Filed by Sirius Satellite Radio Inc.
Pursuant to Rule 425 under the
Securities Act of 1933 and deemed filed
pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Subject Company: XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc.
Commission File No.: 0-27441
This communication contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements include, but are not limited to,
statements about the benefits of the business combination transaction involving Sirius Satellite
Radio Inc. and XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc., including potential synergies and cost savings and
the timing thereof, future financial and operating results, the combined companys plans,
objectives, expectations and intentions with respect to future operations, products and services;
and other statements identified by words such as anticipate, believe, plan, estimate,
expect, intend, will, should, may, or words of similar meaning. Such forward-looking
statements are based upon the current beliefs and expectations of SIRIUS and XMs management and
are inherently subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and
contingencies, many of which are difficult to predict and generally beyond the control of SIRIUS
and XM. Actual results may differ materially from the results anticipated in these forward-looking
statements.
The following factors, among others, could cause actual results to differ materially from the
anticipated results or other expectations expressed in the forward-looking statement: general
business and economic conditions; the performance of financial markets and interest rates; the
ability to obtain governmental approvals of the transaction on a timely basis; the failure of
SIRIUS and XM stockholders to approve the transaction; the failure to realize synergies and
cost-savings from the transaction or delay in realization thereof; the businesses of SIRIUS and XM
may not be combined successfully, or such combination may take longer, be more difficult,
time-consuming or costly to accomplish than expected; and operating costs and business disruption
following the merger, including adverse effects on employee retention and on our business
relationships with third parties, including manufacturers of radios, retailers, automakers and
programming providers. Additional factors that could cause SIRIUS and XMs results to differ
materially from those described in the forward-looking statements can be found in SIRIUS and XMs
Annual Reports on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2006, and Quarterly Reports on Form
10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2007, which are filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the SEC) and available at the SECs Internet site (http://www.sec.gov). The
information set forth herein speaks only as of the date hereof, and SIRIUS and XM disclaim any
intention or obligation to update any forward looking statements as a result of developments
occurring after the date of this communication.
Important Additional Information Will be Filed with the SEC
This communication is being made in respect of the proposed business combination involving
SIRIUS and XM. In connection with the proposed transaction, SIRIUS plans to file with the SEC a
Registration Statement on Form S-4 containing a Joint Proxy Statement/Prospectus and each of SIRIUS
and XM plans to file with the SEC other documents regarding the proposed transaction. The
definitive Joint Proxy Statement/Prospectus will be mailed to stockholders of SIRIUS and XM.
INVESTORS AND SECURITY HOLDERS OF SIRIUS AND XM ARE URGED TO READ THE JOINT PROXY
STATEMENT/PROSPECTUS AND OTHER DOCUMENTS FILED WITH THE SEC CAREFULLY IN THEIR ENTIRETY WHEN
THEY BECOME AVAILABLE BECAUSE THEY WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT THE PROPOSED
TRANSACTION.
Investors and security holders will be able to obtain free copies of the Registration
Statement and the Joint Proxy Statement/Prospectus (when available) and other documents filed with
the SEC by SIRIUS and XM through the web site maintained by the SEC at www.sec.gov. Free copies of
the Registration Statement and the Joint Proxy Statement/Prospectus (when available) and other
documents filed with the SEC can also be obtained by directing a request to Sirius Satellite Radio
Inc., 1221 Avenue of the Americas, 36th Floor, New York, NY 10020, Attention: Investor
Relations or by directing a request to XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc., 1500 Eckington Place, N.E.
Washington, DC 20002, Attention: Investor Relations.
SIRIUS, XM and their respective directors and executive officers and other persons may be
deemed to be participants in the solicitation of proxies in respect of the proposed transaction.
Information regarding SIRIUS directors and executive officers is available in its Annual Report on
Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2006, which was filed with the SEC on March 1, 2007, and
its proxy statement for its 2007 annual meeting of stockholders, which was filed with the SEC on
April 23, 2007, and information regarding XMs directors and executive officers is available in
XMs Annual Report on Form 10-K, for the year ended December 31, 2006, which was filed with the SEC
on March 1, 2007 and its proxy statement for its 2007 annual meeting of stockholders, which was
filed with the SEC on April 17, 2007. Other information regarding the participants in the proxy
solicitation and a description of their direct and indirect interests, by security holdings or
otherwise, will be contained in the Joint Proxy Statement/Prospectus and other relevant materials
to be filed with the SEC when they become available.
***
SIRIUS has
created a website, available at
www.SIRIUSmerger.com, with information about the merger. The website includes the information being filed
herewith.
COfiTACT n< E f CC ~EWSROOf.O WHAT P EOPlE VI«G MEIIG. SOY,, S CTACT SIRIUSfM
SIRIUSmerger.com SATELllTE RAD IO More choices, better j)rici nCj, same radios. HEAR FROM MEL
KARMAZlN, CEO Of SIRIUS RADIO. IN THE NEWS WHATS IN IT FOR YOU Ij ew o;versilj Ad Unveiled Juoo
13 , 2001 Two Ca P1aj: Moc k ad Vou ma v have already heard the new. that SIRIUS and XM sOOv;; r.g
NAB~ip_flop5 are talking about combining imo one company. And you OrM co. ! ma v 01 50 have
wondered whal1hat will mean for you. o;oosa urs V5 , Sal,llle. ReasOll Maga li oo The answer is
simple: View All MORE CHOIC ES Toda V. fans of .atellite radio must purchase two radios and two
subscriptio. 10 get lithe program offe ring. of both SIRIUS and XM. If our merger i. approved.
the combined company will offer cosumers the best of each service on your current radio _al a
price well below the cost of the two servicelOda1. BETTER PRICING Once we merge. 10Uwill have
bener pricing choice. Sub.cribers who want their current .ub.cription package will not have 10 pa
y an y more after the merger. The re will be new . ub. cription pac kage. priced below our current
offering. And the best of both SIRIUS and XM will be available at a lower cost than the price of
.ub.cribing 10 both .ervice. separately. SAME RADIOS We guarantee no radio will become ob. olete.
Your current radio will continue 10 pro vide you with the programming you enjoy. whether you keep
your current .ervice or change 10 a new . ub. cription plan. GET ORE DETAil P PRIVACY I CONTACT
US I SIRIUS.com ©1001 SIRIUSmerger.com |
SIRIUSfM SIRIUSmerger.com SATELllTE RAD IO lor!! choic!!s, b!!tt!!r j)ricinCj, sam!! radios.
WHATS IN IT FOR YOU racre cnerees Both comeanies alread, offer theirfans more than a hundred c
hannels includi ng 100% commercial free music c hannels and a variety of sports news talk. entert
ainment traffi c. weather and data prog ramming A combined comeany will be able to pr,ide
consumers eien greater c hoice in audio ente rt ainment Tod ay you can get great music plus Major
League Baseball PGA Golf NHL and Oprah on XM and the NFL. NASCAR and Mart ha Stewart on SIRIUS Tog
ether. we want to give ,ou the best of both comeanies prog ramming s ewer Pricing Once we merge
you will have better pricing choices There will be new subscrietion packages priced below our c
urrent offerings The best of both SIRIUS ano XMwill be a,ailable fo r a lot less than the $25 90
monthly cost of subscribing to both se ;ces se earately Ano subscribers who want their current se
"';ce aff er the merger will not have to pay any more than the $12 95 per month they pay today same
Radi os We guarantee that no SIRIUS radio will become obsolete as a result ol the merger The two
comeanies have millions of radios in the market includi ng many that are factory-installed in
automobiles Aff er the merger you will not need another radio to continue to receive the prog
ramming you now enjoy FrequenUy Asked Questions PRIVACY I CONTACT US I SIRIUS.com ©2007 SIRIUSme
rge r.com |
COfiTACT n< E f CC ~EWSROOf.O WHAT P EOPlE ARE VI«G MEIlGEIi ... SOYliCE S COfiTACT liS SIRIUSfM
SIRIUSmerger.com SATELllTE RAD IO More choices, better j)ricinCj, same radios. FREQUENTLY ASKED
QUESTIONS When will S IRIUS and XM merge? Why are S IRIUS and XM merging? How ; l1 th is merger
benefit me as a custom er? What will th e merge<J programm ing lin e-up look Ih ? What if I donl
want s ome of the cont ent on either SIRIUS or XMs programm ing line-up post -merger? What s
hould I expec t in terms of s ubs cription co st s after th e merger? Shou ld I buy a radio today
or wait for a dual-s e"';c e radio? I want to buy a second radio s hould I wait for th e new models
? Whic h company s s ate Wtes will th e merged c ompany us e? How 10ng ;l1 you operate both s
ate Wte s yste ms ? Who will run th e new c ompany? 1. When will SIRIUS and XM merge? On Feb ruary
19 2007. S IRIUS and XM announced we intend to merge Together. we will c reate the nations prem
ier audio ente rtainme nt pr,id er with an even stronger platform for future innovation and more
pricing and programming choice s Before we ca n merge we must obtain aeproval by both co mea nies
s hareholders and regulatory aeProvals including antitrust and FCC approvals S ubject to thes e
aeProvals the co me anies exee ct the trans action to be co mpleted by the end of 200 7 2. Why are
SIRIUS and XM merging? We realiz e co ns umers have many c hoices in audio ente rtainme nt s ate
llite radio is only of thes e choices We believe that this is the next logical step in the
evolution of s atellite radio Together our best-in-d as s co mbined management team and programming
co ntent will c reate an unprec edented c hoice for co ns umers while creating long-term value for
s hareholders of both co me anies This merger of S IRIUS and XM is all about offering co ns umers
more c hoice and value a greater range of pricing and programming options the best devic es and
technology from both platforms Currentl, S IRIUS and XM broadc ast wide range of co mmercial-free
mus ic, exclus ive and non-exclus ive s ports co verage news talk and ente rtainme nt programming
The co mbined entity will offer the best co ntent from ea ch c ome any by eliminating s ome
duplicative programming and it will be able to offer wider range of programs to reft ect the
divers it, and demands of our rapidl, growing li stener bas e 3. How will t his merger be nef it
me as a cu stomer? Together. S IRIUS and XM will offer co ns umers even more program ming choices
new · value and best of both packages and it will acce lerate the development of innovative
products s uch as real-time traffi c and rear-s eat video, The merger will als o enable the co
mbined co me any to develop and introduce a wider range of lower cost ea s y-to-use and multi-fun
ctional devic es through effi ciencies in chip s et and radio des ign and procurem ent 4. What will
t he merged programming lineup look like? The merger of S IRIUS and XM is all about offering c ons
umers more choice co ntent at lower prices g reater range of programming the best co ntent on
radio and the best de,ic es and technology from both platforms The combined c
omeany ; l1 provid e co ns umers with broader s election of co ntent ind
uding wide range of co mmercial-free mus ic channels exclus ive and non-exclus ive s ports
coverage news talk and ente rtainme nt programming Sp ecifically, there will be new s ubs cription
packages priced below our current offerings The best of both S IRIUS and XM will be available for a
modest premium ,er the cost of one se rvice today And s ubs cribers wn o want their c urrent s
e"';ce after the merger will not have to po, any more than the $12 S5 per month they pay today Any
plan you s ign up for now will be honored by the merged co mp
any As more decis ions are made
regarding new s ubs cription packages the program ming li ne up and the additional benefits to S
IRIUS fans we will co mmunicate to all our s ubs cribers In fact. we have a s ite dedicated to the
merger http -lIWlffl s iriu sm ergercoml: and we will co ntinue to update this s ite as thes e dec
is ions are made 5. What if I dont want some of t he cont ent on eit he r SIRIUS or XMs
programming line-up post -merg er? We built Parental Controls to allow earents the oetion of
protecting their c hildren from any c hannels they deem inaePropriate Thes e co ntrols allow our s
ubs cribers to block explicit language c hannels 6. What should I expe ct in t erms of subscript
ion co st s afte r t he merg er? Once we merge co ns umers will have eien better pricing c hoices
There will be new s ubs cription packages priced below our current offerings The best of both S
IRIUS and XM;II be available for a lot les s than the $25 gOmonth ly cost of s ubs cribing to
both s ervices s eearately And s ubs cribers wn o want their current s ervice after the merger will
not have to ea, any more than the $12 S5 per month they ea, tod ay Any elan you s ign up for now
will be honored by the merged company 7. Shou ld I bUy a radio t oday or wait f or a du al-servic e
radio? I want t o bUy a se cond radio : should I wait f or t he new mod els? There s neier been a
better time to be a S IRIUS or XM s ubsc riber Any radios or other equipme nt that s ubs cribers c
urrently us e will be fully s uePorted by S IRIUS and XM for many years to co me Furthermore
following the merger existing radios will all be able to rec eive a mix of programming from both
se"';ces 8. Which comp any s sate llitl!S will t he merged com pany use? How long will yo u op
erate bot h sate llite syste ms? Eac h of our s atellite s ,s tems will co ntinue to 0eerate for
many years to come erovid ing s ervice to the millions of radios in us e today 9. Who will run t he
new comp any? Mel Karmaz in the current CEO of S IRIUS will be the chief executive offic er of the
co mbined co mpany Gary Parso ns the current XM Chairman, will be the chairman of the co mbined co
me any The co mbined co meany ; l1 benefit from a highly experienced ma nag
ement team from both co mpa nies with extens~e industry knowledge in radio media co ns umer
electronics OEM enginee ring and tec hnology Further management appo intments and other critica l
bus ines s dec is ions will be announce d prior to clos ing PRIVACY I CONTACT US I SIRIUS.com ©1007
SIRIUSmerger.com |
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SIRIUSfM SIRIUSmerger.com SATELllTE RAD IO Mar!! choic!!s, b!!tt!!r j)ricinCj, sam!! radios. Action
Alert Th e FCC Ca r e s W h a t Con sum e r s Think Ple a s e St a nd Up a nd Be Counted A combined
comeany ill mean more programming oetions and better pricing A in-win for all our s ubs cribers
- - s e0rts enthus ias ts mus ic lovers and news and talk li steners But before the merger can take
elace it must be aeeroved by the Federal Communications Commis s ion Thafs where ,our voice ca n
be heard Pleas e join the growing number of eeoele who have voiced their s uee0rt for the merger
by writing to the FCC Us ing the form below. eleas e se nd a note to the FCC explaining your s
UPe0rt for the proeos ed merger. To do s o 1. Come lete the form below with your information 2.
Write a pers onaliz ed mes s age explaining why you enjoy S IRIUS s ate llite radio and wh, youre
excite d about the eos s ibilit, of ha,ing even more channels to choos e from after the merger 3.
Click S end and your mes s age ill automatica lly be del~ered to the FCC and your mem bers of
Congres s Take Action a (O MPO S E MESSAGE M~ ssa o ~ R~cipi~nts: O~li"~ry M~thod: o Emoil Your
U.S. Senoia , o Pricted Lette r Yo ur U.S. House Represenloti e Subj~ct: Editabl~ t~>rt: (~dil
or odd your on I~xl 9999 oharoct., left) ~====II= ,=,#Em=., === II SEN DER INF ORMATI ON Thi .
ystem require Ihot you provide vour nomo oed conloct informotion. Thi, informotion ill not bo
usod for ony purposo olhor Ihon 10 idontify you 10 Iho rocipionl. Yo u e ( o nt act In fo emation:
Titl~ (rquireq by Qm~ officIOI.) IMr<. vi Fiest la st Em a il r uv Stat~ lIP lIP + 4
IVirQinio vi i §.ill Phon~ o Romombor Mo (what s thiS?) D SiQn mo up for Iho loto l morQor updoto,
. A cop y o f y o ue m~ aO~ will b~ .~nt to th~ ~-mai l adde~ ~nt~e~d abo,,~. send MesSilqe
(Plo o click only onco,) po. ,. d by Capitol Advantage ~20 0 7 PRI VACY I CON TACT US I
SIRIUS.com ©1G07 SIRIUS me rge r.co m |
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SIRIUSmerger.com SATELllTE RAD IO lor!! choic!!s, b!!tt!!r j)ricinCj, sam!! ra dios. NEWSROOM THE
WALL STREETJOURNAL. The Wall Str eet Journ al April 21 2007 hat s the Frequ enc y NAB ? In th
e name 01 preventing s ome phanto m monoeoly from lorming th e NAB is effectively as king
regulators at Ju stice and th e Federal Communications Commis s ion to help it keep th e
competition in chec k and thu s dee rive c ons umers ol fig uring out whether th is is a ,;able
alte rnati,e radio s er,;ce The New Yorker March 19 200 7 S atell te S isters Cons umers th
en ha,B little to lear from a merged s atellite co mpany in th e radio market and th ey may
actually ha,B a lot to gain . XM and S irius which offer real di Brs ity ac ros s th ree hundred
channels are a gain lor co ns umer c hoice Cos Angeles Q:imcs Los Angeles Times Februa ry 27 2007
l t XM and S irius Merge lh e goa l (ol the approach th e FCC has token on media co nso
lidation in general) s hould be to promote choice not in the nich e occ upied by XM and S irius but
in the general market 01 audio ente rtainme nt That market is ,Bry competit~e particularly among
national plalers ~all2hallciscoQ:~rolliclc San Franci sco Chronicle Februa ry 26 2007 A
Monopoly No!· In Was hington th e Ju stice Deea rtment is judged li kely to bles s the dea l
after s ur, e,·ing th e larger lands caee 01 audio choices It s a s ens ible reading of broadcast
reality lI s th e Federal Communications Commis s ion hich laid do, th e no-merger threat a
deca de ago th at may stop th e dea l The panel s houldnt even if it risk s going back on its
guiding words is s ued at th e dawn ol the Internet age USA Today February 23 2007 S IRIUS and
XM Togeth er Makes S ens e for Listeners S atellite competes at a disadvantage with traditional
radio Broadc asters ca n offer programs Iree in part becaus e th ey do nI pay the government for us
e ol the air,,,aves S irius and XM had to pay about $90 million ea ch lor a tiny fraction ol the s
pace on th e air,,,aves that broadcasters enjoy li the government ins ist s on maintaining s uch an
uneven plaling fi eld th e least it can do lor s atellite is unsh s ckle it ehrfHiami Hrrat~ The
Miami Hera ld Februa ry 22 200 7 Money Not Outrag e Fuels Anti-M erger Fight None ol the NABs
holy wars against co meetitors has been as long or as brutal as th e struggle to s uppress s
atellite radio No wonder. Nearly free of ad>B rtis ing and with a divers e s election 01
programming (XM and S irius both offer more th an 150 c hannels everything from 1950s rock and roll
to electronica.trance ). s atellite is th e perfect antidote to th e ad-clogg ed broadcast
stations with tiny playlists operated by the NABs mem bers THE WALL STREETJOURNAL. Wall Stre et
J ourna l Februa ry 21 2007 Making Rad io Wa,es Beltway critics of the dea l s ee a media
monopolist around every co rner s cheming to li mit the publics acce ss to co ntent And its true
that the merger would create a lone s atellite radio co mpany But a pure monopoly is one that
exists in a market here th ere are no clos e s ubstitutes By co ntrast a co mbined S irius -XM
would have to co mpete not only with free broadca st radio but also with MP3 players online radio
and even mus ic channels offered by cab le prO>id ers More P RIVACY I CONTACT US I SIRIUS.com
©1007 SIRIUSme rge r.com |
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SIRIUSfM SIRIUSmerger.com SATELllTE RAD IO lor!! choic!!s, b!!tt!!r j)ricinCj, sam!! ra dios. MORE
ARTICLES W SJ Notices That The NAB Has An Agenoa Techdirt April 23 2007 W haf s the Frequency
NAB? The W all Street Journal April 21. 2007 Dinosaurs vs Satelrtes Reason Magazine Radle, Balko
- - April 19. 2007 Terrestrial Radio Looks To Charge Subscription Fees But Still Doesnl Compete W
ith Satellte Techdirt April 19 2007 More on XM-Sirius The Technology Liberation Front April 11.
