Although streaming trends are growing versus pay TV, there is more overall evidence that streaming is a maturing market as its penetration of U.S. households inched down 82% in the third quarter from 83% in the second quarter, according to MediaPost citing a new HarrisX/MoffettNathanson Research analysis.
At the same time the gap is widening between streaming platforms and legacy pay TV’s distribution system, as 49% of U.S. households now are streaming platforms without pay TV and 33% are streaming with pay TV, compared to 48% (streaming without pay) and 36% (streaming with pay) in the second quarter.
Non-streamers (with or without pay) comprise 18% of homes -- up from 17%.
Looking more granularly, the streaming slowdown was pushed by the top three services showing a decline and flattening -- Netflix, Prime Video, and Hulu.
Responses to the question of which paid services you or someone in your house are currently using to stream content revealed that Netflix was at 53% -- down from 55% in the second quarter. Prime Video was flat at 43%, as was Hulu at 35%, while Disney+ ticked down 27% from 28%.
Research shows the number of streaming services subscribed to (or watching) has declined slightly on average per households that stream -- with 3.7 subscribed and 4.0 watching compared to. 3.8 and 4.1, respectively, for the previous quarter.
Viewing of all streaming services appears to be weakening among older viewers 50 and older -- a reversal from the second quarter.
The strongest demographics are with middle-aged users 25 to 50, and specifically the 35-39 demographic, for which Netflix improved the most.
One service -- Max -- witnessed declines in every age group, with the biggest decline among 18- to-24-year-olds.
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