s look at the product categories produced by the vendors who made the top 30 value list for the 2010 BBS.

.

.

Out of the 27 product categories covered in the 2010 BBS, 21 appear on this list. This is on par with other metrics. For comparison, there are 20 product categories in the top 30 reliability rankings and 23 product categories in the top 30 quality rankings.

Signal processing products lead the list of products produced by the top 30 value leaders.  This is a fiercely competitive market that is at the heart of the transition to HDTV operations, and customers look for both value and quality.  Cameras and audio consoles were close behind, while microphones, production switchers, routing switchers and video transport also made a strong showing.

 .

Please keep in mind when reviewing this information that, unless otherwise specified, all data these charts are presented in alphabetical order, not in the order brands were ranked by respondents to the 2010 BBS.  Also, the charts in this posting measure the responses of all 2010 BBS respondents, regardless of their company type, company size, geographic location, job title and budget for broadcast technology products.  

In order to get full value from this data, it is necessary to evaluate these results on a granular basis.  If you would like more information, please contact Devoncroft Partners.

.

.

.

This article is based on the findings from the 2010 Big Broadcast Survey (BBS), a global study of industry trends, technology purchasing behavior and the opinion of vendor brands.  With more than 5,600 people in 120+ countries participating, the 2010 version of the BBS is the largest and most comprehensive market study ever done in the broadcast industry.

EVS Reports Strong Q2 Results: Revenue up 61.2%, Operating Margins of 52.4%

broadcast industry trends, broadcast technology market research, Broadcast technology vendor financials | Posted by Joe Zaller
Aug 26 2010

Belgian-based broadcast sports slow motion and studio server specialist EVS announced strong results for the second quarter of 2010 today, driven by an improving broadcast market and the 2010 World Cup.  The company also reported a strong order book of future orders.

The company reported revenue of €30.2m during the quarter, with gross margins of 79.4% and operating margins of 52.4%. The revenue for the quarter represents an increase of 61.2% versus the same period a year ago, and an increase of 41.6% at constant currency and excluding rental income from major events. Sales were positively impacted by the 2010 World Cup, where EVS supplied more than €5m of equipment (with rental revenues split over Q2 and Q3).

For the first half of 2010, EVS revenue came in at €51.1m, an increase of 40% versus 2009. Operating margins for the first six months were 49.9%.

The company also announced that its summer order book had risen by 64.8% to €38.9m, 40% of which is for studio applications.

Revenue was up in all geographic regions.

EMEA revenue increased 83.9% to €17.6m, with studio applications accounting for 58% of sales.  The company said that the fragmentation of the European market continues to present a strong opportunity as broadcasters in multiple countries make the transition to tapeless workflows and HDTV operations.

Revenue from the Americas region jumped 55.9% to €9m, driven by continuing HD upgrades and expansion of existing workflows.

Sales in Asia rose 7.5%, with studio applications accounting for 69% of the total.  The company says that it expects increased traction in Asia during the second half of the year due to forthcoming large events there.

In both its earnings press release and presentation to analysts, the company stressed that it is investing in its future, saying it has been recruiting new staff and still has 30+ open positions.  The company says it is recruiting software engineers to develop studio applications, and also plans to expand geographically.

The company issued an upbeat statement in its earnings press release.  CEO Pierre L’Hoest declared the 2010 World Cup a huge success and, and highlighted the company’s progress in the studio market, where it continues to make good progress. EVS CFO Jacques Galloy said that the company’s order momentum continues to be solid in both studio and outside broadcast segments, which have benefitted from the market recovery.

.

EVS always provides a lot of detail in its earnings press release and presentations.

You can read the full EVS earnings press release here

You can see the full EVS presentation to analysts here

Vitec Plc Reports 1H 2010 Results — Videocom Revenue Down 18%, Bexel Revenue up 45%

broadcast industry technology trends, broadcast technology market research, Broadcast technology vendor financials | Posted by Joe Zaller
Aug 25 2010

UK-based Vitec Plc, which owns a large number of brands in the broadcast industry, reported its financial results for the first six months of 2010.

The company operates in several markets, including broadcast, photographic and government / military.  This post looks only at those that relate to the broadcast industry – the company’s “Videocom” and “Services” divisions.

