Pulling the future forward: The entertainment and media industry reconfigures amid recovery
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NEW YORK, Sept. 2, 2020 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/--
Consumer habits can take a lifetime to learn – but just a lockdown to lose.
According to PwC’s Global Entertainment & Media Outlook 2020–2024,
[http://www.pwc.com/outlook] the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated and
amplified ongoing shifts in consumers’ behaviour, pulling forward digital
disruption and forging industry tipping points that wouldn’t have been reached
for many years. Digitalisation, one of the major forces
[https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/issues/adapt.html] shaping all industries, has been
intensified by social distancing and mobility restrictions. As a result, the
entertainment and media (E&M) world in 2020 has become more remote, more
virtual, more streamed, more personal and – for now at least – more centred on
the home than anyone anticipated at the start of the year.
Industry growth contracts sharply…
The pandemic afflicting the world brought the global E&M industry’s growth to a
shuddering halt. As a result, we delayed publication of the Outlook by three
months so we could properly assess the pandemic’s impacts. The revised
projections for revenue growth underline why this was the right decision. Amid
a global recession, 2020 will see the sharpest fall in global E&M revenue in
the 21-year history of this research, with a decline of 5.6% from 2019 – more
than US$120bn in absolute terms. In 2009, the last year the global economy
shrank, total global E&M spending fell by just 3.0%.
…but remains robust in the longer term
However, while the shockwaves from 2020 will continue to ripple through the
global economy, our forecast shows the industry’s fundamental growth trajectory
remains strong. In recent years, as media experiences have become ever more
central to our lives, global E&M growth has typically outpaced GDP. Just so,
after the challenges of 2020, we expect E&M to reassume its outperformance.
Our projections show that in 2021, E&M spending will grow by 6.4%. Looking
across the five-year forecast period, from 2019 to 2024, we’re forecasting
overall revenue growth running at a 2.8% compound annual growth rate (CAGR).
Tipping point timelines accelerate
As is the case in the economy at large, the current pain in E&M is not evenly
shared around the industry. It’s most acute in segments that COVID-19 literally
shut down, such as events: live music, cinema and trade shows. Spending on
advertising likewise will fall by 13.4%. At the same time, the long-running
transition in newspapers from print to digital has been fast-forwarded several
years, cutting into papers’ print revenues, for example.
One result is that E&M segments are being transformed much earlier than was
originally projected. Take cinema box office versus subscription video on
demand (SVOD). As recently as 2015, box office revenue was three times SVOD.
SVOD revenue will overtake box office in 2020 and is projected to surge away in
the coming five years, reaching more than twice the size of box office in 2024.
Or consider the amount of data consumed on smartphones versus on fixed
broadband. Having taken a small lead in 2019, the smartphone is now set to pull
away as the leading individual device used by consumers to access the Internet
globally.
Winners and losers emerge…
So, how are the shifts accelerated by COVID-19 playing out in different
industry segments? With people staying at home, over-the-top (OTT) video has
seen global revenue surge by 26.0% in 2020. And it will keep rising strongly in
the coming years, almost doubling in size from US$46.4bn in 2019 to US$86.8bn
in 2024. The launch of the Disney+ streaming service in late 2019 could hardly
have been better timed: having projected between 60mn and 90mn paying
subscribers by 2024, Disney+ reached 60.5mn in early August 2020. Not
surprisingly given the rise of streaming, global data consumption is another
beneficiary of the digital acceleration powered by COVID-19. It will jump by
33.8% in 2020, and will more than double from 1.9 quadrillion megabytes (MB) in
2019 to 4.9 quadrillion MB in 2024.
At the other end of the scale are the segments that have been hit hardest. With
many cinemas closed and major movie releases delayed, we project that total
global cinema revenues will plunge by almost 66% this year. And it’s not likely
that lost ground will be recovered; our forecast is that in 2024, cinema
revenues for 2024 will be below their 2019 level. A further COVID-related
impact is that the ongoing decline in global newspapers and consumer magazines
has accelerated sharply in 2020, with overall revenues slumping by more than
14%, with consumer magazines suffering the most. That said, digital offers a
silver lining: a tipping point for consumer magazines in 2023 will see their
global revenue from digital advertising overtake that from print advertising.