2007 A Merger and a Praver (subscription requiredl Forbes April 09 2007 Thinking ·Siriusly · About
Satell te RadiQ Competition The Free State Foundation April 09. 2007 Two Can Play Mock ad showing
NAB flip-flops Orbitcast ___April 07. 2007 NAB Shill Says He Didnt Flip-Flop Mds Sky Is Green An,j
Down Is Up Techdirt April 06 2007 Bysted Carmel Group has already oefined Satell te Radios
competitors Orbitcast April 04 2007 How Can New Satell te Radio Merger Analvsis Be Independenf W
hen The NAB Paid For It? Techdirt April 03 2007 Busted Mke Hubbard 800nsor of Alabama anti-merger
resolution owns r.,j io station lan,j more) Orbitcast -March 31, 2007 Satelrte Sisters The New
Yorker James Surowiecki March 19 2007 IfTerrestrial Radio Broadcasters Donl Comr ete W ith
Satelrte Radio Techdirt March 01. 2007 Let XM and Sirius Merge Los Angeles Times February 27.
2007 A Monopoly Not San Francisco Chronicle February 26 2007 They Cannot Be SIRIUS Satell te
Radio The Economist February 24 2007 SIRIUS-XM Toygh Luck? Chicago Tribune February 23 2007
SIRIUS an,j XM Together Makes Sense for Listeners USA Toda, February 23 2007 Money Not Outrage
Fuels Ant i-Merger Fight The Miami Herald February 22 2007 Making Radio W iNeS W all Street
Journal February 21. 2007 New D~ersity M Unleile,j June 13 2007 PRIVACY I CONTACT US I
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SIRIUSmerger.com SATELllTE RAD IO lor!! choic!!s, b!!tt!!r j)ricinCj, sam!! ra dios. WHAT PEOPLE
ARE SAYING I think all of us would agree though that these two the merger of these two is not
going to create a monopoly in any sense because there is a lot of competition out there with the
broadcast ano the Internet and wireless and iPod as others have mentioneo.· Rep. Cliff Stearns
(FL). Ji 7 House Committ ee on Energy and Commerces panel on , he Future of Radio · Indeed. if the
National Association of Broadcasters ano its terrestrial broadcaster allies are able to persuade
the Department of Justice and the FCC to prei ent the SiriuslXM merger on the basis that satellite
radio constitutes a discrete product market well then ma,be nl become a believer in the Easter
Bunny too Randy May. Thinking Siriusly About Satellite Radio Competition April 9 2007 Stop
throwing around the word monopoly. The competition they h,e is with radio stations charging
zero dollars for the same or a similar proouct Rep Anthony W einer (NY). 2.12 8 House Judiciary
Committ ee antitrust task force Satellite radio is a critical medium for Hispanic Americ ans
making available a .;oe range of listening choices that are not generally available on traditional
broadcast radio For example ESPN Deportes Cfll ·J Espanol and several Latin music channels Brent
W ilkes EXIKutiw Director League of United Latin American Citizens Competitors that are threatened
by the prospect of a thrivi ng satellite radio company hae launched a self-interested campaign
aimed at killing the merger. by asserting that an XM-Sirius alliance would constitute a monopoly
Despite their claims the merger of XM and Sirius would be beneficial to consumers ano dese..es
support John BerthQud President National Taxvavers Union Satellite radio is critical to the
programming needs of African Americans The medium offers dozens of channels that are targeted to
the programming needs of African American entrepreneurs entertainers and consumers In fact Internet
radio music download se i ces and satellite radio have all pla,ed critical roles in democratizing
the music and audio industry allo"'; ng consumers access to a i rtual on-oemano world Harry
Alford Presioent National Black Chamber of Commerce Consolidation of the terrestrial radio
industry over the last dec ade has left much of rural America behind in recent years as locally
owned stations are replaced by mega-.e orporate conglomerates which produce homogenized content and
so-called local news and weather delO/ered from hundreds of miles away The emergence of satellite
radio has offered listeners in rural areas a robust alternat~e with hundreds of specialized
channels that cater to the programming needs of rural America · Niel Ritchie Executive Director
League of Rural Voters For for too long the Latino market has fallen ;i ctim to traditional radio
companies that target very narrow and highly profitable audiences Under this framework. Hispanics
lose out on news sports music and diverse cultural programming that is widely available on
alternative sources such as satellite HD and internet radio The satellite radio industry. by c
ontrast. has been a launching pad for Hispanic programmers and an increasingly popular se i ce for
vast numbers of Latino consumers and other listeners who enjoy the richness of Hispanic culture
arts and news Robert G Oe Posada Presioent The Latino Coaltion Because we believe that allo"';
ng Sirius and XM to combine operations wi ll enable satellite radio to become a stronger ano more
effect,;e se i ce provid er. NCL believes this merger will benefit consumers &
#145; Linda Golodner
President National Consumers League PRIVACY I CONTACT US I SIRIUS.com ©2007 SIRIUSme rge r.com |
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SIRIUSmerger.com SATELllTE RAD IO More choices, better j)ricinCj, same ra dios. MERGER RESOURCES
230 U Competition 111i0oi. 12S lOlnuoc___in Audio 116 .c:I~ .RAD Entertainment 10 7S 72
... ""' 50 23.5 2S e 14 > ~. =... ..,...,.. ... ___
_MlInt ..., - ...,...,.. ... Satell it e Radio is a Small Part of a Highly Competit
ive and Ever-Expanding Market f or Aud io Enterta inme nt GET MORE The audio entertainment market
today is ,ibrant comeetit~B and inno, ati,B INF ORMATlON and ff>:ery indi cation is that it
will be ff>:en more so in the future We believe that the combination of SIRIUS and XMwi ll be
good fo r consumers as it will intensify this comeetition exeand the choices for consumers and
reduce S<riu sIXM Jless ,,eases pri ces S<riu sIXM print adYertising The market for
audio entertainment in the Un ited States is robustly Audio Entertainment comeetiti, e and
rapidly eio~ing SIRIUS and XM must comeete directly and Markel. fact sheels intensely with a host
of other audio pro,iders fo r consumer atte ntion Coogressiooal testimooy Fed,aI
Communicatioos Siriu slXM press releases Commis,oo ~I ings SIRIUS and XMAnnounce Merger SIRIUS
RadiQ Guarantee Press Release SIRIUS Radio Guarantee Siriu slXM print adv ertis ing Even
Better TQg ether M W hat s In tl fo r Consumers? Ad listen to the Numbers M Diverse
Merg er Support M Aud io Enterta inment Market f act sheets Audio Competition Fact Sheet NAB-s
Campaign Against Satell te Radio NABs Opposition to Competition NAB What Thev Said Then Y8 What
They are Saving Now Congressional t estimony ill> House Judiciary Committee s Antitrust Task
Force February 28 2007 House Energy and Commerce Committee s Sut>c ommittee on
Telecommunications and the Internet March 7 2007 Senate Judiciary Committee-s Sut>c ommittee
on Antitrust Competition Policy and Consumer Rig hts March 20 2007 Senate Committee on Commerce
Science and Transportation April 17 Fed eral Communic ations Comm ission f ilings FCC
Application for Merger SIRIUS SEC Form 8-K [}!1J.20071 PRIVACY I COUTAC T US I SIRIUS.com ©1007
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SIRIUSfM SIRIUSmerger.com SATELllTE RAD IO MOfe choices, better j)ricinCj, same radios. SPREAD THE
WORD Thanks for taking the time to check out the SIRIUS merger website By now you">-e prob ably
read how the merger will mean more programming choices and lower prices for subscribers You
probably also know that the radio you have today is going to continue to work even after the merger
is complete Ma,be you\ e even s ent letter to the FCC voicing your s upport al the merger ~we
hope s ol) While we re glad you stopped by. ,our friends ma, not know about this s ite or the
details alt he merger Whether or not they s ubs cribe to s atellite radio. we hope you11us e the
form below to encourage them to ,is it our s ite learn more about how the merger ill be
beneficial all c ons umers and ma\be even write to the FCC Ju st fi ll in the blanks below and e
ll se nd them a quick email telling them about the s ite t :m,,,"=======1 [ ,,-mail address:
Enter too,,-mail addresses of up to 6- frieoos =- ~ow: = - ====11==== ====11====
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US WHAT YOU THINK Cant I~e without ,our s atellite radio? l ove the programming? Looking forward
to more content AfJD better pricing options ? ~ s o tell us more We want to hear from you about how
long you\ e been s ubs criber, the programs you love and why youre excited about the merger Us e
the s pace below to tell us your vi ews We II us e your input to s how key government dec is ion
makers in Was hington DC how s ubs cribers like you think a combined company will del~er more
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US.com <!liD01 SIRIUSme rge r.com |
The following is a transcript of an audio broadcast of Mel Karmazin, chief executive officer
of SIRIUS, which was posted to SIRIUSmerger.com.
If youre listening to this, you probably already know that SIRIUS and XM are talking about
combining into one company. But you may be wondering what that will mean for your SIRIUS
subscription.
The answer is easy: More choices, better pricing, and you dont have to buy a new radio.
This is what we like to call a win-win. As a SIRIUS listener, youre already getting the best radio
on radio. If we merge, youll have even more programming choices and you wont pay a penny more for
the service youre already receiving. Its hard to imagine having so much to listen to, but thats
the goal here your happiness.
And one more thing...I GUARANTEE that NO SIRIUS radio will become obsolete after a merger with XM.
Well keep coming out with new radios like we always have, but the radio you have today will ALWAYS
work.
Im very excited about what a combined company will mean for SIRIUS listeners new and better
content, more subscription options, and even faster development of cutting edge radio technology.
But I also know you may still have questions. Thats why I encourage you to take a tour of
Sirius-merger-dot-com to get more information.
For the last five years, SIRIUS has changed the way youre able to listen to music, sports, news,
and entertainment, but we know there are lots of other sources of audio entertainment out there.
Thats why well continue to provide and expand the unparalleled music selections, insights and
perspectives that you have come to expect.
Thanks for listening and for visiting the site.
In
addition, the What People Are Saying page of the website also
contains links to the following letters on the website:
NATIONAL PRESIDENT
Rosa Bosales
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Brent A. Wilkes
NATIONAL OFFICERS
Hector Flores
Immediate Past President
Jaime P. Martinez
Treasurer
Joey Ramirez
Youth President
Richard Fimbres
VP for Elderly
Margaret Moran
VP for Women
Javier Montanez
VP for Youth
Michelle M. Pelayo
VP for Young Adults
Dave Rodriguez
VP for Farwest
Alicia Rios
VP for Midwest
Toula Politis Lugo
VP for Northeast
Maria Rodriguez-Salazar
VP for Northwest
Haydee Rivera
VP for Southeast
Adrian Rodriguez
VP for Southwest
STATE DIRECTORS
Enrique P. Gomez
Arizona
Carlos F. Cervantes
Arkansas
Angel G. Luevano
California
Tom Duran
Colorado
Ada Pena
District of Columbia
Anita De Palma
Florida
Eligio Marin
Illinois
Maria de los angeles Oria
Indiana
Gilbert Sierra
Iowa
Rodrigo Bonilla
Kansas
Annabelle Gnerra
Massachusetts
Augustin Sanchez
Michigan
Enrique Soto
Minnesota
Hortencia Vusquez Wilcox
Missouri
Nicolas Martinez
Nevada
Paul A. Martinez
New Mexico
Rosa Torres Caskey
Ohio
Rey Madrid
Oklahoma
Carmen I. Cruz
Puerto Rico
Roger C. Rocha
Texas
Leni Gonzalez
Virginia
David G. Cortinas
Washington
Yolanda Santos Adams
Wisconsin
League of United Latin American Citizens
May 11,
2007
Ms. Marlene Dortch, Secretary
Federal Communications Commission
Office of the Secretary
445 12th Street, SW
Washington, DC 20554
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Re: |
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Consolidated Application for Authority to Transfer Control of XM Radio and Sirius
Satellite Radio Inc., MB Docket No. 07-57 |
Dear Ms. Dortch:
I am writing on behalf of League of United Latin American Citizens, the oldest and
largest Hispanic membership organization in the country, to urge you to approve the
proposed merger between XM and Sirius Satellite Radio.
Satellite radio is a critical medium for Hispanic Americans, making available a wide
range of listening choices that are not generally available on traditional broadcast For
example, ESPN Deportes, CNN Español, and several Latin music channels.
In most cases, LULAC would support the maintenance of strong competition between two
providers in a relevant market. But here there are considerable
benefits from the proposed merger that we believe outweigh any countervailing
concerns.
In order for our communications companies to compete in a global economy, our
facilities-based communications platforms will need to accommodate ever robust of
programming. We believe that the merger, by eliminating duplicate program will give the
combined company a new and otherwise unavailable opportunity to increase its programming
capabilities.
This is obviously important to LULAC, and this is likely to provide both Hispanic
programmers and consumers with opportunities and choices. More programming means that the
ever diverse American consuming public can look to Satellite radio news and
entertainment. More programming means more jobs from the on-talk production crews. And
more programming means that the ever creative and entrepreneurial American spirit has yet
one more potential outlet and distribution channel.
(continued)
2000
L Street, NW, Suite 610 Washington, DC 20036
(202) 833-6130 FAX (202) 833-6135 www.LULAC
Ms. Marlene Dortch
May 11, 2007
Page 2
Further, both Sirius and XM have made clear that the merger will result in consumers
being able to get more programming choices at a lower price (measured
on a per channel
basis).
Finally, the audio marketplace is clearly not confined to satellite radio. Any
serious study of consumer spending shows that the relevant market consists of
existing broadcast stations and the ever exploding downloadable music industry. This
brisk competition requires financially healthy satellite radio industry to
adequately compete.
Thus, for consumers, the merger means more choices at lower prices. For program the
merger will provide new opportunities. And for the industry itself, the merger will
reaffirm the health of a critical, facilities-based competitor in the ever intense audio
marketplace.
Sincerely,
Brent Wilkes
Executive Director
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Cc: |
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Chairman Kevin J. Martin
Commissioner Michael J. Copps
Commissioner Jonathan S. Adelstein
Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate
Commissioner Robert M. McDowell
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May 17, 2007
The Honorable Kevin J. Martin
Chairman,
Federal Communications Commission
445
12th Street, SW
Washington, DC 20554
Dear Chairman Martin:
On behalf of the 362,000 members of the National Taxpayers Union (NTU), I write to urge your
support of the merger of XM and Sirius Satellite Radio. This development is likely to expand radio
programming available to consumers dramatically without impacting prices.
Because satellite radio relies so heavily on attracting new subscribers, it only stands to
reason that the proposed merger would not raise subscription costs. Indeed, by their very actions,
so-called traditional service providers seem to agree. Competitors that are threatened by the
prospect of a thriving satellite radio company have launched a self-interested campaign aimed at
killing the merger, by asserting that an XM-Sirius alliance would constitute a monopoly. Despite
their claims, the merger of XM and Sirius would be beneficial to consumers and deserves support.
For example, at present, a consumer interested in hearing both National Football League games
and Major League Baseball games must subscribe to both services and purchase two receivers. If the
two services merge, these products would be available on one receiver. Furthermore, merging would
allow the two companies to significantly reduce infrastructure costs, thereby improving chances of
turning a profit in the future while keeping service fees stable.
Critics claim that such an arrangement would essentially create a monopoly. This argument is
disingenuous, however, because any honest definition of the market in which satellite radio
competes must include AM radio, FM radio, high-definition radio, and even products like mp3
players. To label this merger anti-competitive ignores the wealth of consumer options that can and
do vie for the ear of the listening public.
If merger opponents were forced to tell the truth, they would acknowledge that the FCC could
even enhance competition in the satellite radio sector, not through a regulatory crackdown but by
removing current barriers to entry. This goal could be achieved by simply making additional
spectrum available for the use of some newly-formed competitor.
The audio entertainment market is highly competitive today and would remain so after an
XM-Sirius merger. I hope you and the Commission will recognize this fact and vote for the proposal.
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Sincerely, |
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John Berthoud |
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President |
108
North Alfred Street * Alexandria, Virginia 22314 *
Phone: (703) 683-5700 * Fax: (703) 683-5722 * Web: www.ntu.org
National Black Chamber of Commerce
1350 Connecticut Avenue NW Suite 405, Washington DC 20036
202-466-6888 202-466-4918fax www.nationalbcc.org info@nationalbcc.org
Ms. Marlene Dortch, Secretary
Federal Communications Commission
Office of the Secretary
445 12th Street, SW
Washington DC 20554
April 19, 2007
Re: Ex Parte Presentation; MB Docket No. 07-57
Dear Ms. Dortch,
On behalf of the National Black Chamber of Commerce which represents 95,000 Black owned businesses,
I write today to urge that the Commission approve the acquisition of XM Satellite Radio by Sirius.
Satellite radio is critical to the programming needs of African Americans. The medium offers dozens
of channels that are targeted to the programming needs of African American entrepreneurs,
entertainers, and consumers. In fact, Internet radio, music download services, and satellite radio
have all played critical roles in democratizing the music and audio industry allowing consumers
access to a virtual on-demand world.
Further, XM and Sirius have committed to offering both opportunities for programmers and more
choice for consumers at a lower per-unit cost. More channel capacity for new programmers, and more
choices for consumers are clearly matters that meet the FCCs public interest test. Additionally,
with both XM and Sirius struggling financially, the merger ensures that the satellite radio
platform survives.
Given the potential consumer and business benefits, I urge you to approve the XM-Sirius merger
without delay. I thank you for you consideration.