Vitec’s Videocom division is comprised of a dozen brands that serve various parts of the broadcast industry: Anton/Bauer, Autoscript, The Camera Store, Litepanels, Microwave Service Company, Nucomm, OConnor, Petrol Bags, RF Central, Sachtler, Vinten and Vinten Radamec.

The company’s Services division is composed solely of broadcast rental & services provider Bexel.

.

Videocom Revenue Down 18%

The company said that demand in the broadcast segment strengthened during the first six months of 2010, following a 25% constant exchange rate decline in sales during the same period a year ago.  Broadcast revenue grew in all regions, but particularly in Asia and Europe, driven in part by the World Cup.

Revenue in the Videocom division dropped 18% during the first half of 2010 versus the same period a year ago.  Operating profit increased by 5.7% to £3.7 million and decreased by 15.8% in organic terms at constant exchange rates. Operating margin increased by 1.4pts to 6.1% and decreased by 0.4pts in organic terms at constant exchange rates.

On the broadcast side, the company also announced it is creating a new business unit, Vitec Group Tecnologias Ltda, in Sao Paolo Brazil, in order to focus on the emerging Latin American broadcast market, which is expected to be bolstered by the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympic games.

.

Services Division – Bexel Up 45%

Meanwhile, Vitec’s services division saw its revenue for the first half of the year increase by 45%, helped by stronger broadcast market activity, and the Vancouver Olympics.  The company said Bexel supplied more than 25 tons of broadcast hardware and installed 48 miles of fiber optic cable for the Winter Olympics in Vancouver, and entered into a multi-year agreement with Panasonic to make 3D television production equipment available for rental, promoting greater content production by TV networks.

Bexel’s operating profit increased by £0.8 million to £0.2 million and increased by £0.7 million at constant exchange rates. Operating margin increased by 5.8pts to 1.1% and at constant exchange rates it increased by 5.2pts.

.

 

Read the full Vitec earnings press release here.

See the Vitec investor presentation here.

More Broadcast M&A as Ross Video Buys Second Company This Year

broadcast technology market research | Posted by Joe Zaller
Aug 17 2010

Production switcher and infrastructure vendor Ross Video announced today that it is buying Norpak from current parent Rovi.

Norpak produces Nielsen encoders, closed caption inserters as a variety of data insertion products, and has been a member of the Ross-led OpenGear Alliance for the past three years.

According to Ross Video CEO David Ross the acquisition of Norpak will enable the company to provide a “more complete customer solutions and will be a significant benefit to our openGear and other product lines as we move forward.”

This is the second company that Ross has purchased in 2010.  The company recently announced that it entered into a letter of intent to buy 100% of the shares of Australian-based Codan Broadcast Products Pty Ltd, a provider of infrastructure and routing products.

This is the third Ross acquisition in the past two years.  In 2009 Ross purchased Dutch graphics firm Media Refinery.

Kit Digital Reports Strong Q2, Gives Positive Guidance, Hints at Acquisitions

broadcast technology market research, Broadcast technology vendor financials | Posted by Joe Zaller
Aug 17 2010

IPTV technology provider Kit Digital reported their Q2 results Monday.  Revenue for the quarter came in at $23.1m, an increase of 120% versus the same period last year, and an increase of 33% versus the previous quarter.

About 75% of the company’s revenue during the quarter came from fees for the company´s “VX” IP video platform solutions, while approximately 25% came from professional services.

On a geographic basis revenue was split as follows, 41% from EMEA; 36% from the Americas and 23% from Asia-Pacific.

Net loss for the second quarter 2010 included $3.1 million in non-cash charges, including $1.1 million in stock-based compensation and $2.0 million of depreciation and amortization; a non-cash derivative gain of $2.4 million; $3.3 million in integration expenses related to the reorganization and integration of recently acquired companies; and $886,000 in merger and acquisitions expenses, including investment banking advisory and legal fees.

The company’s earnings press release highlighted several key client wins during the quarter, and also provided positive guidance for the rest of the year.  Kit Digital chairman & CEO, Kaleil Isaza Tuzman said “As we move through the midpoint of Q3, we remain on track to exceed our original organic financial targets for fiscal 2010… We estimate our organic growth in the second quarter exceeded 50% on a year-on-year basis.”

