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You are here: MacNN Forums > News > Tech News > AT&T spells out savings, customer benefits in DirectTV buy SEC filing

AT&T spells out savings, customer benefits in DirectTV buy SEC filing
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NewsPoster
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Jun 4, 2014, 01:16 PM
 
In the controversial process of merging with DirecTV, AT&T will have to file a great deal of regulatory paperwork with the federal government. One such document to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has revealed that AT&T believes it can save 20 percent on the cost of acquiring programming for its users. These savings are unlikely to be passed to the customer, and instead will be intended to fund rural broadband programs and other expansions planned by the mega-corporation, should the merger be approved.

AT&T believes that the 20 million customers it will get from DirecTV will give it added leverage over content providers to sell programming at a lower rate. Less clear is how the content providers will react to a loss in revenue from this discount.

In the filing, AT&T claims that it expects "cost synergies to exceed $1.6 billion annual run-rate by three years after closing," meaning that it expects to save this much per year as a result of the merger. It sees the "synergies" coming from "programming cost reductions, operational efficiencies and reductions in redundant broadcast infrastructure."

The filing also spells out what the company believes to be "tremendous consumer benefits" and give consumers a larger array of products to bundle at one time, with one vendor "giving customers what they want -- an integrated bundle of video, broadband, mobility and other services."

Under terms of the $49 billion buyout agreement, AT&T will expand broadband service to an additional 15 million customers in many areas where AT&T doesn't have a presence currently. Stand-alone broadband and DirecTV packages will still be available for three years after the closing of the deal, keeping the company from requiring that customers pickup the new company's services together. Pricing will also be the same for three years under the agreement.

( Last edited by NewsPoster; Jun 16, 2014 at 07:02 AM. )
     
msuper69
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Jun 4, 2014, 06:21 PM
 
The problem is I would like to not have to accept a 'bundle' that includes channels I am not interested in now or ever. Cafeteria style selection and pricing is what I want!
     
b9bot
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Jun 5, 2014, 12:28 AM
 
Then if there's no savings to the customer what's the advantage? Them making more money off the customer? Isn't that what were concerned about them monopolizing and charging more for less! The dream would be to have all cable companies offer al a cart programming. Pick only the channels you want and pay for that only instead of a huge bundle that has a bunch of religious and shopping channels that most of us don't want anyways. There is where AT&T could make the best move to help get this deal is to offer it's customers al a cart programming at lower pricing.
     
   
 
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