Streaming titans seek passage to India for new growth

Amazon has a strong foothold in India with its Prime Video service and typically appeals to wealthier urbanites
Amazon has a strong foothold in India with its Prime Video service and typically appeals to wealthier urbanites

Netflix and Amazon are battling a dizzying array of homegrown outfits, from Bollywood producers to broadcasters, for dominance of India's streaming market, a key target as growth in Western countries slows.

As more Indians shift to viewing movies and shows online, industry revenues from streaming in the country are set to jump from $500 million in 2018 to as much as $5 billion in 2023, according to Boston Consulting Group.

With many Western markets saturated and Asia's top economy China effectively closed off to foreign streamers, a nation of 1.3 billion where phone ownership is forecast to rocket makes for a tantalising prize.

"India is super important, for both Netflix and Amazon," Tony Gunnarsson, a streaming analyst from consultancy Ovum, told AFP at the recent Asia TV Forum in Singapore.

"Netflix... need to continue to generate new subscribers, and there is no better place than India."

But the US giants face tough competition in the vast, ethnically and religiously diverse country where the streaming scene is rapidly evolving.

There are dozens of subscription streaming services in India, according to Ovum, and some domestic outfits have more experience in producing content tailored for local audiences and in the country's myriad languages.

A major player is Hotstar—originally a homegrown outfit which later became part of the Disney empire—which has attracted an army of followers in part by streaming Indian Premier League cricket matches live.

Netflix made a mark with its first Indian original "Sacred Games", a hugely popular series about a troubled police off
Netflix made a mark with its first Indian original "Sacred Games", a hugely popular series about a troubled police officer starring top Bollywood actors

Other Indian rivals include ZEE5, run by major broadcaster Zee Entertainment, and ALTBalaji, the video-streaming service of Bollywood producers Balaji Telefilms.

As well as offering their services direct to consumers, streamers are bundling their content with mobile phone services in a bid to broaden their reach.

'Golden age'

Netflix, the world's biggest subscription streaming service, has made expanding in India a priority and aims to attract 100 million subscribers in the country—an ambitious goal given analysts estimate it will only reach about seven million this year.

The company made a mark with its first Indian original "Sacred Games", a hugely popular series about a troubled police officer starring top Bollywood actors, and has a slate of new productions in the works.

They plan to invest 30 billion rupees ($420 million) in Indian content in 2019 and 2020.

"This is India's golden age of entertainment," Srishti Arya, Netflix India's director of international original film, told AFP.

"There are so many opportunities in streaming, creators are not restricted by length, duration."

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos (R) lights a traditional lamp along with Amit Agarwal (3L), senior vice president and country manager for
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos (R) lights a traditional lamp along with Amit Agarwal (3L), senior vice president and country manager for Amazon India, at Amazon's Smbhav event in New Delhi

Fellow US titan Amazon also has a strong foothold in India with its Prime Video service and, like Netflix, typically appeals to wealthier urbanites who want to see Western as well as Indian content.

It is planning to release around one Indian original production a month over the coming year, and is ramping up its production of shows in regional Indian languages.

Netflix has been lagging behind Amazon in terms of subscriber numbers but looks set to move ahead from 2021, according to Ovum.

Nevertheless both will likely struggle to catch up to Hotstar, which reached 300 million active monthly users last year, although the Indian streamer works on a different model, offering some content for free and other shows only to subscribers.

To compete in a crowded market, the US titans are offering their services for less than in the West—Netflix introduced a package for India priced at only 199 rupees ($2.80) a month, which allows consumers to watch only on a phone or tablet, and Amazon Prime is 999 rupees ($14) for a year.

And the scene is about to get even more competitive with the launch of the Disney+ streaming in India next month via Hotstar.

Entertainment shake-up

The streaming boom has also shaken up India's massive entertainment industry, generating new business opportunities.

Shibasish Sarkar, Group CEO, Reliance Entertainment, which produced "Sacred Games" for Netflix, said it has 40 to 45 s
Shibasish Sarkar, Group CEO, Reliance Entertainment, which produced "Sacred Games" for Netflix, said it has 40 to 45 series in development for streaming platforms

Reliance Entertainment—which produced "Sacred Games" for Netflix—has 40 to 45 series in development for streaming platforms, including Hotstar, Amazon, and Hong Kong-based Viu, said Group CEO Shibasish Sarkar.

Two years ago their business was about 90 percent making films but work for streamers "is the fastest-growing space right now", he told AFP.

The industry hopes that some of the new high-quality shows can find audiences overseas beyond the Indian diaspora—two thirds of the viewers for "Sacred Games" season one, which is in Hindi, were outside India.

Another Indian show to find unexpected success overseas was "Mighty Little Bheem", a Netflix original cartoon about a baby's adventures in his village.

"Indian story tellers are now going global," said Sarkar.

Hopes for overseas success for foreign language productions have been boosted by South Korean black comedy "Parasite", which won a haul of Oscars this month and became the first non-English language film to scoop the gong for best picture.

Some observers are optimistic that streamers in India have much space for growth, but in the long term they believe only the fittest will survive.

"Markets are already at a point where there are more than enough services," said Ovum's Gunnarsson.

© 2020 AFP

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