Gavin Campion, president of KIT digital, said that the company is “committed to expanding our industry leadership position by going from our current estimated 15%-20% global market share to more than 50% over the next couple of years, by complementing strong organic growth with highly selective, accretive acquisitions.” Campion also said that the company continues to see opportunity in the mobile market. 

You can read the full Kit Digital earnings press release here.

ViewCast Q2 Revenues Up, Losses Down

broadcast technology market research, Broadcast technology vendor financials | Posted by Joe Zaller
Aug 16 2010

ViewCast reported its Q2 and first half 2010 results today.

For the second quarter the company posted a net loss of $390K, which is an improvement on previous results.  Revenue for the second quarter was up 26% y/y and 13% q/q to $4.14m.

For the first six months of the year, Viewcast made a net loss of $701K, an improvement on the net losss of $1.7m during the first six months of 2009.  Revenue for the first half of 2010 was up 4% to $7.8m. EBITDA for six-months 2010 was $(195K), compared to $(1.3m) in the first six months of 2009.

In its earnings press release, the company said that it had introduced new products, joined the WebM project, and landed several new customers

Company President and CEO Dave Stoner issued an upbeat statement, saying: “Results from the second quarter – especially the interest from new and significant corporate customers and potential resellers – has the organization energized and working hard to meet demand.  We believe the work we did during the economic downturn of 2009, including product development and cost cutting, has positioned us for significant growth and improved financial results.”

You can read the full ViewCast Q2 earnings press release here.

Devoncroft Digest – August 15, 2010 – Earnings Galore, Broadcast Industry M&A Continues

broadcast industry trends, broadcast technology market research, Broadcast technology vendor financials, Devoncroft Digest, market research | Posted by Joe Zaller
Aug 15 2010

The Devoncroft Digest is a semi-regular amalgamation of news items I’ve seen recently that I think might be interesting / important for readers and clients. 

Due to my travel schedule it’s been two weeks since the last digest post.  Here are a few of the things that have caught my eye during this time.

Earnings Season Continues

We are now in the heart of earnings season, and a large number of tech vendors, platform operators, service providers and broadcasters.  For the most part these results have been generally positive, with many companies saying that they are seeing the green shoots of recovery taking hold. 

.

.

 

Broadcast Technology Vendor Earnings

.

Vizrt Q2 Revenue Rises 17%, CEO Says Market is Improving

Broadcast graphics and asset management provider Vizrt announced its Q2 and 1H results. Revenue for the quarter was up 17% y/y, driven by strong growth in the Americas, which was up 48% y/y.

Gross margins for the quarter were 65%, well ahead of the 58% that the company achieved during the same period a year ago. Broadcast graphics accounted for 72% of the company’s total revenues in 1H 2010.  According to the company, Vizrt’s graphics business is up 33% y/y.

Full details here.

.

Chyron Q2 Losses Narrow as Revenue Jumps 20% 

Broadcast graphics provider Chyron announced its financial results for Q2 and 1H 2010.

Q2 revenue was $6.94m, up 20% versus Q2 2009.  Gross margins for the quarter were 70%, up slightly from the previous year.  Q2 product revenue was $5.4m, up 18% y/y.  Service revenue increased 29% y/y to $1.19m.  Service revenue accounted for 22% of the quarter’s total revenue. The company posted an operating loss for the quarter of $680,000, a 52% y/y improvement; and a net loss of $710,000, 35% better than a year ago.

Full Details Here

.

Miranda Q2 Revenue Up 3% y/y, +11% q/q. CEO Says Market Conditions Improving

Broadcast infrastructure provider Miranda Technologies announced their Q2 2010 results.  Revenue for the quarter was C$32.1m, up 3% from the same period a year ago and up 11% versus the previous quarter.  International sales were up 11% y/y.  Sales in the US were up 10% y/y

The company’s net income jumped 173% to C$3.5m as expenses were reduced during the quarter, and EBITDA rose by 125% to C$6m versus the same period in 2009.  Gross margins were 60%, slightly down from Q2 2009, but up from 57.7% in the previous quarter.  This is a good showing in a competitive market, which the company attributes to a higher margin mix, and increased sales of routing switchers.

Full Details Here

.

DivX Q2 Revenue Jumps 29%

DivX announced that its Q2 revenues were up 29% y/y and that its licensing business was up 23% y/y.  The company, which is in the process of being acquired by Sonic (who also announced their numbers recently) posted a GAAP Loss of $2.8m, and non-GAAP NI of $760K

Read the Divx earnings press release here 

.