Sincerely,
Harry Alford
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Cc: |
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Chairman Kevin J. Martin
Commissioner Michael J. Copps
Commissioner Jonathan S. Adelstein
Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate
Commissioner Robert M. McDowell |
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Ms. Marlene Dortch, Secretary
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Federal Communications Commission |
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Office
of the Secretary 445 12th Street, SW Washington DC 20554 |
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Re: , MB Docket No. 07-57
Dear Ms. Dortch,
The League of Rural Voters urges the Commission to approve the proposed merger between XM Radio and
Sirius. The combined entity will offer listeners more programming options at lower prices than
those currently available from the two companies separately.
Consolidation of the terrestrial radio industry over the last decade has left much of rural America
behind in recent years, as locally-owned stations are replaced with the mega-corporate
conglomerates which produce homogenized content and so-called local news and weather delivered from
offices hundreds of miles away. The emergence of satellite radio has offered listeners in rural
areas a robust alternative with hundreds of specialized channels that cater to the programming
needs of rural America.
It is in the best interest of rural listeners that satellite radio continues to be a viable option.
We note that news reports indicate financial hardships for both Sirius and XM if they attempt to
survive as separate entities. We believe this deal will allow the companies to offer services more
efficiently, cutting costs while creating additional channel space for even more programming
including channels dedicated to public safety and homeland security. And most important, XM and
Sirius contend, if allowed to merge, that they will offer more channels for a lower price than the
current cost of both services combined.
Given the persistent digital divide that plagues much of rural America, many of the latest
alternatives to terrestrial radio have yet to reach the heartland. Therefore the survival of
satellite radio as a competitive alternative is critical. We hope you will look favorably on the
XM-Sirius merger.
Sincerely
Niel Ritchie
League of Rural Voters
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cc:
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Chairman Kevin J. Martin |
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Commissioner Michael J. Copps |
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Commissioner Jonathan S. Adelstein
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No. of Copies recd |
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Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate
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List ABODE |
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Commissioner Robert M. McDowell |
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League of Rural Voters
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P.O. Box 80259
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Minneapolis, MN 55408 |
t. 612-879-7578
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f. 612-879-7567
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e.info@leagueofruralvoters.org |
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www.leagueofruralvoters.org
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April 16, 2007
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Ms. Marlene H. Dortch, Secretary |
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Federal Communications Commission |
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Office of the Secretary |
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445 12th Street, SW |
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Washington, DC 20554
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Re: MB Docket No. 07-57 |
Dear Ms. Dortch,
On behalf of The Latino Coalition, a national issue-advocacy organization based in Washington,
D.C., I urge you to approve the XM Satellite Radio merger with Sirius an acquisition which is
critical to the health of the satellite radio industry and to the larger cause of strong,
facilities-based competition in the communications marketplace.
Today satellite radio faces increasing competition from downloadable music, Internet-based radio,
traditional broadcast radio and an increasingly converged and globalized communications industry.
Clearly, this friendly acquisition is being motivated by financial concerns that result from this
competition and it will help the newly formed company better compete in this international
marketplace. In addition, this merger will provide more diverse programming and bring lower prices
to the growing and highly diverse Hispanic audience.
For far too long, the Latino market has fallen victim to traditional radio companies that target
very narrow and highly profitable audiences. Under this framework, Hispanics lose out on news,
sports, music and diverse cultural programming that is widely available on alternative sources such
as satellite, HD and internet radio. The satellite radio industry, by contrast, has been a
launching pad for Hispanic programmers and an increasingly popular service for vast numbers of
Latino consumers and other listeners who enjoy the richness of Hispanic culture, arts and news.
In our judgment, the acquisition will strengthen an industry that has been reporting losses in
recent months. It appears clear that consumers will benefit as the combined programming will
provide a greater number of channels for far less than such would cost consumers today in their
totality. For programmers, the elimination of duplicate programming and expanded channel capacity
will provide new opportunities for Hispanics and other entrepreneurial programmers as well.
As a strong advocate for the diverse needs of the Latino community, we are always supportive of
measures that will bring variety and expanded options to our community. In our judgment, the
XM-Sirius merger will accomplish just that by bringing more programming opportunities for Hispanic
Americans and millions of other listeners. With expanded choices and better prices, satellite radio
will be an even more attractive option for consumers and this ultimately benefits our growing
community in every part and section of the country.
Thank you in advance for your consideration.
Respectfully,
Robert G. de Posada
707 Fifth Street, S.E. · Washington, DC 20003 · 202-546-0008 Tel · 202-546-0807 Fax · www.TheLatinoCoalition.com
President
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Cc:
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Chairman Kevin J. Martin
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Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate |
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Commissioner Michael J. Copps
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Commissioner Robert M. McDowell |
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Commissioner Jonathan S. Adelstein |
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707 Fifth Street, S.E. · Washington, DC 20003 · 202-546-0008 Tel · 202-546-0807 Fax · www.TheLatinoCoalition.com
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NATIONAL CONSUMERS LEAGUE |
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1701 K Street, NW, Suite 1200,
Washington DC 20006 |
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PHONE (202) 835-3323
FAX (202) 835-0747 www.nclnet.org |
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May 3, 2007 |
Marlene H. Dortch, Secretary
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th Street, SW
Washington, D.C. 20554
Dear Ms. Dortch:
On
behalf of the National Consumers League, we are writing concerning the proposed
merger of XM Radio Holdings Inc. and Sirius Satellite Radio Inc. NCL is the countrys
oldest consumer organization. We have been in existence for over 100 years defending and
expanding rights of consumers. We regularly express opinions on important regulatory and
legislative matters affecting consumers.
Sirius and XM offer an innovative digital audio service that provides a wide variety
of programming to many sectors of our society. In so doing, these two companies face
competition from a number of other formidable audio entertainment providers, including
AM/FM radio, digital HD radio, Internet radio, iPods and other MP3 players, mobile phone
music services, and others. As a result of this intense competition, the two satellite
radio companies have achieved only limited market penetration to date. Although satellite
radio has had proven appeal to many consumers, Arbitron reports that XM and Sirius
combined account for only 3.4 percent of all radio listening. Because we believe that
allowing Sirius and XM to combine operations will enable satellite radio to become a
stronger and more effective service provider, NCL believes that this merger will benefit
consumers.
Important issues are at stake in this proceeding that will require careful
consideration by the FCC and the Department of Justice. These regulatory authorities will
need to ensure that this merger will not result in higher prices or a diminution
in programming or services. If deemed necessary by regulators, NCL would support the
imposition of targeted conditions on this merger in order to prevent these harms to
consumers. Thank you for your consideration of NCLs comments on this important
matter. We look forward to further discussions with the Commission as it reviews this
proposed transaction.
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Respectfully, |
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LINDA F. GOLODNER, President |
In
addition, the Newsroom and More Articles pages
of the website also contain links to the following third-party news
articles:
Wall Street Journal
Whats the Frequency, NAB?
April 21, 2007; Page A8
Ever since satellite-radio companies XM and Sirius announced plans to merge back in February, the
National Association of Broadcasters, which represents commercial AM and FM radio stations, has
been urging federal regulators to quash the deal on antitrust grounds.
The NABs argument is a remarkably weak one, and the government would be remiss if it became a
party to the groups transparent agenda, which is to stop satellite radio from luring away any more
of its listeners than it already has. Which isnt much, otherwise the two satellite-radio companies
wouldnt be merging.
In the name of preventing some phantom monopoly from forming, the NAB is effectively asking
regulators at Justice and the Federal Communications Commission to help it keep the competition in
check and thus deprive consumers of figuring out whether this is a viable alternative radio
service.
Dont take our word for it, by the way. Last October, just months before XM and Sirius unveiled
their plans to combine, NAB President David Rehr spoke openly about the make-up of the current
marketplace for audio news and entertainment. We still must address new competitors, he said in a
speech to the National Press Club in Washington. On the radio side, we have satellite radio,
Internet radio, iPods, other MP3 players, cell phones, and many, many other things. How will we
compete? Not much we can add to that.
Apparently that argument was fine so long as XM and Sirius were lost in space, losing money. Today,
Mr. Rehr is saying that regulators should consider satellite radio a unique and separate market
when assessing the competitive impact of the merger. In testimony before Congress, Mr. Rehr said XM
and Sirius are seeking to form a monopoly that would undermine audio content competition, not
enhance it. The NAB has also commissioned several analyses of the merger that employ sophisticated
Herfindahl-Hirschman Index measures and the like to determine that XM/Sirius would dominate the
market for satellite radio.
Its true that a XM/Sirius merger would leave us with one satellite-radio provider. But opposing
the deal on those grounds is wide of the mark. Sometimes the best response to what a person is
saying today is what that person has said in the past. And despite Mr. Rehrs efforts of late to
take it all back, the reality is that he had it right the first time.
Monopolies are harmful when they are the sole seller of a product or service with no close
substitutes. And as Mr. Rehr acknowledged, substitutes competitors abound in the marketplace.
XM and Sirius, whose subscribers currently represent less than 4% of total radio listeners, arent
merely competing for each others customers; blocking the merger on that assumption makes little
sense.
The real objective of XM and Sirius is to lure listeners from free radio, the Internet, MP3
players, music channels on cable television, cell phones and who-knows-what-other options coming
down the pike.
XM and Sirius, which have a combined 14 million subscribers, continue to lose money. More than 220
million people tune into free radio each week. No one knows whether the public will ever really
take to the pay model, but its not the role of the government to help the NAB smother a fledgling
competitor in the crib. This appears to be a merger of desperation more than anything, and blocking
it could well result in no satellite-radio providers and thus fewer listening options for
consumers. Consumers, not the government, should decide whether one satellite-radio provider is one
too many.
This isnt the first time the NAB has tried to forestall competition from XM and Sirius. The group
opposed granting them radio licenses and urged the FCC and Congress to ban satellite providers from
offering local weather and traffic reports. This is more of the same.
Telecom policy should not be about picking winners and losers but about encouraging investment and
innovation. For that to happen, whats most important is competition among technological platforms:
cable, telephone, wireless and satellite (for now). Policy makers and regulators would do better to
focus less on static models of market share within one platform and more on making sure rival
platforms continue to exist. Consumers will happily take care of the rest.
Satellite Sisters
The New Yorker
March 19, 2007
Antitrust Regulations When the satellite-radio companies XM and Sirius announced, last month, that
they were planning to merge, it looked like a futile attempt to flout antitrust regulations. The
merger would benefit Sirius and XMwhich, despite signing high-profile figures like Howard Stern
and Bob Dylan, have cumulatively lost close to seven billion dollarsbut it would confront radio
listeners with a satellite-radio monopoly. Not surprisingly, then, when Siriuss C.E.O., Mel
Karmazin, appeared before Congress to defend his plans, he was grilled by legislators convinced
that regulators would block the merger. The deal, though, is far from dead. Thanks to an
intellectual revolution that, over the past three decades, has transformed the way the government
assesses mergers and monopolies, we may yet end up with only one satellite-radio provider in
America. And, surprisingly, we may be all the better for it.
Antitrust law in the U.S. rests on two documentsthe 1890 Sherman Antitrust Act and the 1914
Clayton Act. Their underlying principles are clear (competition and lower prices are good,
collusion and price-fixing bad), but the laws themselves are remarkably vague, and regulators have
had much leeway in enforcing them. In the era after the Second World War, for instance, the
government took an aggressive stand against mergers. In 1962, it blocked a deal between the
third-largest shoe company in the country and the eighth-largest, even though the new company would
have owned just five per cent of the shoe market. A few years later, it barred two California
supermarkets from merging, despite the fact that together they controlled less than ten per cent of
the market and had many competitors. Bigness, regulators seemed to assume, was always bad.
The idea that if mergers were bad for competition they were bad for the economy was intuitively
appealing. But it wasnt always accurate, as a group of law professors and economists, usually
called the Chicago School, set out to show in the nineteen-seventies. Much antitrust regulation,
they argued, did not benefit the economy but just protected small businesses; it could even make
consumers worse off. (Most obviously, economies of scale allow bigger companies to produce more for
less, which can lead to lower prices.) This meant that regulators should scrutinize deals through a
different lens: if a merger reduced competition but enhanced consumer welfare, it should be
approved. Later economists have complicated these argumentstheres now a post-Chicago Schoolbut
the idea that mergers should be measured by their impact on consumer welfare remains central to
antitrust law.
Even by these standards, though, the XM-Sirius deal looks sketchy, since monopolies created by
merger are usually bad for consumers. So why does the deal have any chance at all? It comes down to
the question of what market XM and Sirius are in. If its just satellite radio, then they are
competing only with each other and the deal would be sure to send prices soaring. But it makes more
sense to see XM and Sirius as part of the bigger radio and digital audio markets and thus in
competition with AM/FM, HD, and Internet
radio. In that case, even a merged company would have only a small percentage of radio listeners,
and competition would limit its ability to raise prices.
Consumers, then, have little to fear from a merged satellite company in the radio market, and they
may actually have a lot to gain. Dominated by chains like Clear Channel, AM/FM radio has become a
catalogue of bland choices, pre-programmed playlists, and syndicated talk. A recent study by the
Future of Music Coalition found that four companies received fifty per cent of all radio
advertising revenue and had nearly fifty per cent of all listeners. Even among competitors, there
is often tremendous overlap in music playlists; in this environment, XM and Sirius, which offer
real diversity across three hundred channels, are a gain for consumer choice. And theres no reason
to think that this diversity would ebb after a merger; no one wants to pay thirteen dollars a month
to hear the same songs he could have got free from his local KISS-FM.
The National Association of Broadcasters, which represents commercial radio stations, has lobbied
hard against the deal, arguing that XM and Sirius compete only with each other. But the very fact
that broadcasters are fighting the merger demonstrates that they view Sirius and XM as a threat.
Similarly, for fifteen years AM/FM stations have done everything they could to cripple satellite
radio, lobbying the F.C.C. to stop its roll-out in the nineteen-nineties and persistently trying to
limit the types of programming XM and Sirius can carry. Just last month, a bill was introduced in
Congressfor the third time in as many yearsthat would bar satellite stations from providing
local traffic and weather.
Broadcasters understand that a merger between Sirius and XM would help extend satellite radios
reach, making it a more formidable competitor. Many consumers have hesitated to subscribe to
satellite because they didnt know which company would survive. And desirable content is split
between the companies: if you want major-league baseball and Bob Edwards, you need XM, but if you
want N.F.L. games and Howard Stern, you need Sirius. Allowing Sirius and XM to merge would
eliminate this problem in one stroke. And that would significantly increase the competitive
pressure on traditional radio stations, perhaps forcing them to abandon their cookie-cutter model.
Paradoxically, by reducing choice you could stimulate more diversity. Sometimes, it seems, you can
have fewer competitors but more competition.
t
Illustration: CHRISTOPH NIEMANN
Let XM and Sirius Merge
Los Angeles Times
February 27, 2007
The FCC shouldnt stop the nations two providers of satellite radio from joining forces, because
they would be only one of many in the audio entertainment business.
Federal regulators are notoriously slow to act, yet it took Federal Communications Commission
Chairman Kevin Martin less than half a day to erect a daunting roadblock to the proposed merger of
the countrys two satellite radio services, XM and Sirius. Within hours of the companies
announcement of their intention to combine operations, Martin issued a statement saying that XM and
Sirius would need to demonstrate that consumers would clearly be better off with both more choice
and affordable prices.
Although thats not the same as saying a merger is unthinkable the magic word that former FCC
Chairman Reed Hundt used to pre-empt a rumored deal between AT&T and SBC Communications in 1997
Martins two-pronged test sets a nearly unsurmountable bar. Its hard to argue that more choice
results when the only two suppliers of a product combine, or that the merged entity will be
deterred from hiking the fees paid by its subscribers (14 million at last count). In addition, when
the FCC issued two licenses for a national satellite radio service in 1997, it said that they could
not be owned by a single company. Similarly, when the two satellite TV services attempted to merge
in 2002, they ran into withering resistence from both the Justice Department and the FCC.
That said, Martins statement is inconsistent with the approach the FCC has taken on media
consolidation in general. The goal should be to promote choice not in the niche occupied by XM and
Sirius, but in the general market of audio entertainment. As Martin and other Republicans on the
FCC have often noted, technology is enabling consumers to get radio programming and on-demand audio
services in a variety of new ways. That makes the overall market hotly competitive, particularly
among national players.
Consider a few statistics. Half of the new cars sold in the U.S. this year will have stereo systems
designed to work seamlessly with an iPod, and 60% will have inputs that work with any brand of
portable music player. In addition to songs, those devices can play podcasts a recorded program
that emulates over-the-air radio from more than 44,000 sources. Of the roughly 12,500
over-the-air stations pumping out conventional radio broadcasts, about 1,200 also broadcast in
digital frequently, with more than one channel in different formats. Meanwhile, a growing number
of cellular phone and municipal wireless networks are enabling mobile devices to tap into the
expanding ranks of online music services. As of late December, there were nearly 80 citywide or
regional wireless networks in operation, with an additional 150 planned.
Meanwhile, both Sirius and XM are bleeding money at prodigious rates as they try to amass the
number of subscribers needed to overcome their debt and depreciation costs. According to their most
recent financial statements, Sirius spent almost twice as much to operate and promote its service
as it collected from subscribers and advertisers, while
XM spent about 25% more on operations than it collected. Allowing them to merge could save them
billions of dollars in marketing and maintenance expenses while preserving satellite radio as one
of many alternatives available to consumers.
Anticipating resistance from the FCC, the companies said they would let people subscribe to
channels on a more à la carte basis a favorite cause of Martins, at least where cable and
satellite TV are concerned and broaden their programming. They also said the combination would
lead to less expensive receivers and more advanced services, such as delivering improved traffic
and weather reports. The FCC should look at these concessions, declare victory and approve the
merger.
A Monopoly Not
San Francisco Chronicle
February 26, 2007
TEN YEARS AGO, federal regulators sold a pair of satellite radio licenses and sternly warned
that a competition-chilling merger wouldnt be tolerated.
How quaint that worry seems now. The two operators XM and Sirius are losing billions of
dollars and want to huddle together to stop the bleeding. Meanwhile, HD radio, iPods, Internet
broadcasts and other trends have rushed past regulators and redrawn the landscape. There are 90
million people wearing dangling iPod ear-buds, 65 million who listen to free Internet radio and
about 14 million satellite-radio subscribers.
Its hard to see a stifling monopoly in the making when the two satellite networks are gasping for
air. Consumers, who need defending when choices narrow dramatically, dont need any help on this
shift.
In Washington, the Justice Department is judged likely to bless the deal after surveying the larger
landscape of audio choices. Its a sensible reading of broadcast reality.
Its the Federal Communications Commission, which laid down the no-merger threat a decade ago, that
may stop the deal. The panel shouldnt, even if it risks going back on its guiding words, issued at
the dawn of the Internet age.
A merged satellite market will create a semblance of a monopoly, but only over one slender source
of information. If the merged network raises prices or cuts options, unhappy subscribers can turn
elsewhere for their entertainment fix.
This infant industry was touted as a major breakthrough way back when. How far away that era seems
now when cheaper, handier and more varied choices now abound.
