Content Is King And It Will Rule The Direction Of AT&T Stock

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Invest in enough companies and eventually you’ll come across some unpleasant surprises that force you to reassess your exposure. That’s what happened recently with AT&T (NYSE:T). As I shared a few months back, I bought some long-side exposure to T stock primarily for its 5G potential. But the telecom giant is much more than 5G, as its acquisition of Time Warner proved.

Content Is King And It Will Rule The Direction Of AT&T Stock
Content Is King And It Will Rule The Direction Of AT&T Stock

Like other blue chips that have come up against slowing growth in their primary markets, AT&T expanded aggressively into media and content. It’s similar to the path taken by rival Verizon (NYSE:VZ). While the broader moves have their strong points, they also have their weaknesses.

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A recent rumor now has many folks questioning the AT&T stock price, up 3.8% in June versus an almost-1% drop in the 76-stock iShares Global Comm Services ETF (NYSEArca:IXP), which includes both T stock and VZ shares among its top five holdings, each at a 6.72% weighting. Of course, AT&T shares also sport a choice 6.67% dividend yield.

According to The Wall Street Journal, WarnerMedia has abandoned its plan to offer streaming services divided into three pricing packages. Instead, the AT&T unit will bundle HBO, Cinemax, and several Warner Bros. TV shows and movies as one offering. But that’s not the only thing presenting a longer-term cloud on T stock.

Instead, it’s the rumored pricing of this “one shot” package. At just $16 to $17 a month, it’s only slightly more expensive than HBO’s current streaming service. To paraphrase Fast Company’s Jared Newman humorous take, it’s like paying more to get HBO than buying regular HBO.

If that wasn’t bad enough, both offerings are priced well above Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) and Disney’s (NYSE:DIS) new Disney+. Even here, there’s nothing AT&T can do about it due to complex relationships with distributors like Comcast (NASDAQ:CMCSA) and Dish Network (NASDAQ:DISH). The company appears stuck, which hurts the outlook of the AT&T stock price.

But does this mean you should give up on T stock? Not quite yet, and here’s why:

T Stock Benefits as Consumers Chase Content

Admittedly, AT&T’s pricing scheme is a huge distraction. I’ve worked in business planning and retail long enough to understand that this is begging for cannibalization. Ideally, I’d like to see a bigger gap to compel consumer-volume efficiencies. Although it’s giving executives headaches — and freaking out some T stock holders — original content is one possible longer-term solution.