DG FastChannel Reports Record Q2

Advertising and broadcast content delivery specialist DG FastChannel reported record results for its FY2010 second quarter, blowing past the expectations of equity analysts. 

Revenue for the quarter was $60.3m, well ahead of the $55.6m consensus estimate of equity analysts.  This represents a 38% revenue increase versus the same period a year ago, and an increase of 11% from the previous quarter.  Net income for the quarter was $9m, up 150% increase versus Q2 2009 and up 12.5% versus the previous quarter.

Significantly, the company’s revenue from the delivery of HD advertising content increased 99% to $23.9 million versus the same period of 2009.

The company also that it retired all of its outstanding debt, thanks to a recent public equity offering that raised net proceeds of approximately $108m. As a result of this offering, the company reported that as of June 30, 2010, it has $79.6 million in cash and no debt.

Company Chairman & CEO Scott Ginsburg said “The Company continues to execute on its strategic business plan… revenue, margins, earnings and net debt show marked improvements during the second quarter.”

.

Harris Broadcast Records $21m Operating Loss

Harris Corporation reported its Q4 and full year 2010 results.  While the company as a whole did well, the broadcast communications division continued to struggle.

For the full year, revenues from the broadcast communications division were down 17% versus the previous year.  For Q4, the company’s broadcast revenues were down just 1.9% y/y, although orders were down 12.5% versus the same period last year.

In the 4th quarter of FY 2010, Harris posted an operating loss of $21m.  According to the company, this “includes $7 million in charges related to cost-reduction actions and $6 million in inventory write-downs associated with weaker demand.”

Harris CEO Howard Lance said the following about the revenue of the broadcast division: “we continue to expect revenue in a range of $490 million to $510 million with break-even operating results. We expect to see continued operating losses in the first half of the year with profitability improving in the second half of the fiscal year.”

Full Details Here

.

RealD Reports 1st Results As Public Company

3D specialist RealD announced its first results as a public company, and reported huge y/y increases in revenue and EBITDA, which were up 152% and 387% respectively.  The company announced that it has now deployed 7500 screens, significantly more than Technicolor, who announced recently that they have now deployed 250 screens, 

Read the RealD earnings press release here.

,

,

Broadcaster & Platform Operator Earnings

DISH Network Reports Second Quarter 2010 Financial Results 

DISH Network reported total revenue of $3.17 billion for the quarter ended June 30, 2010, a 9.1 percent increase compared with $2.90 billion for the corresponding period in 2009.

DISH Network lost approximately 19,000 net subscribers during the quarter ended June 30, 2010, ending the quarter with approximately 14.318 million subscribers.

.

 

Ascent Media Reports Lower Revenue, Higher Losses

Digital media service provider Ascent Media reported increased losses and lower revenue for the second quarter ended of 2010.  The company attributes the lower results to market volatility and lower capital spending by customers. 

Revenue for the quarter dropped 13% to $99.5m, while revenue for the first six months was off 11% to $204m.  The company said that the decline in second quarter and year-to-date revenue was driven primarily by a reduction in revenue from the Content Services segment.

Q2 losses from continuing operations before income taxes were $17.5m, compared to a loss of $12.4 million in the prior year period. Year-to-date, the loss from continuing operations before income taxes was $28.6 million compared to a loss of $23.2 million for the six months ended June 30, 2009.

 “Ascent’s year-to-date operating results have not met our expectations as uncertainty about the timing and pace of the economic recovery has led to ongoing volatility in the media marketplace,” said William Fitzgerald, Ascent’s CEO. “A consequence of the current environment is that our customers have continued to take a cautious approach to capital spending.”

Fitzgerald was more upbeat about the rest of 2010, saying “We are beginning to see positive indications of an upturn, including first half revenue improvement in our creative services business, a strengthening pipeline of feature film and other projects, and rising industry advertising estimates for the second half of 2010.”

Ascent’s full earnings press release can be found here.

.

Scripps Reports Second-Quarter Results 

Scripps reported operating results for the second quarter of 2010 that showed a continuing trend of significantly improved year-over-year revenue performance in the television division – up 22 percent from last year.

You can read the Scripps earnings release here.

.

Liberty Media Reports Second Quarter 2010 Financial Results

The Liberty Media press release is here.