SIRIUS and XM Together Makes Sense for Listeners
USA Today
February 23, 2007
Remember the baseball, hot dogs, apple pie and Chevrolet car ad from the 1980s? Turns out it was
prescient. While the food is still sold separately, baseball now comes free with many Chevys, at
least for a three-month introductory offer.
Thats because General Motors has a deal to build XM Satellite radios into Chevys and its other
cars. And XM has a deal with Major League Baseball.
Satellite competitor Sirius is frozen out of both. But it has the NFL and NBA contracts, which
means that if theres a Ford in your future, football and basketball arent far behind. Not a
sports fan? Oprah is on XM; Martha Stewart is on Sirius.
As Stewart might say, that is not a good thing. It makes little sense that sports fans must decide
between every single pro football game and no baseball games, or vice versa. Nor does it make much
sense that peoples listening preferences should enter into their car-buying decisions.
Thats one reason the proposed XM-Sirius combination, announced this week, may be the rare merger
that is good for consumers.
Before the federal government approves the deal, of course, it should be thoroughly vetted. The
salient question for regulators is whether satellite radio is a market unto itself, in which case a
merger would create a monopoly, or whether it is part of larger universe that includes broadcast
radio and an array of existing and emerging technologies.
If its the latter and a strong case can be made that it is the merged entity would represent
a more potent competitor to entrenched broadcast interests, one that would offer its customers a
more enticing and complete product.
Satellite clearly competes with ground-based radio. If it didnt, the National Association of
Broadcasters wouldnt be trying to restrict the traffic and weather channels offered on the
satellite services, nor would it be so concerned about an XM-Sirius merger.
Satellite competes at a disadvantage with traditional radio. Broadcasters can offer programs free
in part because they dont pay the government for use of the airwaves. Sirius and XM had to pay
about $90 million each for a tiny fraction of the space on the airwaves that broadcasters enjoy. If
the government insists on maintaining such an uneven playing field, the least it can do for
satellite is unshackle it.
Satellite listeners would end up paying more than the $12.95 a month they currently pay, as well
they might expect if they get more content. But the merged company might offer à la carte pricing
options and would face natural constraints. The more it charged, the
more listeners would opt for free broadcast radio, MP-3 devices or new car-based Internet options
being developed.
The case against the proposed deal would be stronger if XM, with 7.6 million subscribers, and
Sirius, with 6 million, were strong and profitable companies. Both, in fact, have been big money
losers, hemorrhaging $6 billion collectively in less than a decade.
The most pressing question is not whether XM and Sirius would be too powerful if they merged; it is
whether they can survive if they dont. And the best way to ensure survival is to let them combine.
Baseball goes with Chevrolet, so why not also with football, basketball, Howard Stern and Martha
Stewart?
Money, Not Outrage, Fuels Anti-Merger Fight
The Miami Herald
February 22, 2007
Watch out for winged pigs, rivers flowing upstream, Hillary Clinton kissing Rush Limbaugh and
Britney Spears putting on underwear. Anything is possible now that the National Association of
Broadcasters has discovered indecency on the airwaves.
Conveniently, its somebody elses airwaves those inhabited by the two satellite radio companies
that compete with the NABs broadcast clients. The NAB has been shocked, shocked, to learn that the
potty-mouth Howard Stern is talking about sex, poop and body parts on satellite radio, and says
thats a good enough reason for the government to block the merger of XM and Sirius.
In coming weeks, policymakers will have to weigh whether an industry that makes Howard Stern its
poster child should be rewarded with a monopoly platform for offensive programming, said Dennis
Wharton, the NABs vice president, earlier this week. ``Were hopeful that this anti-consumer
proposal will be rejected.
DIFFERENT TIME
If youre wondering how many times the NAB labeled Sterns show offensive when it aired on
broadcast radio, heres a clue: The answer lies somewhere between zero and zip, nothing and nada.
The only time NAB ever mentions broadcast shock jocks is when it complains about FCC fines for
their behavior. Back in 1991, when classical-music broadcaster Woody Tanger who owned radio
stations in Miami, Philadelphia and Detroit urged his colleagues to denounce Stern, NAB
president Eddie Fritts stonily replied that the group was not an ``industry programming critic.
Its possible, I suppose, that the NAB recently underwent a taste-conscience transplant, and that
explains the sudden antipathy to Stern. More likely, though, is that the group is just exhibiting
some new creativity as it goes about its same old business of strangling consumer choice in
entertainment.
From crippling a plan for low-power FM radio stations that would have created thousands of new ones
to forcing cable-TV systems to load up with broadcast shopping and religious channels at the
expense of more popular cable-only networks, the NAB has long used government regulation as a
weapon to crush any potential competitors.
None of the NABs holy wars against competitors has been as long or as brutal as the struggle to
suppress satellite radio. No wonder: Nearly free of advertising and with a diverse selection of
programming (XM and Sirius both offer more than 150 channels, everything from 1950s rock and roll
to electronica/trance), satellite is the perfect antidote to the ad-clogged broadcast stations with
tiny playlists operated by the NABs members.
CHUTZPAH
The NAB warred so ceaselessly against the initial proposal for satellite radio that it took 11
years for Sirius and XM to get on the air. The NABs claim that the merger of the two companies is
an ''anti-consumer proposal that will create ''a monopoly platform, if anything, showed more
chutzpah than its denunciation of Stern. There were originally four companies interested in
building satellite radio networks, but two of them gave up as NAB objections turned the application
process into the regulatory version of the Bataan death march.
The attacks didnt stop when XM and Sirius finally went on the air in 2001. Since then, the NAB
lobbied to prevent satellite radio from delivering local traffic and weather reports, even to
prohibit broadcasts of local Amber Alerts about missing children. Its trying to force XM and
Sirius to remove the repeater towers that boost their signals into satellite dead spots. And its
demanded that the government outlaw free trials of satellite radio in new cars or on the Internet.
This attempt to stop the merger is just one more skirmish in the NABs war on competition. If
youre an anti-trust enforcer and you see that all the competitors are banding together to oppose a
merger in the name of `public interest, its pretty easy to figure out that the truth is exactly
the opposite, says Tom Hazlett, who teaches law at George Mason University in Virginia.
What the NAB really hopes is that if the merger is blocked, Sirius and XM which are both losing
money will go bankrupt. Then, to hear actual entertainment programming rather than ads, well
have to listen to our iPods. Until the NAB figures out a way to get them banned, too.
Making Radio Waves
The Wall Street Journal
February 21, 2007
As the Federal Communications Commission ponders the merits of allowing satellite
radio companies Sirius and XM to combine, lets hope the ghost of another proposed
merger haunts the proceedings.
In 2002 the FCC blocked satellite television rivals EchoStar and DirecTV from joining
forces on the grounds that allowing the merger would decrease competition and lead to
higher prices. Michael Powell, the FCC chairman at the time, said the deal would create a
satellite monopoly.
In the event, regulatory intervention, based on an overly narrow definition of the market,
has only led to unfulfilled promise in satellite broadband. Five years later, the cable and
phone companies are by and large eating satellites lunch in attracting subscribers. Rupert
Murdoch is in the process of selling his stake in DirecTV. And consumers who want one
provider for television, Internet and phone service have fewer options than they might
otherwise if the regulators had stayed out of the way.
Which brings us to the proposed merger of XM and Sirius. On news of the deal, FCC
Chairman Kevin Martin remarked that the regulatory hurdles would be high. If so, the
agency might want to write more up-to-date regulations. The current digital audio radio
service rules date to the late 1980s, before high definition radio, iPods, Pandora.com,
music file-sharing and other options existed. The media landscape has changed a bit since
The Police split up.
Beltway critics of the deal see a media monopolist around every corner, scheming to limit
the publics access to content. And its true that the merger would create a lone satellite
radio company. But a pure monopoly is one that exists in a market where there are no
close substitutes. By contrast, a combined Sirius-XM would have to compete not only
with free broadcast radio but also with MP3 players, online radio and even music
channels offered by cable providers.
Heaven only knows what the cellular companies will bring to the party. Theyre already
gearing up to provide more video options, but theres nothing stopping Verizon or
Cingular from coming up with a device that includes a couple of dozen radio stations to
compete with satellite.
Which is why the real danger here isnt the creation of a monopoly, unless you define
the market in a way that has no resemblance to the real world. The bigger concern is that
regulators will repeat the satellite television mistake and in the process reduce consumer
choice. The reason for this merger is not to exclude others from the market, says Adam
Thierer, who follows telecom issues at the Progress & Freedom Foundation. Its to make
sure they can compete in the broader market against the various players they face
serious competitors that have satellite radio providers scrambling for their lives.
The most vocal opponents will be traditional radio broadcasters, who will want the deal
scotched outright, or at least conditioned on satellite operators being prohibited from
offering local services news, weather, traffic that would compete with their own
offerings. Legislation to this effect has been floating around for the last couple of
Congresses, courtesy of Republican Representative Charles Pickering of Mississippi.
We hope Mr. Martin will resist any push for industrial protectionism. If this deal, or
subscription-based satellite radio in general, turns out to be a bust, the marketplace will
let us know in due time.
WSJ
Notices That The NAB Has An Agenda
Techdirt
April 23, 2007
WSJ Notices That The NAB Has An Agenda
from the nice-one dept
Its been pretty clear for some time that the National Association of Broadcasters opposition to
the merger of XM and Sirius isnt based on any concern for the public, as it would like you to
believe, but rather is an attempt to get the government to bolster its struggling business because
it doesnt want to compete in the marketplace. Weve pointed out before that its that behavior
that rankles us in this case, rather than any real desire to see a merged XM-Sirius. What the NAB
is doing the astroturfing, the paid shills, the conflicts of interest, the not-so-independent
research, and most of all, the utter hypocrisy is representative of so many other entrenched
industries that will do anything and everything they can to avoid having to actually compete in the
marketplace. With all that in mind, its nice to see people starting to catch on that the NABs
self-serving agenda means it really shouldnt have any part in the debate about the XM-Sirius
merger, as The Wall Street Journal did over the weekend. As an editorial in the paper put it:
No one knows whether the public will ever really take to the pay model, but its not the role of
the government to help the NAB smother a fledgling competitor in the crib... Telecom policy should
not be about picking winners and losers but about encouraging investment and innovation. For that
to happen, whats most important is competition among technological platforms: cable, telephone,
wireless and satellite (for now). Policy makers and regulators would do better to focus less on
static models of market share within one platform and more on making sure rival platforms continue
to exist. Consumers will happily take care of the rest.
That cuts to the heart of the issue: the NAB wants the government to give it, in essence, a subsidy
to protect its business just as its tried to do so many times before, with so many other
technologies. Blocking this merger wont block anticompetitive behavior from XM and Sirius, it will
empower anticompetitive behavior from the NABs terrestrial radio membership.
Dinosaurs vs. Satellites
Reason Magazine
April 19, 2007
Last year, the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB), the lobbying group for local radio and
TV stations, began running a series of truly awful advertisements attacking satellite radio. In
one, for example, you hear the play-by-play for a baseball game. Just as the announcer gets to a
crucial point in the action, an operator interrupts, and asks you the listener to deposit money to
keep listening, as if you were on a pay phone. A voiceover then announces, Radio. You shouldnt
have to pay for it.
The ads were economically illiterate (as if the time you spend listening to the endless commercials
on traditional radio were free), blatantly dishonest (you pay a monthly fee for satellite radio,
not by the hour), and roundly criticized for their broad assault on the intelligence of the average
radio listener. But the NAB stuck with them. They were part of the NABs longstanding, sometimes
vicious attack on satellite radio, an emerging medium that the NAB clearly sees as a long-term
threat. And with good reason.
While satellite radio still seems to be figuring out how to make a profit, its soaring in
popularity, winning over 14 million paid subscribers in just a few years. Of course, that may not
be a reflection of XM or Sirius quality so much as the mundanity and drollery of Clear Channel
America. With only two business models to choose from, its unlikely that satellite radio has come
anywhere close to fulfilling its potential.
So when XM and Sirius announced a highly-publicized merger this year, everything changed for the
NAB. Clearly, the two startups it so feared for so long were floundering. And with no other
licensed satellite providers around, the NABs position on the merger became clear: Whats bad for
satellite is good for the NAB. So the NAB would oppose an XM-Sirius alliance.
Problem is, the only colorable argument against the merger is that it would create a monopoly for
satellite radio. XM and Sirius cleverly (and probably accurately) headed that objection off by
noting that satellite radio competes with a variety of technologies for the listeners ear. This
put the NAB in an awkward position. The lobby would have to argue that despite its 15-year effort
to derail satellite radio, satellite radio was not a competitor. Of course, the harder the NAB
fights and the more money the NAB spends to promote this message, the clearer it becomes that the
NAB fears the competition posed by an XM-Sirius alliance. In effect, the more the NAB fights the
merger, the more it undermines its own argument against it.
But adherence to logic and consistency have never stopped a Washington lobby before. So the NAB
went to work. It first put an abrupt halt to the Radio. You Shouldnt Have to Pay for It ads
(though a press release announcing the ads remains, the ads themselves seem to have disappeared
from the NABs website).
The NAB then hired on other lobbying firms to help influence policy makers. Among those is the
Ashcroft Group, run by the former U.S. attorney general. It has since been reported that the
Ashcroft Group initially offered its services to XM-Sirius, in support of the merger. When they
declined, the firm switched sides, and signed up with the NAB. John Ashcroft himself then fired off
a strong letter opposing the merger to his successor, Alberto Gonzalez. This from a man who made
personal integrity the cornerstone of his confirmation campaign.
If nothing else, the frantic backpedaling has been entertaining. The NAB initially opposed the
federal government allocating any spectrum at all to satellite start-ups. Its lobbying efforts then
managed to delay that allocation for seven years. Finally, the FCC doled out the spectrum, but
licensed only two companies to broadcast in the U.S., what would become XM and Sirius. Thanks in
large part to the NABs recalcitrance, satellite radio would get just two chances to find its
footing. To borrow a cliched analogy, imagine if buggy whip manufacturers had successfully lobbied
Congress to limit all manufacture of automobiles in the U.S. to just Ford and Chevrolet. If both
failed, well, then that probably would have been a good indication that there just wasnt much of a
market for automobiles in America.
Once XM and Sirius started broadcasting, the NAB continued to work K Street to put up barriers to
their success. The lobby was particularly nasty in attacking XMs plan to add local traffic and
weather to its service. This, the NAB said, violated a gentlemans agreement between the NAB, XM,
and the FCC that XM wouldnt offer localized programming, a concession the company says it had to
offer up to traditional radio in order to get its license (though there was no binding agreement).
Clearly, radio consumers would benefit from an additional traffic and weather provider, and the NAB
knew it. When I called the NAB for an article I wrote on the fight at the time, the NAB rep
couldnt explain to me why or how the NABs position would benefit consumers. His only argument was
that XM went back on its word. And allowing XM to broadcast local traffic and weather could put
terrestrial radio out of business.
Now comes the backtracking, which is at least good entertainment. Its also a fine illustration of
the sleaze that is Washington lobbying. In addition to the Ashcroft Group, consider the Carmel
Group, a California-based consulting firm that represents the NAB. In 2005, the consulting firms
chairman Jimmy Schaeffer wrote an op-ed on the emerging threats to traditional radio. In it, he
described a marketplace in which, numerous competitors thrive, side-by-side. In this case, the new
player is satellite radio, with more than seven mil. subscribers, and its
competition comes in the form of traditional analog AM & FM radio, as well as burgeoning services
like MP3 players, terrestrial radio, and video- and Internet-to-the-vehicle.
Fast-forward to 2007, after the merger. Within weeks the same firm, the Carmel Group, rushed out an
NAB-funded white paper concluding that XM and Sirius state that their competitive landscape
presently includes all forms of terrestrial radio (i.e., analog AM and FM, digital HD and Internet
radio), as well as digital services such as MP3 devices and music-to-cellular telephones. This
position is ludicrous. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth.
(For amusement, read this NY Post column on the paper, which labels it independent despite the
fact that the NAB both paid for the paper and hosts it on its website.)
Then theres David Rehr, the NABs current president. Rehr polished his forked-tongue in his
previous job with the Beer Wholesalers Association. Alcohol wholesalers are a curious bunch. Their
entire existence depends on a series of antiquated, post-prohibition state laws requiring a
three-tier system of alcohol distribution: They require alcohol to pass through a wholesaler
between its manufacture and retail sale. The useless middleman laws really only serve one purpose:
to make wholesalers rich at the expense of consumers. Because of the unique nature of the product
and the anachronistic business model they want to protect with the force of law, the booze
wholesalers simultaneously argue personal responsibility when it comes to the marketing and
advertising of alcohol, but for continued government control over distribution, because consumers
cant be trusted to buy booze in bulk from Costco, or responsibly purchase wine over the Internet.
That kind of rudderless advocacy has at least prepared Rehr for his baptism-by-fire at the NAB. The
guy has had to completely reverse course over the span of just a few months, a flip-flop that makes
John Kerry look like Barry Goldwater. In just October of last year, Rehr said in a speech to the
National Press Club, Who are the newer competitors?...On the radio side, we have satellite radio,
Internet radio, iPODs, other MP3 players, cell phones and others.
And now? Heres Rehr three weeks ago in an NAB statement about the XM-Sirius merger: ... XM and
Sirius compete ferociously against each other in the market for nationwide multichannel mobile
audio services, and no one else.
The NAB has consistently opposed every bit of new technology offering new media options to
consumers, going back to satellite television in the 1980s (for which a federal appeals court
called the group a Luddite). How does it get away with it? Simple. It has a lot of money to throw
around. Not to mention influence. One NAB program, for example, lets members of Congress and their
families
record public service announcements in NAB studios free of charge. The commercials are then
broadcast in the members districts on NAB stations, also free of charge. Thats broadcast time
politicians often have to pay thousands of dollars to reserve.
There seem to be three approaches the federal government might take to the proposed XM-Sirius
merger. The most extreme would be to prevent it from happening, which would be a monumental victory
for the NAB and a crucial loss for consumers. If both companies continue to lose money at current
rates, they may well go under, leaving consumers with no satellite option at all. Thats not a
monopoly, but it hardly seems like a good scenario for consumers, either.
The second option would be to allow the merger, but only after forcing satellite radio to agree to
a wish list of demands from regulators and politicians, such as forcing satellite broadcasters to
abide by FCC indecency regulations. That too would be a loser for consumers, many of whom
subscribed to satellite solely to listen to frequent FCC targets like Howard Stern or Opie and
Anthony.
The third option is of course to allow the merger. And while this may be the least worst of the
realistic outcomes, its certainly not optimal. The number of business models in the medium would
halve from two to one. And if XM-Sirius still falters, then what?
There is a fourth option, but it isnt likely. That would be for the FCC to allow the merger, but
then to buck the NAB and open a considerable amount of spectrum to other potential satellite
broadcasters. This most consumer-friendly approach to satellite radio would create a true market in
the medium, allowing several, perhaps dozens of companies to compete for consumer attention.
