On Monday, Apple attempted to re-introduce itself as an
entertainment and financial services company that also makes iPhones as
it launched a streaming TV service, a credit card and an online gaming
arcade.
With appearances by Oprah Winfrey and Steven Spielberg, the world’’s
second-most valuable technology company lifted the curtain on a
television and movie subscription service called Apple TV+ that will
stream original TV shows and movies.
The star-studded
line-up failed to excite investors, however, who sent Apple shares down 1.2%.
The company’s long-expected plunge into the streaming video
war is years behind leaders Netflix and Amazon. Apple left out key
details such as pricing, making it difficult to judge how its service
will stack up against these competitors.
“While Apple may introduce a bigger roster of original content than
Amazon and Netflix during their respective launches, the streaming
market has arguably already reached a level of saturation and consumer
fatigue in the US,” said Colin Gillis, an analyst at Chatham Road
Partners.
The programming will come through a revamped TV-watching app for
users of Apple’s 1.4-billion gadgets worldwide, as well as owners of
smart TVs and other devices.
Apple is taking a different approach by offering paid “channels” from
AT&T’s HBO, Lions Gate Entertainment’s Starz and CBS’s Showtime,
alongside its own content.
Its revamped app for subscribing to channels from
others will come out in May, but Apple’s own original shows will not
arrive until the autumn, with pricing not yet announced. Apple said both
its TV+ shows and the new version of the TV app will be available in
more than 100 countries.
Apple also introduced a credit card, a
digital video game arcade, and added hundreds of magazines to its news
app at an event at its Cupertino, California, headquarters.
The
launches come as Apple struggles with falling iPhone sales, which has
prompted the company to turn more of its attention to services that
provide regular subscription revenue.
Hollywood celebrities helped
debut the revamped TV offering. Apple has commissioned programming from
Jennifer Aniston, Reese Witherspoon, Winfrey, Spielberg and
others. Winfrey, who announced a global book club and two documentaries,
said she was drawn to Apple in part by its reach. “They’re in a billion
pockets, y’all,” she said, referring to Apple’s ubiquitous devices.
Alongside
its own iPhones, iPads and iMacs, Apple will make the programming
widely available through smart TVs and devices from Roku and others,
departing from the past where it has tended to keep content exclusively
on its own hardware.
Privacy to the fore
Throughout
the presentation, Apple executives stressed privacy protections for
consumers as they shop and consume content. “The most important point
for today was advertising and privacy,” said DA Davidson analyst Thomas
Forte.
Apple, second only to Microsoft in market value among tech
giants, led off the event with an announcement that its free news app
will now come in a paid-subscription version, called Apple News+, which
curates a range of news articles and will include 300 magazines
including National Geographic, People, Popular Science, Billboard and the New Yorker. Apple said it would cost $9.99 a month.
Apple
then introduced a titanium, laser-etched Apple Card backed by Goldman
Sachs and Mastercard that can track spending across devices and pay
daily cash back on purchases. Cook said Apple Pay will be available in
more than 40 countries by the end of the year.
The company also
introduced Apple Arcade, a game subscription service that will work on
phones, tablets and desktop computers and include games from a range of
developers. Apple said the gaming service will feature more than 100
exclusive titles from gaming partners such as Annapurna Interactive and
that the service will arrive this autumn.
As with its original content service, Apple did not say how much its gaming service will cost consumers.
Crowded field
With
its new media push, Apple joins a crowded field where Amazon’s Prime
Video and Netflix have spent heavily to capture viewer attention and
dollars with award-winning series and films.
Apple’s primarily
family-friendly content, likely to appeal to young audiences, also sets
the stage for a rivalry with the Walt Disney company.
The big tech
war for viewers ignited a consolidation wave among traditional media
companies preparing to join the fray. Disney, which has bought 21st
Century Fox, and AT&T, which purchased Time Warner, plan to launch
or test new streaming video services this year.
Revenue from
Apple’s services — which include the App Store, iCloud and content
businesses such as Apple Music — grew 24% to $37.1bn in fiscal 2018. The
segment accounted for only about 14% of Apple’s overall $265.6bn in
revenue, but investors have pinned their hopes for growth on it.
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