Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.
How Much Are the Streaming Giants Spending on Content?

In This Article:

When Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) got its streaming start in 2007, it was the only service of its kind. Locking down deals to stream movies and TV shows back then was not quite as difficult as it is in today's highly competitive field. But Netflix foresaw that it wouldn't be the only game in town forever, and it prepared for a cost-efficient and promising future by investing heavily in original content. Last year, Netflix spent more than $12 billion on content, around 85% of which was earmarked for original films and series.

Netflix needs to spend big. It's facing down a lot of new competition, and many of the incoming competitors are major content producers -- effectively taking certain shows, movies, and franchises out of Netflix's consideration. But the newcomers have to spend, too, because toppling Netflix won't be cheap. The result is a pricey battle for the best content. Let's take a look at what the major companies are shelling out.

Coins slip through a businessman's fingers.
Coins slip through a businessman's fingers.

Image source: Getty Images.

Amazon: $6 billion on original content

Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) spent $1.7 billion on music and video content in the first quarter of 2019, an increase of 13% year over year that put the company on pace for $7 billion of content spending in 2019. But that combined total makes it tough to figure out how much Amazon is spending on video as opposed to music.

According to one analysis, Amazon's 2019 content budget will include roughly $6 billion earmarked for original content. That figure would put Amazon neck and neck with a new competitor: Apple.

Apple: $6 billion

Apple's (NASDAQ: AAPL) new streaming service, Apple TV+, is designed to take on Netflix and draw customers to Apple's TV app, an Amazon Channels-like service that gives Apple another chance to charge a platform tax. But Apple TV+ is entering a market with established competitors like Netflix, and Apple does not have a back catalog to leverage like Disney does.

What it does have, like its peers in the tech industry, is a lot of cash on hand. Apple is using that cash to play catch-up. Apple's big spending on original content has only gotten bigger since numbers were first reported, and it now stands at an eye-popping $6 billion.

AT&T: $14.3 billion in 2018 and likely more in 2019

AT&T's (NYSE: T) HBO boasts some of the biggest shows in streaming -- and some of the priciest, too. AT&T spent a whopping $14.3 billion on content in 2018, according to RBC Capital Markets analysts. With a new streaming service on the way, AT&T is likely to spend even more this year.

AT&T has already beefed up HBO's streaming budget (HBO spent about $2 billion a year before being acquired), and now it's poised to spend even more to get HBO Max off the ground.