From Front Office Sports <[email protected]>
Subject The $6 Billion Cricket Bill
Date February 27, 2022 12:31 PM
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February 27, 2022

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Good morning and happy Sunday! This week we’re doing a deep dive on the Indian Premier League’s media rights battle and how streamers can benefit from the enormous Indian market.

While I have you, check out the Insights [[link removed]] Deal Tracker to stay up to date on all the deals in the private markets.

Drop me a line at @liamkillingstad [[link removed]] on Twitter or email me at [[email protected]] if you want to continue the conversation. Now back to cricket.

Streamers Love Cricket More Than You Know

IPL/Design: Alex Brooks

The battle for the rights to stream Southeast Asia’s premier sports asset — the Indian Premier League — is about to heat up.

The Board of Control for Cricket in India, the sport’s national governing body, began soliciting bids in early February for the next five-year streaming rights package.

The rights are currently owned by Disney through their 2019 acquisition of Star India.

In 2017, the Indian broadcaster paid an unprecedented $2.55 billion for the rights to broadcast the league’s matches. This time the stakes are even higher as the new five-year deal could surpass a projected $6 billion.

Why The IPL?

Last week, we referenced total addressable market when discussing Nike’s efforts in Chinese markets. Similar to China, India is an attractive market thanks to its population of 1.37 billion.

Now, a large TAM alone is not enough to justify a $6 billion investment — there has to be product market fit. Luckily for the world’s largest streamers, cricket has an incredible product market fit in India. In 2020, 44% of Indian households watched an IPL match live, accounting for 61 billion viewing minutes.

Some back-of-the-napkin math can show the incredible reach of the sport: 44% of a 1.37 billion population represents 603 million viewers, almost double the U.S. population.

The Potential Value of the IPL

When the IPL was first founded in 2008, the league was home to eight teams and a 14-match schedule. Fast forward to 2021 and the league has grown to 10 teams and 74 matches.

In the past couple of years, at least three clubs have received backing from some of the largest private equity firms investing in sports properties.

In 2020, RedBird Capital Partners purchased a 15% stake in the Rajasthan Royals at a $250 million valuation.In 2021, CVC Capital Partners paid $736 million for a new Ahmedabad franchise.Also in 2021, the Sanjiv Goenka-led RPSG Group paid approximately $964 million for a new Lucknow franchise.

The IPL’s streaming rights are a major part of why smart capital is flowing into the league.

As the popularity of a sport grows, the rights to view those sports become increasingly valuable from a dollar perspective. That appreciation in league value trickles down to teams and team owners often see a notable increase in franchise valuations thereafter.

Let’s take a look at some of the potential bidders for streaming’s newest grand prize.

Disney+ Hotstar

Our first contestant is the incumbent service.

Disney acquired the rights to IPL through its $71.3 billion acquisition of 21st Century Fox in 2019 and has spread the content to its streaming services in the time since. 21st Century Fox owned Star India, which owns Hotstar, which held the rights to IPL.

Disney will bid to retain control of the rights, according to people familiar with the company’s plans. Retaining the IPL for Hotstar, which has merged with Disney+ in India, is important for Disney’s continued growth in international markets. The Mouse is hoping to see its streaming user base reach 260 million by 2024.

Here’s where it stands as of February 9:

ESPN+ surged to 21.3 million subscribers, up 24.6% quarter-over-quarter and 76% year-over-year.Disney+ subscribers reached 129.8 million, up 11.7 million from the previous quarter and 37% year-over-year.

While it’s difficult to extrapolate, the company’s most recent financials [[link removed]] indicate that 35% of Disney+ subscribers come from India. Of these users, a large portion are likely subscribing to gain access to the IPL.

Sony and Amazon

Back in December, Sony Pictures Networks India closed a high-profile merger with former rival Zee Entertainment, an Indian media conglomerate.

SPNI owns close to a 51% stake in the combined entity, which is expected to make a significant bid for IPL rights. There’s some history here: Sony’s India unit held the rights for 10 years starting with the inaugural season in 2008.

Prior to the Zee merger, it was rumored that Sony would make a joint bid with Amazon. While Amazon is no longer looking to bid jointly with Sony, they’re still in the mix for broadcast rights.

Both Sony and Amazon have the capital to spend on the potentially massive rights package. Sony is in a position to dominate in India after the Zee merger and Amazon continues to build out sports properties for Prime Video.

Paramount

Another likely bidder is Viacom18, a joint venture between Paramount (formerly ViacomCBS) and Indian conglomerate Reliance Industries that’s actively building its sports streaming business.

The JV set up a sports channel — Sports18 — hired executives from Star Sports and Disney+ Hotstar to handle programming and advertisements, and bought the rights to major global sporting events and leagues including Spain’s La Liga, the FIFA World Cup 2022, and the Abu Dhabi T10 cricket series.

Viacom18 is reportedly in the process of selling a stake in the joint venture to renowned Indian media executive Uday Shankar along with media investment firm Lupa Systems. Shankar is the former chairman and CEO of Star India and until 2020 served as Disney’s Asia Pacific head.

During its most recent earnings call, Paramount announced that its streaming service has reached 56 million subscribers. On top of that, revenue increased 16% YoY to $8 billion for the three months ended December 2021. One of the main reasons? The return of live sports.

The IPL and its enormous base of active users would only help bolster those numbers.

The Case for Streaming Sports

Large streaming companies tend to struggle with both high customer acquisition costs and retention. Getting a user to sign up for any given service requires a strong enough carrot — for many in the Indian population the IPL is just that.

According to an S&P Global Market Data report, frequent sports viewers are 74% more likely to subscribe to a streaming service if it has their desired sports property. Whichever service bags the IPL rights will be able to add a significant number of new users who are inherently sticky.

The race is on, and with Hotstar already driving much of Disney’s international growth, my horse is The Mouse — but we’ll have to wait and see.

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