Other important sectors will struggle to claw back the growth they lost in
2019. For example, the global advertising sector – which will fall by 13.4% in
2020 to US$559.5bn – is not expected to return to its 2019 level until 2022.
…as a vast industry reconfigures
Yet – perhaps counterintuitively – some “traditional” media has held its own
despite the effects of COVID-19 and digital acceleration. Amid reports of book
sales booming during lockdowns, total global consumer books revenue is
projected to continue its upward trajectory, rising at 1.4% compounded annually
between 2019 and 2024 to reach US$64.7bn. Significantly, technology is playing
an important role, with increasing use of smartphones and smart speakers
boosting uptake of audiobooks, enabling consumers to listen on-the-go.
Live physical events is another long-standing segment looking to adapt to the
reality of an accelerated digital world. With concert halls, exhibition centres
and stadiums closed for much of the year, some live events are using digital
platforms to stay connected to their audiences. In the UK, London’s Wireless
Festival teamed up with tech outfit MelodyVR in mid-2020 to deliver recorded
virtual reality performances from artists such as Cardi B, Travis Scott, and
Migos. More than 130,000 people from 34 countries attended virtually.
A year that stands apart
Although 2020 has been a challenging and disruptive year for most industries –
including many segments of E&M – it is clear that consumer demand for the
varied and expanding array of media choices now on offer continues to grow. The
revenue figures in this year’s Outlook reflect the full force of the economic
downturns and digital acceleration triggered by COVID-19, but the longer-term
outlook for the E&M industry as a whole remains bright. That said, it’s also
clear that as normality slowly returns, there will continue to be winners and
losers.
Werner Ballhaus, Global Entertainment & Media Industry Leader at PwC, comments:
“It’s clear that COVID-19 has accelerated consumers’ transition to digital
consumption and triggered disruptive change – both positive and negative –
across many forms of media. Yet it’s equally evident that the E&M industry’s
underlying strengths and appeal to consumers remain as strong as ever. While
there will still be challenges for E&M companies as we move beyond the
pandemic, the digital migration that it has pulled forward will also generate
opportunities in all segments – not only those that have benefited from its
impacts to date.”
Press access to Global Entertainment & Media Outlook content online
To request press access to the online Global Entertainment & Media Outlook
2020–2024 content, contact Ashley Worley at ashley.worley@pwc.com. This access
will allow you to illustrate this and other media stories both by extracting
detail from the Global Entertainment & Media Outlook dataset and analysis at a
segment and territory level, and by creating charts on-screen that can be
exported for use with your stories.
About the Global Entertainment & Media Outlook
PwC’s 21st annual edition of the Global Entertainment & Media Outlook is a
comprehensive online source of global analysis for consumer and advertising
spending. With like-for-like, five-year historical and five-year forecast data
and commentary for 14 defined industry segments in 53 territories, the Outlook
makes it easy to compare and contrast consumer and advertising spending across
segments and territories. Find out more at www.pwc.com/outlook.
Segments covered by the Global Entertainment & Media Outlook
Books; Business-to-business; Cinema; Data consumption; Internet access;
Internet advertising; Music, radio and podcasts; Newspapers and consumer
magazines; OTT video; Out-of-home advertising; Traditional TV and home video;
TV advertising; Video games and esports; Virtual reality
About Global Entertainment & Media Outlook data
Much of the content in this press release is taken from data in the Global
Entertainment & Media Outlook 2020–2024. PwC continually seeks to update the
online Global Entertainment & Media Outlook data. Therefore, please note that
the data in this press release may not be aligned with the data found online.
The online Global Entertainment & Media Outlook 2020–2024 is the most
up-to-date source of consumer and advertising spend data.
About PwC
At PwC, our purpose is to build trust in society and solve important problems.
We’re a network of firms in 157 countries with more than 276,000 people who are
committed to delivering quality in assurance, advisory and tax services. Find
out more and tell us what matters to you by visiting us at www.pwc.com.
PwC refers to the PwC network and/or one or more of its member firms, each of
which is a separate legal entity. Please see www.pwc.com/structure for further
details.
Contact: Ashley Worley,
PwC Global Corporate Affairs & Communications
ashley.worley@pwc.com
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Source: PwC
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