What Is The Future Of Domestic WWE PPV?
Will this be the last year of WWE being on traditional PPV in the United States? Or have rumors of its impending demise been greatly exaggerated? After WWE announced 667,287 subscribers for the WWE Network, most expected that traditional PPV purchases from domestic households would be significantly down. Internally, WWE was expecting about 250,000 buys. However, WWE stunned analysts (and themselves) when they declared that nearly 400,000 US homes had ordered the landmark Wrestlemania XXX event. It took some hard work but WWE was able to coax all the major providers (inDemand, Dish Network, DirecTV) to carry Wrestlemania 30. Convincing the myriad of systems to stick around clearly paid off; Cable & Satellite Systems and WWE all reaped the spoils from the larger-than-expected domestic audience purchasing the PPV (spending $60 to $70 per household). But this was a short-lived alliance. DirecTV has decided to pull the plug on WWE PPVs, at least for the time being. Dish Network, who earlier had protested the WWE Network launch by yanking Elimination Chamber off their systems, appears to once again be dropping WWE coverage. Just a few months ago, during the Februarys fourth quarter conference call, WWE noted that these two systems represented about 35% of PPV which is roughly relative to their coverage of homes in the U.S.. Suddenly, a third of WWE's PPV marketplace just shut them out, After thirty years of producing Pay-Per-View events, it looks like launching the over-the-top WWE Network may be the final nail in WWEs PPV coffin. Yet contrary to popular sentiment, domestic Pay-Per-View business was not dead. Not only have combat sports (Boxing & UFC) continued to generate hundreds of millions of dollars annually, but WWE was nowhere close to a death spiral. As the chart clearly demonstrates, PPV buys grew enormously in the past 15 years. This growth in PPV Buys was driven by two major factors: (a) Increasing the frequency of PPVs and (b) expanding the number of homes capable of ordering PPVs.