Liberty Media investor conference call transcript here.

.

DIRECTV Q2 Rev Up 12%, Net Income up 33% Buys Back Stock 

DTH satellite operator DirecTV announced that it grew revenues by 12% to $5.85Bn and Net Income 33% to $543 Million.

DirecTV Q2 Press Release Here

.

Cablevision Systems Corporation Reports Second Quarter 2010 Results 

Cablevision’s Q2 profits fell by 30% but its revenues were up 5.8% to $1.802 billion versus the same period a year ago, which the company says reflects solid revenue growth in Telecommunications Services and Rainbow, offset slightly by a decline at Newsday. Consolidated adjusted operating cash flow grew 9.0% to $677.6 million and consolidated operating income grew 23.0% to $416.8 million, both compared to the prior year period.

You can read the Cablevision press release here

.

WSJ.com – Net Rises at Time Warner Cable, Falls at Cablevision

According to a Wall Street Journal article, Time Warner’s second-quarter earnings rose 8.2% on solid revenue growth, but the nation’s second-biggest cable-television provider saw the same weakness in subscriber additions in July felt by its larger cable counterpart, Comcast Corp.

.

News Corp Reports Q4 and Full year Results – TV Station Operating Income up 13%

News Corp’s Q4 revenue increased by 6% and it hauled in Net Income of $875m.  Significantly, the company’s TV Operating Income was up 13% versus the same period last year, driven by an improved TV station advertising market.

Here’s the full News Corp press release 

.

CBS 2Q TV Station Revenue Climbs 31%

According to leading industry website TV News Check, TV station revenue at CBS jumped by 31%. The company also realized a 17% increase in local broadcasting revenue (TV stations plus CBS Radio) to $678.2 million from $579.5 million in the year-ago quarter. Sumner Redstone, the company’s executive chairman called the results “Terrific”

Full story from TV News Check

.

Sinclair Broadcast Group Reports Q2 Results.

Sinclair Broadcast Group, one of the largest US TV station groups reported that its net broadcast Q2 revenues from continuing operations were up 19.3% versus the prior year.  The company had net income of $17.3 million versus $2.8 million in the prior year period.  Local net broadcast revenues, which include local time sales, retransmission revenues and other broadcast revenues, were up 16.6% in the second quarter 2010 while national net broadcast revenues, which include national time sales and other national broadcast revenues, were up 27.7% versus the second quarter 2009.

Full story from TV News Check

.

WSJ.com – Discovery Turns In 40% Decline in Profit 

According to an article in the Wall Street Journal, Discovery Communications posted a 40% drop in its second-quarter profit, hurt in part by costs related to its recent $3 billion debt refinancing. Still, the cable-network operator showed revenue and operating-profit growth, and announced a $1 billion share repurchasing program.

Full article from the Wall Street Journal

.

Barrington Sees 14% Jump In 2Q Revenue

Barrington Broadcasting Group announced that gross revenues for the quarter ended June 30 increased 13.6% to $32.7 million from $28.8 million for the same period a year earlier. The company said the increase was primarily due to 16.7% increase in national revenues, a 4.7% increase in local revenues, and an increase in political revenues of $900,000 to $1 million.

Full Story from TV News Check

.

Gray Beats Street

According to TVB, Gray Television came in ahead of analyst expectations for the second quarter. The pure-play TV group posted revenues of $75.6 million for the 36 stations, up 16 percent from a year earlier. Net income was $534,000 compared to a loss of $6.6 million a year ago. After payment of $6.4 million in dividends, net loss to common stockholders was $5.9 million, or 11 cents a share.

Full Story from TVB

..

.

Broadcast Industry M&A Continues

Blackmagic Buys Assets of Echolab

As predicted here last month, Blackmagic Designs announced that it has acquired “all the assets of Echolab,” putting Blackmagic in the production switcher business.

Echolab was forced into liquidation a few months ago when its primary shareholder stopped funding its operations.  The company had been in business for more than 35 years, specializing in low-end production switchers.

Blackmagic is buying Echolab for the latter’s ATEM product line, which was introduced about two years ago and has been continuously upgraded since under Echolab’s former CEO Nigel Spratling, who apparently not part of the Blackmagic deal and has now joined Ross Video in a marketing role.