Unfortunately, until dinosaurs like the NAB step out of the way, that isnt likely to happen.
Radley Balko is a senior editor for reason.
Terrestrial Radio Looks To Charge Subscription Fees, But Still Doesnt Compete
With Satellite
Techdirt
April 19, 2007
from the blah-blah-blah dept
While terrestrial radio broadcasters keep insisting that satellite radio is no competition for
them, their actions continue to betray that fallacious argument. But in addition to all the
doublespeak, terrestrial broadcasters are also trying to figure out how they can start charging for
their content a move that would only underline the fact that they do indeed compete with
satellite radio providers. iBiquity, the company that develops the HD Radio digital radio
technology for terrestrial broadcasters, says its chosen a provider of conditional access
technology, which will give broadcasters the ability to charge subscription fees for their content,
offer pay-per-listen events, or additional subscription-based services. The fact that terrestrial
broadcasters want to start charging for content (apart from sounding like a really bad idea) would
seem to further undermine the NABs claim that they dont compete with XM and Sirius. Of course,
perhaps you could argue that if terrestrial broadcasters tried to make people pay for the stuff
they broadcast, it really wouldnt be much competition for the satellite companies, but somehow we
dont think thats the point the NAB is trying to make.
More on XM-Sirius
The Technology Liberation Front
April 11, 2007
The proposed XM-Sirius merger continues to generate intense debate here in Washington. Broadcasters
are aggressively pushing regulators to spike the deal, calling the proposed merger a monopoly. As
I pointed out in my earlier essay on this, I just cant buy that argument. I just dont understand
how anyone can honestly believe that satellite radio, terrestrial radio and digital music are not
in fierce competition for our ears.
I recently stumbled upon two good essays that make the same point. One is by my former PFF
colleague Randy May, who is now the president of the Free State Foundation. In his article,
Thinking Siriusly About Satellite Radio Competition, Randy argues that the notion that
satellite radio constitutes a discrete market for purposes of assessing the mergers competitive
impact seems problematicaland to defy common sense.
Tim Farrar of TMK Associates agrees. In a new paper entitled The Competitive Landscape for
Satellite Radio, Farrar argues that the potential alternatives to satellite radio are, in
essence, those technologies which provide (either live or recorded) in-vehicle audio content (i.e.
talk, music, sports and information services such as news, traffic and weather). He continues:
The most obvious alternative to satellite radio is terrestrial AM or FM radio, which comes
pre-installed in virtually all vehicles and is free-of-charge. Clearly the amount of programming
varies, depending on where the consumer is located across the US, since a wide range of channels
are provided in urban areas, but rather less variety is available in rural areas. Nevertheless,
since we understand that a significant majority of usage for satellite radio is by commuters
driving into urban areas (which incidentally is not what XM or Siriuss original business plan
projected), many consumers who are unwilling to pay a premium for satellite radio content obviously
have an adequate choice of terrestrial radio channels. Alternatively, for those users who wish to
listen to commercial-free music, it was reported in January 2005 that almost 50% of iPod users had
purchased accessories which allow for in-car connections, while a January 2006 analyst report
predicted 28M US cars would have iPod connections integrated into their audio systems by 2011.
Given that there are 30M+ iPod users in the US alone, the number of consumers already able to
listen to an MP3 player in their car (either through an integrated audio connection or an
after-market accessory) may well exceed the current total of 14M subscribers to XM and Sirius.
Further:
It is entirely possible that the strength of terrestrial free-to-air radio, combined with readily
available pre-recorded content on MP3 players and other increasingly capable storage devices, will
prevent subscription-based radio from ever serving more than perhaps 20% of US vehicles, a view
supported by the recent slowing of satellite radio subscriber additions. In that case it would be
hard
to describe a merged satellite radio operator as any sort of monopoly provider of in-car audio
content, except in a very limited number of isolated rural areas with few terrestrial free-to-air
radio stations.
Farrar also discusses the rise of new competitive threats from cellular providers who continue to
roll out more and more content via systems like EV-DO and MediaFLO. And there are many other
current or potential threats to satellite radio that I discuss in my old essay on the subject.
A Merger and a Prayer
Forbes
April 9, 2007
The proposed merger between the two satellite radio broadcasters, XM and Sirius, faces serious
regulatory obstacles, primarily for anticompetition reasons. FCC Chairman Kevin Martin has said the
antitrust hurdle will be high. Critics carp that the two firms got the green light to go into
business a decade ago because they would be competing, not combining, and thus would not be in a
position to gouge customers Some Capitol Hill politicians gloomily warn that this joining-if
allowed-is , another nefarious example of the consolidation of the communications industry, since
a handful of companies have already bought scores of television and hundreds of radio licenses.
These Rip Van Winkle skeptics are apparently unfamiliar with something called the Internet
Expanding broadband capacity is making it easier for almost anyone to go into the broadcasting
business. Satellite radio faces competition that didnt exist a mere decade ago, such as digital
radio and cell phones; iPods are also starting to factor in both radio and video.
In short, innovation is making these monopoly concerns look like a Saturday Night Live parody. The
merger should be given the go-ahead immediately-and investors had better hope the new entity can
survive the onslaught of once unforeseen competition.
Its nothing new for regulators to be behind the technology eight ball. Years ago when Xerox
invented the copier business and drew the unwelcome antitrust attention of the Federal Trade
Commission, bureaucrats didnt foresee that a slew of companies would soon make cheaper, less
advanced copiers that over time would become more efficient and reliable and would, ultimately, eat
Xeroxs lunch. Once mighty Xerox stock today sells at only a fraction of its price ten years ago.
And dont forget that decades ago GM and IBM were frequently eyed by antitrusters. Competition and
innovation sharply cut the clout and comparative size of both giants.
In free markets, monopolies are always short-lived
Thinking Siriusly About Satellite Radio Competition
The Free State Foundation
April 09, 2007
If you harbor an unshakeable belief that satellite radio service constitutes a separate market for
audio entertainment and information, you may also believeand might try to convince methat the
eggs used in yesterdays White House egg hunt were left by the Easter Bunny late Saturday night.
But Im not going to be easily convinced. Indeed, if the National Association of Broadcasters and
its terrestrial broadcaster allies are able to persuade the Department of Justice and the FCC to
prevent the Sirius/XM merger on the basis that satellite radio constitutes a discrete product
market, well then, maybe Ill become a believer in the Easter Bunny too.
Ive been reflecting on the proposed merger since it was announced. And at least at this point, the
notion that satellite radio constitutes a discrete market for purposes of assessing the mergers
competitive impact seems problematicaland to defy common sense. As UBS put it in a February 20
investment research report: The combination of an enhanced programming lineup with improved
programming lineup with improved technology, distribution and financials will better position
satellite radio to compete for consumers attention and entertainment dollars against a host of
products and services in the highly competitive and rapidly evolving audio entertainment
marketplace: including free over the air AM and FM radio, iPods, mobile phone streaming, HD
Radio, Internet Radio, and next generation wireless technologies.
Merrill Lynch had this to say on the same day: The merged company could ultimately deliver greater
content choice (more niche channels given greater bandwidth), offer improved technology (radio
receivers and traffic/data products), realize cost synergies and help satellite radio remain
competitive in the evolving audio entertainment landscape as it competes with terrestrial radio,
Internet audio media, HD radio and portable music players.
Each year the FCC issues a report examining the status of video competition. As the Commission
stated in its 2006 report: The market for the delivery of video programming services is served by
a number of operators using a wide range of distribution technologies. The agency included in its
competitive examination cable operators, direct broadcast satellite operators, broadband service
providers and other wireline video providers, wireless cable operators, Internet-based video
services, and DVDs and videocassettes. It would be difficult to understand why, in assessing
competition in the audio market, the full range of distribution technologies similarly would not be
considered. More pointedly, the Commission doesnt ignore DBS satellite television in assessing
competition in the video market, and neither do courts reviewing FCC media ownership decisions. Nor
should they.
For my own part, I am not sure that the appropriate product market with respect to assessing the
competitive impact of the XM/Sirius merger is not somewhat broader than strictly audio
entertainment and information. Consider that both cable and DBS multichannel video programming
distributors offer many different channels of audio only programming. In todays fast-changing
technological and marketplace environment, perhaps the relevant market is the audio and video
information and entertainment market.
With my free market-orientation, I confess to being a bit baffled by some of the comments I have
read from those who often share my market-orientation. For example, my friend Scott Cleland has a
blog entry in which he opposes the Sirius/XM merger as anti-competitive. Cutting through the heated
rhetoric, at bottom his objection seems to be that XM and Sirius are operating on
government-licensed spectrum. Scott claims that spectrum grant alone makes satellite radio a
separate and distinct market for antitrust purposes.
This spectrum alone contention simply cant be right. While there may be certain aspects of the
spectrum license grant and accompanying conditions that are relevant for assessing competitive
impacts, the use of a certain block of frequencies alone cannot be determinative for purposes of
defining a relevant product market. Terrestrial radio and television broadcasters use spectrum too.
So do DBS operators and wireless cable operators. Even cable and other multichannel video operators
often use spectrum, say, cable relay frequencies and satellite earth stations, as part of their
network configurations to deliver their audio and video services. The use of different spectrum
blocks does not mean that these various forms of media do not compete with each other.
From my free market perspective, what seems crucially important for communications policy is to
move beyond classifying and regulating services based on the technology used, or, to the same
effect, based on whether a particular slice of the spectrum is used. You can read my views on this
point at greater length in my Federal Communications Law Journal article, Why Stovepipe Regulation
No Longer Works: An Essay on the Need for a New Market-Oriented Communications Policy. Whats
important, whether for purposes of assessing the competitive impact of a particular merger or, more
often, for purposes of deciding whether it is time to jettison or relax outdated and unduly
burdensome technology-based regulationssay, media ownership regulationsis whether consumers
have alternatives in the marketplace for the service or application in question.
My interest in the Sirius/XM merger has little or nothing to do with concern about whether either
one of the two money-losing companies, or the merged company if the merger is approved, will be
around in five or ten years. The same goes for terrestrial broadcasters, Apples iPod, mobile
streamers, a particular cable or telephone company, and so on. Frankly, the way technologies and
consumer
tastes evolve so rapidly in todays dynamic environment, I wouldnt feel comfortable betting $10 on
any one or the other of them surviving that long.
My main interest is that consumers continue to benefit from the array of information and
entertainment choices that the digital revolution enables. Consumer welfare ultimately depends on
continued long-run investment and innovation in the marketplace, with providers seeking competitive
advantage by responding to consumer demands. And continued investment and innovation depend on
regulators at DOJ and the FCC not taking such a constrained, static view of marketplace competition
that they end up maintaining in place or adopting new regulations, or preventing market-driven
mergers, which have such investment and innovation-stifling effects.
Two Can Play: Mock ad showing NAB flip-flops
Orbitcast
April 07, 2007
I figured that since the NAB can create anti-merger ads, I can just as well create my own pseudo-ad
showing the NABs inconsistencies. So here goes:
Busted: Carmel Group has already defined Satellite Radios competitors
Orbitcast
April 04, 2007
In the recent Carmel Group study, Senior Analyst and Chairman Jimmy Schaeffler writes an analysis
about the proposed XM-Sirius merger, and drafts point-by-point blows combating each argument in
favor of the merger.
One key aspect that Schaeffler argues against is the definition of the competitive landscape.
Heres a quote from the Carmel Group report:
Sirius and XM make an argument that is critical to the success of this proposed merger. They state
that their competitive landscape presently includes all forms of terrestrial radio (i.e., analog AM
and FM, digital HD and Internet radio), as well as digital services such as MP3 devices and
music-to-cellular telephones. This position is ludicrous. In fact, nothing could be further from
the truth.
Note that I added the emphasis on the ludicrous statement. Thats something that the media is
picking up on very heavily.
But exactly how ludicrous is this position? Exactly how far from the truth could it be? Not too far
I guess, because Jimmy Schaeffler took that position himself in a Carmel Group article written in
October 05, 2005:
...satellite radio, with more than seven mil. subscribers, and its competition comes in the form
of traditional analog AM & FM radio, as well as burgeoning services like MP3 players, terrestrial
radio, and video- and Internet-to-the-vehicle.
Now thats not a selectively snipped quote. Read the full article yourself it goes on to outline
and describe satellite radios competition, and what obstacles they will face in the years to come.
This is an article that was written (free of any funding from the NAB) only a year and a half ago
by The Carmel Group, and it explicitly defines satellite radios competitors. But yet an NAB
commissioned report by the same group suddenly claims that any such definition is ludicrous.
Coincidence?
How Can New Satellite Radio Merger Analysis Be Independent When The NAB Paid For It?
Techdirt
April 03, 2007
from the
curious-how-that-works dept
Research firm, The Carmel Group, has come out with a new report that supposedly tries to show why
having XM and Sirius merge would be bad for consumers. The group also put out a similar report back
when DirecTV and EchoStar tried to merge and some credit that report with killing off that
merger. What the report apparently tries to highlight is that as Sirius and XM competed with each
other, they continually tried to one-up each other with new features and services thus
suggesting that competition between the two was strong. Now, obviously, we feel that competition
like this does drive innovation, but it brushes aside the fact that competition also comes from
terrestrial radio, iPods and other forms of entertainment. The folks over at Orbitcast point out
that they could just as easily create a report highlighting how terrestrial radio has changed as it
competes with satellite radio as well. Still, the silliest thing about this research is that the
press is reporting that this is an independent report despite being funded by the NAB. Weve
already covered some of the dirty tricks the NAB is pulling in trying to prevent the merger, but to
call a report that they funded independent isnt exactly realistic. The group is squarely against
the merger, though the stronger they come out against the merger, the weaker their argument is. If
they really believe that satellite radio doesnt compete with terrestrial radio (who the NAB
represents), then why are they so concerned about the merger? If it would really lead to higher
prices for consumers and less service, wouldnt that be a good thing for terrestrial radio? It
would mean that more people would stick with good old fashioned terrestrial radio rather than
bailing for satellite radio.
Busted: Mike Hubbard, sponsor of Alabama anti-merger resolution, owns radio station
(and more)
Orbitcast
March 31, 2007
Remember that resolution against the XM-Sirius merger that was passed in Alabama? Well it seems
that several keen-eyed commenters have noticed that the chief sponsor of the resolution actually
owns a terrestrial radio station as well as a production company.
Mike Hubbard, Alabamas House Minority Leader and the chief sponsor of a resolution against the
Sirius-XM merger (HJR144) cites his own possible conflict of interest in his official bio:
Hubbards company, Auburn Network, Inc., owns and operates WANI NewsTalk 1400, a commercial radio
station in the Auburn/Opelika market as well as Studio 197, an audio production company serving the
national broadcast industry...
In his legislative bio, we also learn that Hubbard is a member of the Alabama Broadcasters
Association which identifies itself as a trade association representing radio and televisions
stations. The ABA itself has officially denounced the XM-Sirius merger, obviously using the
strength of its 287 members (particularly one certain House Minority Leader) to push forward their
agenda.
Conflict of interest? Nah, its for the good of the people!
If Terrestrial Radio Broadcasters Dont Compete With Satellite Radio...
Techdirt
March 01, 2007
from the
youve-got-some-explaining-to-do dept
Weve talked about the debate concerning whether or not XM and Sirius should be allowed to merge a
few times. Those who are worried about it creating a monopoly seem to ignore the fact that the
market isnt for satellite radio but for audio entertainment which goes well beyond satellite
radio to things like terrestrial radio, HD radio, iPods, podcasts and much, much more. It seems
like a no brainer. However, theres almost no way to make sense of the testimony of David Rehr,
President of the NAB, to the House Judiciary Committee on why the merger should not be allowed. He
starts out by saying that the merger would create a monopoly. However, if thats true, then its
not clear why hes an interested party at all. Hes there representing the terrestrial radio
broadcasters and the more that he complains about this merger, the more that it sounds like
those broadcasters absolutely do view the satellite radio companies as direct competition. In fact,
the terrestrial broadcasters have publicly admitted that they face strong competition from
satellite radio. If those broadcasters are so worried that the satellite radio firms would abuse
their so-called monopoly position to raise rates, then wouldnt that represent a huge opportunity
for terrestrial radio to win back listeners?
In the meantime, were still wondering how the NAB can say with a straight face that satellite
radio doesnt compete with terrestrial radio, while at the same time demanding a relaxation of
media ownership rules and using satellite radio as an example of why old media ownership rules no
longer apply. That NAB page says: The FCC should relax unreasonable ownership restrictions on the
media. Broadcasters believe that these decades-old rules should be updated to reflect the dramatic
changes in the media marketplace, including the growth of cable TV, satellite TV and radio, and the
Internet. So, apparently, satellite radio is competition when it comes to media ownership... but
not competition when it comes to mergers?
They Cannot Be Sirius Satellite Radio
The Economist
February 24, 2007
Regulators May Oppose the Merger of Americas Two Satellite-Radio Firms EVEN a cursory glance into
a typical van pulling into the car park of an American mall reveals a bewildering amount of
entertainment activity going on inside. Mum is likely to be talking on her mobile phone behind the
wheel. Music will be playing from an iPod, or from a satellite or terrestrial radio station. The
children in the back have their own iPods, mobile phones or games consoles, or are watching video
on screens built into the seats in front. Americas cars, boats and recreational vehicles are fast
becoming entertainment centres that happen to have wheels.
It is therefore somewhat surprising that Kevin Martin, the chairman of the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC), which regulates Americas telecoms and media industries, responded negatively to
news this week that Americas two satellite-radio companies want to merge. Sirius, based in New
York, and XM, based in Washington, DC, plan to unite in an exchange of shares that would leave each
firms shareholders with half of the new company, worth about $11 billion on the day of the
announcement, February 19th. But first they need approval both from Americas Department of
Justice, which rules on antitrust matters, and from the FCC, which looks out for the more arbitrary
public interest. Mr Martin said that the hurdle would be high for Sirius and XM to prove that
their union would not limit consumer choice or affordability.
In fairness, Mr Martin can point to an FCC rule that specifically bars Sirius and XM from merging.
But that rule was written a decade ago, when neither company had begun its service, and years
before iPods, podcasts and other neologisms had battled their way into the English vocabulary.
Sirius and XM have since launched their satellites, struck deals with carmakers to build receivers
into their vehicles and signed exorbitant contracts to license content-most notoriously with Howard
Stern (pictured), the countrys most sexually explicit shock jock, whom Sirius is paying $500m
over the course of five years. Such deals, and the proposition of music, sports and news
uninterrupted by advertising breaks, have enabled both firms to attract plenty of paying
customers-XM has 7.6m, Sirius 6m-although forecasts have fallen in the past year.
