TV's tough trajectory

Data: MoffettNathanson; Chart: Tory Lysik/Axios Visuals

2022 was one of the hardest years ever for traditional television companies — and it’s only expected to get worse as the ad market continues to slow and cord-cutting accelerates.

Why it matters: The transition to streaming has wreaked havoc on the business models of major media firms, driving a new wave of consolidation and putting smaller channels' survival at risk.

State of play: Paramount, Warner Bros. Discovery and NBCUniversal are all expected to sell or combine with other media entities in the next few years, in order to give their businesses the scale needed to possibly compete with tech firms like Amazon, Netflix and Google.

Details: Most challenges plaguing TV giants today stem from the false assumption that streaming would be able to easily make up for linear TV losses.

Zoom in: Media giants are having a particularly tough time convincing Wall Street that their streaming bets will eventually pay off.

Data: YCharts; Chart: Tory Lysik/Axios Visuals

Between the lines: The migration of the country's biggest sports rights packages from linear TV networks to streaming will expedite the inevitable collapse of the cable bundle.

The big picture: Today, most media giants are left in limbo, trying desperately to reap what's left of their lucrative linear television businesses while simultaneously investing in their expensive new streaming services.

Go deeper:

https://www.axios.com/2023/01/02/tv-streaming-profits-disney-paramount-nfl