This is great news for the affected Echolab employees, who were left jobless in an instant when the company shut its doors in mid-May.  It’s also good news for the industry, because the ATEM switcher product line, which looks like a pretty good product, will continue to be available through Blackmagic.  In fact, Blackmagic has said that it is adding to the engineering team responsible for ATEM.

It will be interesting to see how Blackmagic approaches the production switcher market, which is different than the company’s core post production market.  The part of the production switcher market where Echolab is active has considerable competition. In addition to Echolab, Sony, Panasonic, JVC, For-A and Ross Video are all very active players in this space.   

In addition to the competitive aspects of the deal, it seems to me that selling production switchers is a bit of a departure business-wise for Blackmagic.  Production switchers are a “high-touch” product category.  They are mission critical elements of the live production workflow, and as such they can require extensive demonstrations and training.  The majority of Blackmagic’s products are plug-in cards or stand-alone units, which are sold primarily through third-party dealers.  

At this point, I am unsure whether Blackmagic’s all-dealer sales approach is a positive or a negative for Echolab.  On the plus side, the compact HD production switcher market is a large and somewhat amorphous, running the gamut from broadcasters to corporation, to churches to education –  so it requires a large dealer network, which Blackmagic already has in place.  On the other hand production switchers require a specialized sales approach. Every buyer wants a demonstration, which typically involves shipping equipment and people, thereby increasing the cost of each sale.  Blackmagic will probably have to augment their approach somewhat in order to be successful selling production switchers.

Still if they can get the distribution right, Blackmagic may have a good chance of making their purchase of Echolab a success.  Blackmagic most likely paid very little for Echolab’s assets, and since it’s buying the assets and not the company, it gets a brand new HD switcher line, but not 35 years of legacy products that need support.  And Blackmagic does have experience buying distressed “traditional” vendors and changing their approach.  Last year, Blackmagic acquired leading color grading vendor Da Vinci Systems, and proceeded to radically change Da Vinci’s market approach, not to mention its pricing, turning a $200,000 hardware product into a sub-$1000 product according to TVB Europe.

Arguably however, Da Vinci’s color grading products (which are used off-line in post production) were easier to port to software platforms – and they still require a very expensive hardware controller.  Live production switchers are a different kettle of fish than off-line color grading systems for post production.  They are the key element of any live broadcast production, and they are still a relatively expensive hardware platform that requires specialist sales and support.

Blackmagic CEO Grant Petty is obviously familiar with this.  In the company’s press release that announced the deal he said: “I have been using live production switchers since I was in school where we covered local theater, sports, racing and bands. I think it’s the most exciting way to do production because it’s all live and thousands of people are watching what you are doing! Production switchers need to be powerful while also being familiar and easy to operate.”

Petty also said that “Since the acquisition, we have already dramatically expanded the engineering team working on ATEM. This fresh engineering team, which is a combination of new as well as experienced EchoLab staff, will allow us to move faster in adding new features to the ATEM product.”

Blackmagic will be displaying the ATEM on its booth at the IBC show next month. 

Here is a link to the full press release announcing the deal.

.

.

Transcoding Consolidation — Telestream to Acquire Anystream

Over at his always informative Business of Video blog, Streaming Media’s Dan Rayburn writes that Telestream is to Acquire fellow transcoding provider Anystream from parent Gab Networks.  This is a deal has long been rumored, and according to Rayburn has now been confirmed by the management of both companies.

There’s been quite a lot of activity in the transcoding space recently.  Ripcode was sold to RGB networks and Elemental Technologies announced other week that it had raised $7.5m of new venture money, bringing its total to $14m

.

.

 

 

Other Broadcast Technology Vendor News

Chyron Appoints New Chief Commercial Officer 

Chyron has appointed Susan Brazer as its new Chief Commercial Officer.  According to the company’s press release, Brazer has a big job, taking responsibility for “commercial strategy and all product and services revenues, directing its worldwide sales network of direct sales, resellers/systems integrators and joint ventures in Europe, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East.”

This is the second C-Level appointment recently.  The company previously announced that it had appointed Bonnie Barclay as VP and Chief Marketing Officer.

.

New COO at Vizrt

Vizrt has appointed François Laborie as its new Chief Commercial Officer. Laborie replaces David Zerah who left Vizrt to become managing director of gaming firm Dragonfish.