Not surprisingly in a new business where most costs are fixed rather than variable, both firms
still make losses. But this cost structure, rather than a desire to increase market power, is what
makes the deal attractive, says Craig Moffett of Sanford C. Bernstein, a broker. By teaming up, the
two firms can cut their fixed costs, the biggest of which is content. A merger would cut the cost
of Howard Stern in half, says Mr Moffett, and so move the combined firm closer to profit. It is
unlikely, he contends, that the merged firm would raise prices beyond the $12.95 per month that
both Sirius and XM now charge subscribers.
But what about choice? Counter-intuitively, a merger would lead to more of it, say XM and Sirius,
since it would allow them to drop channels that duplicate each other and to
replace them with a wider range of niche channels. The FCC, however, will also be on the receiving
end of an opposing view, delivered loudly from the politically powerful National Association of
Broadcasters (NAB), an industry lobby with members such as Clear Channel, the countrys largest
terrestrial radio broadcaster. The NAB is expected to argue that the newly unified satellite outfit
would put local programming on some of its new niche channels, which would violate todays rules
and compete with terrestrial radio stations. This would be an odd argument in some ways, since the
violation would consist of increasing consumer choice, not limiting it.
In the past Mr Martin, a Republican, has been sympathetic to the NAB. Of the other four
commissioners, two are Democrats who tend to be wary of media consolidation and two are
Republicans who may be more inclined to take a friendly view of the merger. There is, in short, a
lot of politics to contend with, which makes a sensible outcome far from assured.
Sirius, XM: Tough luck?
Chicago Tribune
February 23, 2007
Sirius and XM, the countrys only providers of satellite radio, want to merge. Their reasons are
obvious. Over the last eight years, the two have lost a combined $7 billion, and they dont see a
way to profitability.
They have a combined 14 million subscribers, but theyre still losing lots of money. One reason:
They handed out giddy sums to lure programming such as Howard Stern, the National Football League,
Oprah Winfrey and Major League Baseball. Heck, whatever Sirius paid for Bubba the Love Sponge, it
was too much.
So, should regulators tell Sirius and XM: Tough luck, you made a bad bet, no merger allowed? A
merger, after all, would create a satellite radio monopoly.
Well, not so fast. A merger might make sense, even for consumers.
XM and Sirius are the only companies that reach you by satellite, but there are plenty of other
competitors for what goes in your ears. This market is changing with amazing speed.
Consumers can pay $12.95 a month for Sirius or XM. Or they can listen to thousands of free radio
stations around the world via the Internet. They can listen to radio downloads on their MP3
players. About 10 percent of the 12,500 broadcast radio stations have upgraded to high-definition
signals, a number sure to grow. HD allows broadcast stations to expand their offerings via digital
multicasting and, eventually, they will provide datacasting of weather, stocks, sports, traffic,
etc. HD radio will usher in static-free sound, which will bring FM quality sound to the AM radio
band and CD-quality sound to FM.
A merged Sirius/XM would compete against all of the above. Lest a combined Sirius/XM is tempted to
send its subscription price soaring, it will find that consumers do have options, and more options
every day.
The merger has to pass muster with the Justice Department and the Federal Communications
Commission. FCC Chairman Kevin Martin has said the deal faces high hurdles to win approval.
Indeed, the FCC granted Sirius and XM operating licenses a decade ago on the condition that the
licenses would not eventually be owned by the same company.
But regulators have to be forward-looking in their analysis. They cant evaluate this in terms of a
10-year-old agreement. In the communications sphere, that was centuries ago.
They need to consider where competition is today and where competition will be tomorrow. And then
they have to be humble, because their powers of forecasting havent been great.
A decade ago the FCC thought it saw the future and decreed there would be two licenses for
satellite radio. The companies awarded those licenses would compete with each other.
The market had different ideas.
Radio via the Internet was barely a blip on the horizon back in the 90s. Last year, 52 million
Americans listened to Web radio, a 35 percent jump over the previous year.
In the 90s, no one had heard of an iPod. Yet, more than 70 percent of 2007 cars made in the U.S.
offer easy integration with an iPod. Satellite radio is just another option in a universe that is
changing with astonishing speed.
So lets hear more from Sirius and XM about this proposed deal. The government doesnt want to kill
satellite radiobut thats a possibility if both these money-losing players go under.
Better to permit the merger and invite other companies to seek a license to launch satellite radio.
Perhaps no one would jump at the opportunity, which involves a massive upfront investment. But a
combined Sirius/XM certainly would have competition from emerging businessesand from businesses
no one has yet dreamed up.
In
addition, the Merger Resources page of the website also
contains links to the following fact sheets included on the website:
Fact Sheet on Competition
Today, satellite radio faces robust, dynamic and growing competition from a broad variety of
products and services. Consumers now have many ways of getting music, news and other content to
listen to at home and in their cars. In addition to competition from free over-the-air AM, FM,
and HD Radio, Internet radio, music subscription services, iPods and other MP3 players, CD players,
and cell phones, satellite radio will face new challenges as technologies and services like 3G,
WiMax and MediaFLO gain more popularity.
The proposed satellite radio merger is the best way to maintain vigorous, long term competition in
the audio entertainment market and the best way to promote the broadest possible choices for
consumers.
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A huge AM and FM radio presence dominates audio entertainment across the
country. Offered at no charge to listeners, AM and FM radio boast more than 280 million
listeners compared to about 14 million satellite radio subscribers. |
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The AM/FM radio industry has committed hundreds of millions of dollars to
promoting HD radio technology it offers listeners commercial-free, CD quality broadcasts
in their homes and in their cars, again at no charge to listeners. It is estimated that HD
radio sales will reach 1.51 million by the start of 2008. |
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Internet radio is a large and fast-growing force with more than 50 million
estimated users and a 50% increase in the number of weekly users over the last year. |
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iPods and other MP3 players are also enormously popular audio entertainment
devices, with more than 100 million sold as of 2006. By 2011, 60 million U.S. cars are expected
to have factory-installed iPod jacks. |
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Internet music download and subscription services, as well as CD players,
provide consumers with even more audio entertainment choices. |
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Digital music is also beginning to be offered on cell phones and iPhones.
MediaFLO, a new data transmission technology that will soon be available to 100 million
customers of Cingular and Verizon, will also offer audio entertainment options. |
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Once the merger is complete, the new company will be able to look for new and
innovative ways to deliver satellite radios to our customers. We will be able to put a
greater emphasis on the development of devices that will be lighter, thinner, more
functional and have a longer battery-life. |
MM of Units
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US motor-vehicle registrations excluding buses as of 2005; Source: Bureau of Transportation Statistics |
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US PCs in use as of 2005; Source: Computer Industry Almanac |
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US weekly AM/FM radio listeners (12+); Source: Arbitron Radio Today, 2006 Edition |
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US wireless subs as of 6/30/06; Source: CTIA |
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Apple Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook Goldman Sachs Technology Investment Symposium |
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Satellite radio subscribers; Source: Company estimates |
ANOTHER CHAPTER IN NABS SEVENTEEN-YEAR CAMPAIGN TO STIFLE
SATELLITE RADIO AND STIFLE COMPETITION
As the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) begins its annual meeting in Las Vegas, it is
time to take stock of the organizations long history of lobbying in Washington to stop competition
from satellite radio Their latest effort to block the merger of Sirius and XM is only part of a
long expensive campaign to attack satellite radio and forestall effective competition.
In a multimillion dollar effort that began seventeen years ago, the NAB repeatedly opposed the
creation of satellite radio because it would compete with its members radio stations:
1990: The NAB tried to make end run around government plans to create a satellite system
by proposing a digital system using land-based radios.
1992: NAB mobilized opposition to
the FCCs proposal to set aside spectrum for satellite radio.
1994: The NAB submitted a filing to the FCC opposing any licenses to operate satellite
radio technology.
1995: The NAB filed a report with the FCC and mounted a publicity campaign warning that
satellite radio will fragment radio audiences and make local radio unprofitable.
1997:
The NAB paid Kagan Consulting to produce an independent report claiming that FM radio
would suffer great financial harm from satellite radio.
The NABs efforts to stop satellite radio failed. That, however, didnt stop their rhetoric. Last
September, in his remarks to the NAB Radio Show in Dallas, Texas, NAB President and CEO David Rehr
declared, In 2006, we have satellite and internet radio [as competitors]. And barely a day passes
without the introduction of a new competing device or service. But we have news for our
competitors: We will beat you as we have beaten those change agents in the past.
Although XM and Sirius together have a mere 3.4% of the total radio listening, as measured by a
recent Arbitron survey, the NAB is again lobbying the government, this time seeking protection from
the enhanced competition they would face from the merged company.
As soon as the merger was announced, the NAB embarked on a non-stop campaign to bend the
truth and distort the facts about the merger:
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The NAB funded a phony consumer front group called the Consumer Coalition for Competition
in Satellite Radio (C3SR), to oppose the merger. C3SR claimed to be an independent
grassroots consumer organization and refused to say who funded it. The group has since
been exposed by
Corporate Crime Reporter as a NAB front group. |
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The NAB also paid the Carmel Group, a California consulting firm, to change its views about
competition in the audio entertainment market. In an article written a year-and-a-half ago,
before being hired by NAB, Carmels Jimmy Schaeffler described satellite radios
competitors as traditional analog AM & FM radio, as well as burgeoning services like MP3
players, terrestrial radio, and video- and Internet-to-the-vehicle. This
month, after receiving money from the NAB, Mr. Schaeffler produced a white paper saying
exactly the opposite. |
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The NAB has used its money for any Washington hired guns it could find. The Wall Street
Journal reported that Former Attorney General John Ashcroft, who sent a letter... to his
successor Alberto Gonzales blasting the proposed merger... approached XM in the days after
the merger was announced offering the firm his consulting services. |
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Not content to change minds only in Washington, the NAB has worked to influence state
legislatures as well through dubious means. For instance, the chief sponsor of an
anti-merger resolution in the Alabama legislature is a member of the Alabama Broadcasters
Association who owns a terrestrial radio station and an audio production company serving
the national broadcast industry. |
And, of course, their rhetoric has changed. NAB President Rehr now claims that satellite radio
doesnt compete with AM and FM radio. The harder NAB works to quash competition, the easier it is
to see their hypocrisy.
NAB Opposition
For over twenty-five years, the NAB has objected to the evolution of communications technology,
including satellite television, drop in radio stations, low-power radio and low-power TV band
devices, in addition to their opposition to satellite radio. We have come to expect consistent,
unbridled criticism from the NAB when it comes to new technology.
So what makes satellite radio different? Opposition to the SIRIUS-XM merger is simply the latest
and greatest in the NABs persistent resistance to change. Lets take a look at the evidence...
Satellite
Television... In the 1980s, the NAB fought the FCCs decision to award DBS
licenses, claiming that the Communications Act forbade a nationwide licensee. Its position
was so extreme that a federal appeals court described the NAB as luddite[s], saying it
would be irresponsible to deny consumers new technology that offers the promise of
substantial public benefit. Moreover, the court chided terrestrial broadcasters,
commenting that the Act does not entrench any particular system of broadcasting: existing
systems, like existing licensees, have no entitlement that permits them to deflect
competitive pressure from innovative and effective technology. (NAB v. FCC, 790 F.2d 1190,
1197-98 D.C. Cir., 1984).
Drop-In Stations... In the 1980s, the FCC issued a decision allowing the allotment of
additional FM frequencies. The NAB and other broadcasters sought to have restrictions
imposed on the operation of these so-called drop-in FM stations, which were made possible
by technological improvements in radio receivers. The NAB also filed a petition for
reconsideration of the FCCs decision to authorize the new stations.
Low-Power Radio... The FCC first proposed the establishment of rules for low power radio
service in 1999. The NAB and other broadcasters submitted comments vehemently opposing this
new service. As noted by then-FCC Chairman William Kennard, this opposition was about the
havesthe broadcast industrytrying to prevent the have-notssmall community and
educational organizationsfrom having just a little piece of the pie. Just a little piece
of the airwaves which belong to all of the people. (Statement of FCC Chairman William E.
Kennard on Low Power FM Radio Initiative, 2000 FCC Lexis 1536 March 27, 2000)
Low-Power TV Band Devices... In 2004, the FCC proposed to allow certain types of unlicensed
devices to operate in the broadcast television spectrum at locations where the spectrum is
not being used. As the Commission explained, permitting such operations would enable more
efficient and effective use of the TV spectrum and would have significant benefits for the
public by allowing the development of new and innovative types of broadband devices
(Unlicensed Operation in the TV Broadcast Bands; Additional Spectrum for Unlicensed Devices
Below 900 MHz and in the 3 GHz Band, 19 FCC Rcd 10018 2004). The NAB [and other broadcast
interests] sought to impede the operation of these new devices, though they would operate
only on channels not being used for licensed services. Even after the FCC issued a decision
in 2006 authorizing the devices, the NAB and other broadcast interests asked FCC to impose
an extensive set of restrictions on the operation of the devices.
Satellite Radio... From the start, the NAB vehemently opposed allocation of spectrum for and
licensing of satellite radio, asserting that it would destroy local radio broadcasting. The
radio industrys evidence was embarrassingly thin ranging from
studies that assumed satellite radios would be free, claiming that a temporary revenue
fall-off during a recession was indicative of the declining fortunes of terrestrial
broadcasters, to a survey of radio station executives, each of whom claimed that satellite
radio would be the death of localism. Ultimately, NABs opposition
delayed licensing
satellite radio for seven years. Now the organization is looking to stop the SIRIUS-XM
merger from going through, using any means necessary.
The NABs public opposition to the SIRIUS-XM merger is an effort to advance its members interests
under the guise of consumer rights. The organizations opposition to the transaction is not
indicative of the value of the transaction itself, but rather is symptomatic of the NABs
conservativeness, self-interest and consequent hostility toward new technology.
\
NAB: What They Said Then vs. What They are Saying Now
The National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) has gone to great lengths to impede the SIRIUS-XM
merger, and in the say anything, do anything process has not only put its credibility on the
line, but has also radically misrepresented the competitive environment in which satellite radio
operates. Since the merger was announced on February 20th, the NAB and the Carmel Group
(a paid advocate for the NAB) have contradicted themselves time and time again on this matter.
Before the merger was announced, the NAB and its paid advocate cited satellite radio as one of
AM/FMs rivals in the highly competitive audio entertainment industry. However, after the merger
was announced, these groups drastically changed their characterizations of industry competition in
order to bolster their opposition to the SIRIUS-XM combination. The proof of these groups
contradictions is in their own words:
WHAT THEY SAID BEFORE THE MERGER WAS ANNOUNCED:
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...the new player is satellite radio, with more than seven million subscribers, and
its competition comes in the form of traditional analog AM & FM radio, as well as burgeoning
services like MP3 players, terrestrial radio, and video- and Internet-to-the-vehicle. (Jimmy
Schaeffler of The Carmel Group, Growing Another Telecom Pie; Satellite Radios In-Vehicle
Competition, October 5, 2005) |
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First it was TV, then LPs, then cassette tapes then my favorite eight-tracks then CDs
now its iPods...And today is no different. In 2006, we have satellite and Internet radio. And
barely a day passes without the introduction of a new competing device or service. (David K.
Rehr, 2006 NAB Radio Show, September 21, 2006) |
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Who are the newer competitors?...On the radio side, we have satellite radio, Internet radio,
iPODs, other MP3 players, cell phones and others. (David K. Rehr, The National Press Club,
October 4, 2006) |
WHAT THEY ARE SAYING NOW:
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...the national satellite radio market currently is a two-company duopoly trying to become a
government-sanctioned monopoly. There are two companies in the market for nationwide,
multichannel mobile audio programming services. (David K. Rehr, Oral Testimony Before The U.S.
House Judiciary Antitrust Task Force, February 28, 2007) |
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...XM and Sirius compete ferociously against each other in the market for nationwide
multichannel mobile audio services, and no one else. (David K. Rehr, NAB Statement On FCCs
Satellite Radio Market Definition, March 30, 2007) |
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[SIRIUS and XM] state that their competitive landscape presently includes all forms of
terrestrial radio (i.e., analog AM and FM, digital HD and Internet radio), as well as digital
services such as MP3 devices and music-to-cellular telephones. This position is ludicrous. In
fact, nothing could be further from the truth. (The Carmel Group, Carmel Group Study: Higher
Prices, Less Content and A Monopoly: Good For The Consumer? The Proposed Sirius-XM Merger,
April 2007) |
Despite the NABs efforts to distort the competitive landscape, the facts remain clear: the audio
entertainment industry is highly competitive and will remain so following the SIRIUS-XM merger. The
incredible effort that the NAB is expensing to oppose this merger is, in itself, evidence of how
intense the competition has become. Satellite radio is just one alternative available to consumers
among a wide spectrum of audio entertainment choices, including free AM/FM radio, HD radio,
internet radio, mobile phones, CDs, MP3 players and iPods. For the NAB to say otherwise is
hypocritical.
We appreciate the opportunity to share our perspective and for your interest in this matter. If we
can be of assistance as you continue to report on the SIRIUS-XM merger, please let us know.
In
addition, the Merger Resources page of the website also
contains links to the following testimony of Mel Karmazin, Chief
Executive Officer of SIRIUS, included on the website:
Testimony of Mr. Mel Karmazin
Chief Executive Officer
SIRIUS Satellite Radio
Before the House Judiciary Committees
Antitrust Task Force
Regarding the
Competition and the Future of Digital Music
February 28, 2007
Mr. Chairman,
Good afternoon. Thank you, Chairman Conyers, Ranking Member Smith, and
members of the Anti-Trust Task Force for the
invitation to talk with you about our merger with XM
Satellite Radio.
Im Mel Karmazin, the CEO of Sirius Satellite
Radio. Before I came to Sirius in 2004, I was
president of Viacom, and before that, president of CBS.
Ive spent just about my entire working life in
the broadcast industry.
I am speaking today on behalf of both companies. With
me here today is Gary Parsons, the chairman of
XM. Gary is a veteran of the communications
business, a real leader in the world of satellite
radio. Gary and I are both looking forward to working
together to create an exciting new company.
Garys leadership and talent are crucial to this merger.
He built XM into the success it is today.
I should point out that XM has the largest
digital radio facility of its kind in the country,
and is headquartered right here in Washington.
We firmly believe that this transaction is essential to
preserving and enhancing choice for consumers. A
combined company will be able to compete more
effectively in the highly competitive and rapidly evolving
audio entertainment marketplace. Our new enterprise will
enhance the audio industrys future.
I appreciate this opportunity to explain why we believe so
strongly that this merger will benefit American consumers.
This afternoon I would like to focus on the
two most important aspects of this merger:
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How this merger will lead to increased consumer
choice and lower prices; and |
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How this merger enhances competition in an
already highly competitive market. |
Consumer Choice and Lower Prices
Since the
creation of satellite radio in 1997, the
consumer has been at the center of our business
plan. Consumer wants and needs have brought the technology and the
industry to where it is today and the consumer continues to be
our number one priority. That simple but important fact
will not change post-merger. The long-term success
of satellite radio rests on growing our subscriber
base. As a single company, we expect to provide current
and future subscribers the best and most diverse audio
content available.
