Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Comcast - CBS Deal Completed Above the Fray

The announcement is out that Comcast and CBS have entered into a 10 year distribution deal that covers retransmission consent of CBS O&O stations as well as carriage of Showtime, Smithsonian Channel and the CBS College Sports Network and On Demand and online rights for certain CBS owned programming. This deal is notable for several reasons

First off is the term of the deal. Rather than keep the term to 3 years in order to mirror the usual retransmission consent election cycle, the deal has a 10 year term which is rather long by industry standards. As noted by CBS CEO Les Moonves, “There is a lot of flexibility built in”. I certainly hope so given the speed at which things change in the industry.

Secondly, the agreement encompasses more than just retransmission consent. Comcast was smart to tackle all of the networks at once. Strategically, it allowed them the ability to do some good old fashioned “horse trading”. As any negotiator and chess player knows, the more pieces you have to move around on the board, the better deal you are able to craft. There is no word whether CBS College Sports will be moved from the poorly penetrated Comcast sports tier to a more penetrated “digital basic” or “expanded basic”. Of course, it doesn’t hurt that Comcast is the largest player in the game either.

Lastly, the agreement was hammered out behind closed doors. Unlike recent negotiations between other cable operators and broadcasters, there were no public theatrics or threats of pulling the stations off the cable systems. Not that I expect this to change the very public way in which Time Warner Cable and The Walt Dinsey Co. are engaging over ESPN and ABC. To be sure, Comcast has traditionally handled their negotiations without high public drama. Even more so lately as the last thing that Comcast needs is a high profile struggle with a broadcaster at the same time that their deal to acquire GE’s NBC-Universal is under review. Perhaps CBS knew that and played it to their advantage.

As if to underline the nature of Comcast’s negotiation style, there was little chest thumping by CBS. While neither party disclosed the financial terms of the deal, there was no grand statement by CBS that the deal is proof that the "marketplace works". That pronouncement will be left to the NAB. However Moonves did say that Comcast negotiated in good faith and “kept their word” – just what Comcast needs the regulators to hear.