Laborie joined Vizrt at the beginning of 2006 as the Company’s Executive Vice President Marketing. At the beginning of 2010, he took on the additional role of Regional President for the EMEA region.

.

 

3D News

Technicolor announced this week that it has now installed its 3D system at 250 screens – good progress, but far less than clear leader RealD’s 7,500.

 

Mobile TV News

 According to an article in TVB,  Broadcast and WiFi Take Wind Out of FLO TV Sales 

.

Other News

The Financial Times reports that News Corp has refused to refuses to raise its offer for BSkyB 

.

Also in the FT, the BBC is under fire over Canvas project 

.

.

Market Research Note of the Week:

Who are the Most Important Decision Makers in Broadcast Technology?  Vendors Predict Shift Towards Operations and IT

In a recent article, “Broadcast Industry’s Largest Market Study Reveals Most Important Technology Trends,” the move toward file-based, tapeless workflows was highlighted as one of the most important issues to broadcasters today.

But how will this shift affect how broadcast technology products are purchased, not to mention who buys them? Traditionally, these products have been purchased primarily by engineers. Will this be the same for products that are increasingly IT-based, or will there be a new set of buyers? Broadcast vendors need to know this because a new set of buyers may require a new market approach.

To find out, we asked the nearly 800 broadcast technology vendors who responded to the 2010 Big Broadcast Survey who they feel is currently the most important decision maker in the sales process, and who they feel will be most important in two to three years.

Let’s start with the most important buyers today. Respondents were asked, “When selling your products/services, which category of customer is typically the most important decision maker today?” According to responses, broadcast tech vendors see engineering staff as their most important customers, followed by operations, IT and finance personnel. Engineers are clearly seen as the most important decision makers, with operations staff a distant second.

But what about the future?

To read the full article, including four charts that break down the results, click here.

Vizrt Announces Q2 and 1H 2010 Results

broadcast industry technology trends, broadcast industry trends, broadcast technology market research, Broadcast technology vendor financials | Posted by Joe Zaller
Aug 12 2010

Broadcast graphics and asset management provider Vizrt announced its Q2 and 1H results.

Revenue for the quarter was $24.2m, an increase of 17% versus the same period last year.  Revenue for the first half of 2010 was $48m, an increase of 26% versus 1H 2009.

Gross margins for the quarter were 65%, well ahead of the 58% that the company achieved during the same period a year ago.

Broadcast graphics accounted for 72% of the company’s total revenues in 1H 2010.  According to the company, Vizrt’s graphics business is up 33% y/y

Media Asset Management (MAM) revenues for 1H 2010 were $9.4m (20% of 1H), up 31% versus 1H 2009.  For the quarter, MAM revenues were up 23% versus the same period a year ago.  The company attributed the increase in MAM revenue to “the general improvement of the market conditions, a growth in RFPs related to strategic investments, our ability to convert a large part of the outstanding RFPs into business for Vizrt and our improved capacity to deliver projects.”

Online activities contributed 8% to the company’s 1H 2010 results.

Geographically, the largest revenue contributor continued to be the EMEA region, but the strongest growth came from the Americas, which was up 42% y/y and 28% q/q.  Revenue from the Asia-Pac region was down 23% q/q, which the company attributed to orders lost in Thailand due to political unrest.

Company CEO Martin Burkhalter said that “top line results for the second quarter could have been even better, bar for three developments in the market: Firstly, the strong recovery of the US Dollar compared to other currencies and especially the Euro had a significant impact on our top line. Secondly, the effects of the Vulcano eruption in Iceland earlier this year delayed certain sales efforts, affecting our Q2 top line. Finally, the political instability in Thailand, currently one of our more important markets in Asia Pacific and also used as a hub for the region, had a clear negative impact on revenue development in this area.”

The company issued a relatively upbeat forecast, saying “The positive trends we signaled in our previous results releases continue to hold true. Improvements in the general market conditions, combined with technology driven change, such as the migration to HD and to file based workflows, contributed to the strong growth we posted. Our efforts to strengthen and integrate our operations at the regional level are also starting to pay dividend. For the remainder of this year we therefore expect this development to continue, especially in Broadcast Graphics and MAM.”

Vizrt always provides very detailed documentation with their results.

Here is a link to the full earnings press release.

The company’s presentation to equity analysts can be found here.