A merged company will also give subscribers additional
programming options and pave the way for even
more programming. We expect that consumers will
no longer have to subscribe to both services in
order to receive the most popular programming. We want
subscribers on both systems to be able to listen to
both the NFL and Major League
Baseball. Both the PGA and NCAA basketball. Both Oprah
Winfrey and Martha
Stewart.
Moreover, in the long-term the significantly expanded
channel capacity of our merged company will give consumers
access to a greater range of programming. XM and
SIRIUS already broadcast a wide range of
commercial-free music channels, exclusive and non-exclusive
sports coverage, news, talk, and entertainment programming.
In the long-term, our combined company expects to be
able to expand diverse programs for underserved interests.
For example, we hope to expand foreign language and
religious programming.
The merger will also result in a combined focus on
designing the best products and innovative services for our
subscribers. By combining our research and development, we
will be able to design and introduce radios and
transmission infrastructure that will give satellite radio
subscribers the best experience in audio entertainment. We
will be able to speed the introduction of radios
offering content from both of our services today
something that has been challenging as separate companies.
We anticipate that together, our radios will be smaller, lighter,
simpler, and more technologically-advanced than what each company
has on the market today. Over time, we
will look to combine our satellite and terrestrial
transmission infrastructure to deliver the broadest range of
content and the highest level of service quality.
Finally well use our combined resources to improve
upon our nascent non-audio services, like Backseat
Video, real-time traffic and weather, and other
infotainment-style data services. At the same time,
we will accelerate the delivery of innovative services and
products.
It is important to realize, however, that our individual
radios will not become obsolete as a result of this
combination. Any radios or other equipment that subscribers currently use
will be fully supported by SIRIUS and XM. When
more technologically advanced devices are ready,
subscribers will make the decision to adopt them at a
timing of their choice.
In summary, a merged Sirius and XM will
be a boon to consumers. They will receive
additional programming opportunities and choice at more
competitive prices. They will have access to advanced
equipment and services, but they will have the
flexibility to adopt technology when they wish, secure in
the knowledge that their current radio will
continue to operate. And satellite audio will continue to
be a viable consumer option in
the modern audio entertainment marketplace a marketplace that has undergone
incredible growth and upheaval since the birth of
satellite radio.
Enhanced Competition in the Audio Entertainment Industry
We operate in an intensely competitive environment
and that competition will continue to intensify
post-merger and continue to provide an inherent check on programming as well
as on pricing. Our long-term success rests on growing
our subscriber base, and we simply will not attract new
subscribers if we are not meeting consumer expectations on
price and programming.
The dynamic growth in audio technology has given consumers
an impressive array of
choice a significantly broader range of audio entertainment options from which to
choose than was the case when we were first granted
our licenses a decade ago in 1997. Back in 1997, an eon
ago in the world of technology, audio entertainment was dominated
by analog AM and FM radio. Digital broadcast
radio did not yet exist. The Internet was still in its
infancy; with multi-channel digital broadcast radio and
broadband streaming
Internet audio and radio still on the horizon.
Todays options paint a stark contrast to those
in 1997. Of course, satellite radio still
competes vigorously with free over-the-air AM-FM radio a
service that exists in
virtually every home and car in the country.
That competition is becoming fiercer, as radio moves to
digital broadcasts in response to satellites appeal. But we
also face growing competition for our audience from emerging
audio sources, including multi-channel digital broadcast
radio, wireless broadband and mobile phone streaming.
But thats just the beginning; an even wider range
of new services are becoming mainstream. Wireless carriers
are exploring new data and voice services as they
deploy
3G and 4G networks. Multi-channel HD radio
is spurring renewed growth in the terrestrial radio marketplace,
with additional free programming choice. Services such
as WiMAX and Media Flow are emerging as
high-bandwidth, long-range content, and data transmission technologies.
It has only been 10 years since satellite radio
was licensed. Could we have predicted 10 years ago
that the audio entertainment marketplace would look the way it does
now?
One reason for all the new technological
advancements is that competition in the audio entertainment
market is robust. We are seeing new entrants on a
regular basis as the market continues to meet the needs of
the consumer. The reality is that consumers can choose
from a wide range of different services and
technologies that offer audio entertainment.
XM and Sirius are relatively small players in
that highly competitive and rapidly evolving audio
entertainment marketplace. Welterweights in an arena of
heavyweights. There are 237 million vehicles in the
United States, each of which offers a built-in AM
and FM radio. There are another 230 million PCs in
use that can access programming online, and there
are 223 million weekly AM and FM radio
listeners in the United States, and millions of
cell phones for music listening, to programmed entertainment,
music news, talk and information. Contrast that to
Sirius and XM. The companies currently have about
14 million subscribers. Satellite radio is a David
operating in a land of Goliaths and is hardly
a threat to controlling the audio entertainment market.
But
competition is healthy and it benefits the consumer.
Today when we think to ourselves, I want to hear some
of the jazz greats like Louis Armstrong, John Coltrane or
Miles Davis, we have a multitude of options at
our fingertips. We can turn on our
AM/FM radio and tune in to a jazz station; we
can log on to the Internet and find the music
online; or we can turn on our SIRIUS satellite radio
and tune into Planet Jazz, Jazz
Café or Spa 73.
Given the expansive market within which satellite radio is only one of
many alternatives we are certain that an accelerating level of competition will
exist post-merger. There is little doubt that satellite radio faces
stiff competition from many of the technologies and
entertainment platforms that I have already described. In
fact, I would like to note for the committee that
in the SEC filings of traditional radio companies, they
readily acknowledge that they compete with satellite radio
in a larger market for audio entertainment:
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From Clear Channel Communications 2005 Form 10-K; page24 Our
broadcasting businesses face increasing competition from
new broadcast technologies, such as broadband
wireless and satellite television and radio, and new consumer
products, such as portable digital audio players
and personal digital video recorders. |
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From COX Broadcastíng / COX RADIO 2005 Form
10-K; page 8-9: In addition, the radio broadcasting
industry is subject to competition from new technologies and
services that are being developed or introduced, such
as the delivery of audio programming by cable
television systems, by satellite digital audio
radio service and by digital audio broadcasting.
Digital audio broadcasting and satellite digital audio
radio service provide for the delivery by
terrestrial or satellite means of multiple new audio
programming formats with compact disc quality sound to
local and national audiences. |
The fact is that we are in the middle of a
rapid evolution of the audio entertainment industry. Together,
SIRIUS and XM can compete more effectively. We
will have the capacity to expand our market by
offering more compelling and more diverse content to a
greater proportion of the population. Our goal is to have as
many people in this country look to us as a source
of content relevant to them. By combining our companies, we
are absolutely convinced that we are creating a company
with tremendous potential. We are confident that together we
will be able to quickly and successfully integrate the
two companies to deliver the greatest programming choices
to our existing and new subscribers.
Our merger has resulted in one unexpected harmony.
There are few if any issues where youll find the
LOS ANGELES TIMES, the WALL STREET JOURNAL, USA TODAY,
and the CHICAGO TRIBUNE in agreement. All four newspapers
found that our merger is meritorious. The LA TIMES
concluded that the audio entertainment market is very competitive,
particularly among the national players. Mr. Chairman, Ranking
Member Smith, and members of the Committee, thank you for
this invitation to speak with you today about the
very significant consumer benefits that this merger will produce.
Sirius and XM together see great opportunities, and
we believe that our growth will be faster and our
service offerings will be more competitive on a
combined basis.
This transaction is about choice. We look forward to the day
this merger is approved and we can begin to
provide consumers with best-of-breed programming as well
as the acceleration of innovative services and products that
they desire.
I look forward to answering any questions the Committee might
have.
Page 1 of 10
Testimony of Mr. Mel Karmazin
Chief Executive Officer
Sirius Satellite Radio
Before the House Energy and Commerce Committees
Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the
Internet
Regarding The Digital Future of the
United States: The Future of Radio
March 7, 2007
Page 2 of 10
Mr. Chairman,
Good afternoon. Thank you, Chairman Markey, Ranking Member Upton, and members of the
Telecommunications and Internet Subcommittee for the invitation to talk with you about the future
of radio, and how our merger with XM Satellite Radio will strengthen that future.
Im Mel Karmazin, the CEO of SIRIUS Satellite Radio. Before I came to SIRIUS in 2004, I was
president of Viacom, and before that, president of CBS. Ive spent almost 40 years in radio, and
just about my entire working life in the broadcast industry.
With me here today is Gary Parsons, the chairman of XM. Gary is a veteran of the
communications business, a real leader in the world of satellite radio. Gary and I are both looking
forward to working together to create an exciting new company.
Garys leadership and talent are crucial to the future of radio. Gary, together with XMs CEO
Hugh Panero, built XM into the success it is today. I should point out that XM has the largest
digital radio facility of its kind in the country, and is headquartered right here in Washington
where the combined company will continue to have a significant presence.
As this hearing and this panel demonstrate, audio entertainment in the United States is a very
competitive and rapidly evolving market. The AM/FM radio broadcasting industry is highly
competitive with respect to listeners and advertising revenues. Radio comes as a standard feature
in every vehicle manufactured without an additional cost to the consumer. Some radio
Page 3 of 10
stations have begun reducing the number of commercials per hour, expanding the range of music
played on the air and experimenting with new formats in order to compete with other stations and
satellite radio. Several major radio companies have launched advertising campaigns designed to
assert the benefits of traditional local AM/FM radio.
While most traditional AM/FM radio stations broadcast by means of analog signals, the radio
industry has made significant strides in rolling out advanced digital transmission technology.
Digital broadcasting offers higher sound quality than traditional analog signals and the multicast
of as many as five stations per frequency, significantly increasing the quality and quantity of
content available to consumers. Digital radio broadcast services have been expanding, and an
increasing number of radio stations in the U.S. have begun digital broadcasting or are in the
process of converting to digital broadcasting. I understand that over 1,150 radio stations in the
United States currently broadcast digitally. Like with traditional radio, digital radio is offered
to consumers for free. BMW recently became the first automaker to offer factory-installed HD
digital radio receivers as an option across all of its 2007 model year vehicles, and retail HD
digital radios are available nationwide at many large retailers, including the nations largest
retailer, Wal-Mart, which announced this week it will begin to sell HD radios.
A number of leading radio broadcasters have joined together to form the HD Digital Radio
Alliance to accelerate the successful rollout of digital radio. The HD Digital Radio Alliance has
announced a $250 million on-air advertising campaign to spur the adoption of digital radio.
Page 4 of 10
Internet radio is also becoming a growing force in the market. A 2006 Arbitron study found
that weekly listeners increased 50% in just the past year, and now approaches one in five Americans
among key demographic segments. Internet radio broadcasts have no geographic limitations and can
provide listeners with radio programming from around the country and the world. Improvements from
higher bandwidths, faster modems and wider programming selections will make Internet radio an even
more significant competitor for listening in the home and office. Technologies like WiMax will also
make internet radio more pervasive. In addition to the many free Internet streams, subscription
Internet music services offer unlimited and fully-customizable play lists for a small fixed fee per
month.
Several of the largest wireless providers currently offer radio-like services music to
cellular phones, and a number of phones now contain FM radio receivers. For example, Sprint Nextel
currently offers streaming music from a variety of providers plus a music store for purchase;
Verizon Wireless offers the V CAST music service that can be played directly on a phone; and AT&T
offers a variety of streaming content and has also partnered with Apple to offer the upcoming
iPhone. Further, next generation wireless protocols will offer unprecedented broadband coverage and
broadcast capabilities.
Lastly, a number of other entities have announced plans to deliver entertainment and media
content through cell phones and other wireless devices, including: MediaFLO USA, a subsidiary of
QUALCOMM; Modeo LLC, a subsidiary of Crown Castle International Corp.;
Page 5 of 10
HiWire, an affiliate of Aloha Partners; and a joint venture of Sprint Nextel, Comcast, Time
Warner Cable, Cox Communications and Advance/Newhouse Communications.
In addition, radio faces competition from numerous recorded media, including CDs, MP3 players
and iPods. In fact, a large percentage of the new vehicles produced today come with an auxiliary
jack in the radio solely to make MP3 players and iPods easier to use.
Contrast all of this amazing innovation with the market back in 1997, when the FCC granted
licenses to SIRIUS and XM. Ten years may not seem long ago, but it was a different era in the
evolution of audio entertainment. In 1997 there were no MP3 players, there was no HD radio, there
was no Internet radio and no streamed music to cell phones. Satellite radio was in its infancy, and
had yet to even launch its satellites or service. The 1997 market is not relevant to business
decisions today, and it should not guide policy decisions in 2007. Indeed, if we have learned
anything over the last 10 years about technology-driven transformation, it is that the only thing
certain about audio entertainment is that it will continue to change rapidly in the years ahead.
So in this fast changing environment, how will the merger of SIRIUS and XM benefit
consumers?
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First, it will increase consumer choice. Today, consumers have many choices in the
audio market, but for those who choose satellite radio services, there really are only
forced choices: You can get great music plus the NFL, NASCAR and Martha |
Page 6 of 10
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Stewart on SIRIUS; or, Major League Baseball, PGA Golf, Oprah and great music on XM. But if
you want all of this, or the best of both, you need to subscribe to two services, buy two
radios, and pay two monthly fees. Not surprisingly, only a small number of consumers make this
choice. But if our merger is approved, we will offer consumers a much more attractive choice:
the best of each service on one radio at a price well below the cost of the two services
today. |
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Second, we will not raise prices. In fact, we expect to use savings from the synergies of the
merger to lower the costs to consumers. In other words, subscribers who want to stay with their
current SIRIUS or XM service will be able to do so, and they will not pay any more after the
merger. Those who want to take advantage of new services, like the best of both program line-ups,
will be able to do so for less than this would cost today all with their current radio. |
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I want to emphasize that we view better prices for consumers as a win-win: something that
would save consumers money and would strengthen our merged business at the same time. After
all, we compete today with free terrestrial radio. About 14 million people have signed up as
subscribers for either SIRIUS or XM and now pay $12.95 per month. The key to getting more
subscribers for our merged company is not to widen the price gap between free and $12.95.
Instead, it is to offer consumers a better value meaning, more quality programming at better
prices. |
Page 7 of 10
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|
Third, no radio will become obsolete. After the merger, subscribers will be able to continue
receiving either their present or expanded services using the radios they have today. At the same
time, we fully expect that the merger will stimulate innovation by concentrating engineering
talent and resources and accelerating the development of highly portable, low-cost, easy-to-use,
multi-functional devices. |
|
|
|
|
Fourth, in the long-term the merger will help increase programming diversity. Both
SIRIUS and XM already broadcast a wide range of commercial-free music channels,
exclusive and non-exclusive sports coverage, news, talk, entertainment and religious
programming, channels in Spanish, Korean and French, as well as weather and traffic
information for many cities. In the long run, the merger synergies will make it possible to
use our channel capacity to enhance this diversity; and |
|
|
|
|
Fifth, we believe that the merger strengthens competition in
the audio entertainment marketplace.
Proud as we are of what we have accomplished in 10 years, the fact is
that our combined 14 million subscribers translate into about 3.4% of national radio
listeners, according to the Fall 2006 Arbitron Survey. Interestingly, Arbitron found that
satellite radio listeners are heavy listeners to radio in general, and spend even more time
listening to AM/FM radio than they do satellite programming. Compare that to 237 million
vehicles with AM/FM radios, 223 million weekly AM and FM listeners, or even the 230 million
PCs that can access Internet delivered programming. XM and SIRIUS are relatively small players
in a highly competitive and rapidly evolving audio entertainment marketplace: welterweights in
an arena of |
Page 8 of 10
|
|
|
heavyweights. The merger will make satellite radio a competitor with more choices
and better prices, and consumers will be major beneficiaries of these changes. |
These commitments to provide more choice, better prices, and utilize todays radio are more
than just words. We are prepared at the appropriate time to discuss each of these issues with
regulators and to guarantee these benefits as a condition of our merger approval. From our
standpoint, these guarantees are not only good for consumers, they also are essential to the long
term success of the combined company.
From our inception, satellite radio has been a subscriber-based business dependent on meeting
consumer expectations on both price and programming. The dynamic growth in audio technology over
the past 10 years has given consumers and impressive array of new and additional choices.
It has only been 10 years since satellite radio was licensed. Could we have predicted 10 years
ago that the audio entertainment marketplace would look the way it does now? One reason for all the
new technological advancements is that competition in the audio entertainment market is robust. We
are seeing new entrants on a regular basis as the market continues to meet the needs of the
consumer.
Given the expansive market within which satellite radio is only one of many alternatives
we are certain that an accelerating level of competition will exist post-merger. There is little
doubt that satellite radio faces stiff competition from many of the technologies and
Page 9 of 10
entertainment platforms that I have already described. In fact, I would like to note for the
Committee that in the SEC filings of traditional radio companies, they readily acknowledge that
they compete with satellite radio in a larger market for audio entertainment:
|
|
|
From Clear Channel Communications 2005 Form 10-K; page 24: Our broadcasting
businesses face increasing competition from new broadcast technologies, such as broadband
wireless and satellite television and radio, and new consumer products, such as portable
digital audio players and personal digital video recorders. |
|
|
|
|
From COX Broadcasting / COX RADIO 2005 Form 10-K; page 8-9: In addition, the radio
broadcasting industry is subject to competition from new technologies and services that
are being developed or introduced, such as the delivery of audio programming by cable
television systems, by satellite digital audio radio service and by digital audio
broadcasting. Digital audio broadcasting and satellite digital audio radio service provide
for the delivery by terrestrial or satellite means of multiple new audio programming
formats with compact disc quality sound to local and national audiences. |
Clearly, we are in the middle of a rapid evolution of the audio entertainment industry marked
by continuing innovation and expanding choice. It is not surprising in such a competitive and
changing environment that some competitors would seek to use government to prevent others from
gaining any ground. But it is ironic that many who raise questions about our
Page 10 of 10
proposed merger are working overtime themselves to consolidate their own positions in the
audio entertainment market.
We are also pleased that the announcement of our merger already has resulted in some welcome
harmony. There are few if any issues where youll find the LOS ANGELES TIMES, the WALL STREET
JOURNAL, USA TODAY, and the CHICAGO TRIBUNE in agreement. All four newspapers found that our merger
is meritorious. The LA TIMES concluded that the audio entertainment market is very competitive,
particularly among the national players. USA Today wrote: the merged entity would represent a
more potent competitor to entrenched broadcast interests, one that would offer its customers a more
enticing and complete product.
Chairman Markey, Ranking Member Upton, and members of the Committee, the audio entertainment
market today is vibrant, competitive, and innovative, and every indication is that it will be even
more so in the future. We believe that the combination of SIRIUS and XM will be good for consumers
as it will intensify this competition, expand the choices for consumers and accelerate the pace of
innovation in the market. We appreciate this opportunity to share our views with you, and look
forward to answering any questions you may have.
Thank you.
Page 1 of 10
Testimony of Mr. Mel Karmazin
Chief Executive Officer
SIRIUS Satellite Radio
Before the Senate Judiciary Committees
Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy and
Consumer Rights
Regarding The XM-SIRIUS Merger: Monopoly or
Competition from New Technologies
March 20, 2007
Page 2 of 10
Mr. Chairman,
Good afternoon. Thank you, Chairman Kohl, Ranking Member Hatch, and members of the Senate
Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy and Consumer Rights. Im grateful for the
opportunity to talk with you about how our merger with XM Satellite Radio will provide a
significant consumer benefit and strengthen radio as we know it.
Im Mel Karmazin, the Chief Executive Officer of SIRIUS Satellite Radio. Before I came to
SIRIUS in 2004, I was president of Viacom, and before that, president of CBS. Ive spent almost 40
years in radio, and just about my entire working life in the broadcast industry.
With me here today is Gary Parsons, the chairman of XM. Gary is a veteran of the
communications business, a real leader in the world of satellite radio. Gary and I are both
looking forward to working together to create an exciting new company.
Garys leadership and talent are crucial to the future of radio. Gary, together with XMs CEO
Hugh Panero, built XM into the success it is today. I should point out that XM has the largest
digital radio facility of its kind in the country, and is headquartered
right here in Washington where the combined company will continue to have a significant
presence.
Let me begin by saying that audio entertainment in the United States is a very competitive and
rapidly evolving market. The AM/FM radio broadcasting industry is highly competitive with respect
to listeners and advertising revenues. There are over 10,000 terrestrial
Page 3 of 10
radio stations. Radio comes as a standard feature in every vehicle manufactured without an
additional cost to the consumer. Some radio stations have begun reducing the number of commercials
per hour, expanding the range of music played on the air and experimenting with new formats in
order to compete with other stations and with satellite radio. Several major radio companies have
launched advertising campaigns designed to assert the benefits of traditional local AM/FM radio.
While most traditional AM/FM radio stations broadcast by means of analog signals, the radio
industry has made significant strides in rolling out advanced digital transmission technology.
Digital broadcasting offers higher sound quality than traditional analog signals and the multicast
of as many as five stations per frequency, significantly increasing the quality and quantity of
content available to consumers. Digital radio broadcast services have been expanding, and an
increasing number of radio stations in the U.S. have begun digital broadcasting or are in the
process of converting to
digital broadcasting. I understand that over 1,150 radio stations in the United States
currently broadcast digitally. Like traditional radio, digital radio is offered to consumers for
free. BMW recently became the first automaker to offer factory-installed HD digital radio
receivers as an option across all of its 2007 model year vehicles, and retail HD digital radios are
available nationwide at many large retailers, including the nations largest retailer, Wal-Mart,
which announced two weeks ago that it will begin to sell HD radios.
A number of leading radio broadcasters have joined together to form the HD Digital Radio
Alliance to accelerate the successful rollout of digital radio. The HD Digital Radio
Page 4 of 10
Alliance has announced a $250 million on-air advertising campaign to spur the adoption of
digital radio.
Internet radio is also becoming a growing force in the market. A 2006 Arbitron study found
that weekly listeners increased 50 percent in just the past year, and now approaches one in five
Americans among key demographic segments. Internet radio broadcasts have no geographic limitations
and can provide listeners with radio programming from around the country and the world.
Improvements from higher bandwidths, faster modems and wider programming selections will make
Internet radio an even more significant competitor for listening in the home and office. Wireless
broadband technologies, like WiMax, will also make radio more pervasive and not just something for
the home or office. Indeed, Avis has recently announced a deal with Autonet Mobile to offer Avis
customers wireless internet access in their rental cars by
Spring of this year. In addition to the many free Internet streams, subscription Internet
music services offer unlimited and fully-customizable play lists for a small fixed fee per month.
Several of the largest wireless providers currently offer radio-like services which deliver
music to mobile phones, and a number of phones now contain FM radios. For example, Sprint Nextel
currently offers streaming music from a variety of providers plus a music store for purchase;
Verizon Wireless offers the V CAST music service that can be played directly on a phone; and AT&T
offers a variety of streaming content and has also partnered with Apple to offer the upcoming
iPhone. Additionally, next generation wireless protocols will offer unprecedented mobile broadband
coverage and broadcast capabilities.
Page 5 of 10
A number of other companies and consortiums have announced plans to deliver broadcast
audio and video content through mobile phones and other wireless devices. Three companies
MediaFLO USA, HiWire and Modeo have acquired nationwide or near-nationwide spectrum to deliver
audio and video content through existing wireless service providers and are in the process of
implementing, testing and launching service. A joint venture of Sprint Nextel and several cable
companies is implementing a similar mobile entertainment platform.
In addition, radio faces competition from numerous recorded media, including CDs, MP3 players
and iPods. In fact, a large percentage of the new vehicles produced today come with an auxiliary
jack in the radio solely to make MP3 players and iPods easier to use.
Contrast all of this amazing innovation with the market back in 1997, when the FCC granted
licenses to SIRIUS and XM. Ten years may not seem long ago, but it was a different era in the
evolution of audio entertainment. In 1997 there were no MP3 players, there was no HD radio, there
was no Internet radio and no streamed music to mobile phones. Satellite radio was in its infancy,
and had yet to even launch its satellites or service. The 1997 market should not guide policy
decisions in 2007. Indeed, if we have learned anything over the last 10 years about
technology-driven transformation, it is that the only thing certain about audio entertainment is
that it will continue to change rapidly in the years ahead.
So in this fast changing environment, how will the merger of SIRIUS and XM benefit consumers?
Page 6 of 10
|
|
First, it will increase consumer choice. Today, you can get great music plus the NFL,
NASCAR and Martha Stewart on SIRIUS; or, Major League Baseball, PGA Golf,
Oprah and great music on XM. But if you want all of this, or the best of both, you need to
subscribe to two services, buy two radios, and pay two monthly fees. Not surprisingly, only a
small number of consumers make this choice. But if our merger
is approved, we will offer consumers a much more attractive choice: the best of each service
on one radio at a price below the cost of the two services today. |
|
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|
Second, we will not raise prices. In fact, we expect to use a substantial portion of the
savings from the synergies of the merger to lower the costs to consumers. In other
words, subscribers who want to have a service that is substantially similar to their current
SIRIUS or XM service will be able to do so, and they will not pay any more after the merger.
Those who want to take advantage of new services, like the best of both program line-ups,
will be able to do so for less than this would cost today all with their current radio. We
also plan to make programming choices available at a cost below todays $12.95 per month. |
|
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|
I want to emphasize that we view better prices for consumers as a win-win: something that
would save consumers money and would strengthen our merged business at the same time. After
all, we compete today with free terrestrial radio. About 14 million people have signed up as
subscribers for either SIRIUS or XM and now pay $12.95 per month. The key to getting more
subscribers for our merged company is not to widen the price gap between free and what
satellite radio charges. |
Page 7 of 10
|
|
Instead, it is to offer consumers a better value meaning, more quality programming
at better prices. |
|
|
|
Third, no radio will become obsolete. After the merger, subscribers will be able to
continue receiving either their present or expanded services using the radios they have
today. At the same time, we fully expect that the merger will stimulate innovation by
concentrating engineering talent and resources and accelerating the development of highly
portable, low-cost, easy-to-use, multi-functional devices. |
|
|
|
Fourth, in the long-term the merger will help increase programming diversity. Both SIRIUS
and XM already broadcast a wide range of commercial-free music channels,
exclusive and non-exclusive sports coverage, news, talk, entertainment and religious
programming, channels in Spanish, Korean and French, as well as weather and traffic
information for many cities. In the long run, the merger synergies will make it possible to
use our channel capacity to enhance this diversity. |
|
|
|
Fifth, we believe that the merger strengthens competition in the audio entertainment
marketplace. Proud as we are of what we have accomplished in 10 years, the fact is
that our combined 14 million subscribers translate into about 3.4% of national radio listeners,
according to the Fall 2006 Arbitron Survey. Compare that to 237 million vehicles with AM/FM
radios, approximately 220 million weekly AM and FM listeners, or even the 230 million PCs that
can access Internet delivered programming. XM and SIRIUS are relatively small players in a
highly competitive and rapidly |
Page 8 of 10
evolving audio entertainment marketplace: lightweights in an arena of
heavyweights. The merger will make satellite radio a competitor with more choices and
better prices, and consumers will be major beneficiaries of these changes.
These commitments to provide more choice, better prices, and utilize todays radios are more
than just words. We know our customers. We know what they want, and we are committed to serving
their needs for the long term. We are prepared at the appropriate time to discuss each of the
issues I have discussed in my testimony with regulators and to guarantee these benefits as a
condition of our merger approval. From our standpoint, these guarantees are not only good for
consumers, they also are essential to the long term success of the combined company.
From our inception, satellite radio has been a subscriber-based business dependent on meeting
consumer expectations on both price and programming. The dynamic growth in audio technology over
the past 10 years has given consumers and impressive array of new and additional choices.
It has only been 10 years since satellite radio was licensed. Could we have predicted 10
years ago that the audio entertainment marketplace would look the way it does now? One reason for
all the new technological advancements is that competition in
the audio entertainment market is robust. We are seeing new entrants on a regular basis as
the market continues to meet the needs of the consumer.
Page 9 of 10
Given the expansive market within which satellite radio is only one of many
alternatives we are certain that an accelerating level of competition will exist post-merger.
There is little doubt that satellite radio faces stiff competition from many of the technologies
and entertainment platforms that I have already described. In fact, I would like to note for the
Committee that in the SEC filings of terrestrial radio companies, they readily acknowledge that
they compete with satellite radio in a larger market for audio entertainment:
|
- |
|
From Clear Channel Communications 2005 Form 10-K; page 24: Our broadcasting
businesses face increasing competition from new broadcast technologies, such as broadband
wireless and satellite television and radio, and new consumer products, such as portable
digital audio players and personal digital video recorders. |
|
|
- |
|
From COX Broadcasting / COX RADIO 2005 Form 10-K; page 8-9: In addition, the radio
broadcasting industry is subject to competition from new technologies and services that
are being developed or introduced, such as the delivery of audio programming by cable
television systems, by satellite digital audio radio service and by digital audio
broadcasting. Digital audio broadcasting and satellite digital audio radio service
provide for the delivery
by terrestrial or satellite means of multiple new audio programming formats with compact
disc quality sound to local and national audiences. |
Clearly, we are in the middle of a rapid evolution of the audio entertainment industry
marked by continuing innovation and expanding choice. It is not surprising in such a
Page 10 of 10
competitive and changing environment that some competitors would seek to use government and
regulatory processes to prevent others from developing and evolving their businesses.
Let me close by noting that the announcement of our merger has resulted in editorial support
by observers with often different viewpoints and from very opposite ends of the ideological
spectrum. There are few issues where youll find the LOS ANGELES TIMES, the WALL STREET JOURNAL,
USA TODAY, INVESTORS BUSINESS DAILY and the CHICAGO TRIBUNE in agreement. Yet the editorial
boards of all of these newspapers and several additional smaller outlets have spoken out and
said that our merger is meritorious and ultimately should be allowed by regulators. The LA TIMES
concluded that the audio entertainment market is very competitive, particularly among the national
players. USA Today wrote: the merged entity would represent a more potent competitor to
entrenched broadcast interests, one that would offer its customers a more enticing and complete
product.
Chairman Kohl, Ranking Member Hatch, and members of the Subcommittee, the audio entertainment
market today is vibrant, competitive, and innovative, and every indication is that it will be even
more so in the future. We believe that the combination of SIRIUS and XM will be good for consumers
as it will intensify this competition, expand the choices for consumers and reduce prices. We
appreciate this opportunity to share our views with you, and I look forward to answering any
questions you may have.
Thank you.
Testimony of Mr. Mel Karmazin
Chief Executive Officer
Sirius Satellite Radio
Before the United States Senate Committee on
Commerce, Science & Transportation
Regarding the XM-Sirius Merger
April 17, 2007
Mr. Chairman,
Good morning. Thank you, Chairman Inouye, Vice Chairman Stevens, and members of the Senate
Committee on Commerce, Science & Transportation. I am grateful for the opportunity to talk with
you today about how the merger of Sirius Satellite Radio and XM Satellite Radio will provide
extensive consumer benefits and continue to promote competition in audio entertainment.
I am Mel Karmazin, the Chief Executive Officer of Sirius. Before I came to Sirius in 2004, I was
president of Viacom and, before that, president of CBS. I have spent almost 40 years in radio,
and just about my entire working life in the broadcast industry.
With me here today is Gary Parsons, the Chairman of XM. Gary is a veteran of the communications
business and a leader in the world of satellite radio. Gary and I are both looking forward to
working together to create an exciting new company. Garys leadership and talent are crucial to
the future of radio. Gary, together with XMs CEO Hugh Panero, built XM into the success it is
today. I should point out that XM has the largest digital radio facility of its kind in the
country, and is headquartered right here in Washington, DC, where the combined company will
continue to have a significant presence.
I would like to talk today about some of the important benefits consumers will see as a result of
the proposed merger. I also plan to discuss the extensive competition that satellite radio faces
from a range of players in the audio entertainment market. As I will explain, this intense
competition will remain after the merger is consummated.
I. A SIRIUS/XM MERGER WILL GENERATE CONCRETE AND SIGNIFICANT BENEFITS FOR CONSUMERS.
The Combined Company Will Offer Consumers More Choice at Lower Prices:
Today, Sirius and XM each provide consumers one service offering at one price$12.95 per month.
Consumers have only a limited ability to tailor their service, and those seeking programming from
both Sirius and XM must subscribe to both services for a combined payment of $25.90 per month. The
merger of Sirius and XM will enable the combined company to enhance these offerings through:
|
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|
Better pricing. The merger will allow us to lower prices. Consumers who want fewer
channels than currently offered will be able to select one or more packages of channels
for less than $12.95 per month. These packages will include an attractive mix of
music, news, informational, sports, childrens, and religious programming. |
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|
More choices. Sirius and XM customers will be able to access certain popular,
previously exclusive programming of the other provider for a modest premium over what
they are paying now. |
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|
Still more choices. When interoperable radios are commercially available, consumers who
want to have access to the complete offerings of both companies will be able to do so on
a single device for significantly less than the current price of $25.90. |
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|
Empowering consumers. While customers of both companies currently have the option of
blocking adult programming, the combined company will provide customers a credit if they
choose to do so. |
Despite the speculation to the contrary, the combined company will not raise prices. After the
merger, consumers who want to continue to receive substantially the same channel lineup of
either Sirius or XM may continue to do so at the same price$12.95 per month.
The Combined Company Will Be Able To Provide Consumers More Diverse Programming: Sirius
and XM currently provide a wide range of commercial-free music channels, exclusive and
non-exclusive sports coverage, news, talk, traffic and weather, and entertainment programming.
However, there is significant overlap and redundancy in the channel line-ups of Sirius and XM. For
example, 12 identical channels are available on both Sirius and XM. A further 75 channels overlap
by genreproviding substantially similar programming.
In the long-term, the combined company will be able to consolidate certain redundant programming.
The result ultimately will free capacity for more diverse offerings that are not currently
available on either companys system, including expanded non-English language programming,
childrens programming, and additional programming aimed at minority and other underserved
populations. Notably, this additional capacity also may allow the combined company to provide
additional programming related to public safety and homeland security.
The Merger Will Help Accelerate Deployment of Advanced Technology: The combined company
will be able to offer consumers access to advanced technology sooner than would otherwise occur.
In particular, the marriage of the companies two engineering organizations will ensure better
results from each dollar invested in research and development. As a consequence, the combined
company will be able to improve on products such as real-time traffic and rear-seat video. In
addition, the combined company will be able to introduce new services, such as enhanced traffic,
weather, and infotainment offerings; more rapidly and with greater capabilities.
The Merged Company Will Be Capable of Commercializing Interoperable Receivers, Providing
Greater Customer Choice and Convenience, While Also Protecting All Receivers on the Market
Today: This merger will neither interrupt nor affect customers use of their existing radios.
After the merger, current subscribers may choose to continue to receive substantially similar
service at the same price over their existing satellite radio. While no radio will become
obsolete as a result of the transaction, we fully expect the merger to stimulate the development
of new interoperable, highly portable, low-cost, and user-friendly devices.
The Merger Will Create Operational Efficiencies and Safeguard the Future of Satellite
Radio: Satellite radio is a highly capital-intensive and expensive business. Sirius and XM
each have invested over $1 billion in their initial in-orbit satellites and over $5 billion each
in their businesses overall, and both continue to report significant operating losses. For the
year ended December 31, 2006, Sirius reported a net loss of $1.1 billion while XM reported a net
loss of $719 million. Both companies continue to report enormous operating losses. The proposed
merger will allow Sirius and XM to achieve large-scale operational efficiencies that will help
ensure that satellite radio can remain a strong, effective, and innovative audio entertainment
provider. Importantly, significant portions of the savings achieved through the merger will be
shared with customers immediately and in the long-term through lower prices and improved service
offerings.
* * *
Each of these important benefits is directly tied to the proposed merger and cannot be
realized without it. I also would like to make clear that these commitments are more than
just words offered to appease regulators. We view each of these benefits as a win-win that will
make good business sense for Sirius-XM. At the same time that we will be able to save our
customers money and offer them more attractive services, we will be strengthening our merged
business. As I will explain in more detail below, satellite radio competes intensely with free
terrestrial radio and a host of other audio entertainment providers. The key to getting more
subscribers will not be to widen the price gap between free and what satellite radio charges.
Instead, it will be to offer consumers a better value. We are prepared at the appropriate time to
discuss each of the issues with regulators and to guarantee these benefits as a condition of our
merger approval.
II. A SIRIUS/XM MERGER WILL ENHANCE NOT HARM COMPETITION.
A. Satellite Radio is a Small Part of a Highly Competitive and Ever-Expanding Market for Audio Entertainment.
The market for audio entertainment in the United States is robustly competitive and rapidly
evolving. Sirius and XM compete directly and intensely with a host of other audio providers for
consumer attention. As a result, although satellite radio has proven to be an appealing and
popular new product, its market penetration remains quite limited. A recent Arbitron study found
that Sirius and XM account for just 3.4 percent of all radio listening, spread out among the
approximately 300 channels that the two companies currently offer. To provide the Committee with a
sense of the fiercely competitive state of todays audio entertainment market, I would like to take
a few moments to provide some details concerning some of our more salient competitors.
Terrestrial Radio: By any measure, over-the-air AM/FM radio is the most dominant
form of audio entertainment. This is not surprising, given the ubiquity of the service:
AM/FM radio is offered free of charge to all consumers and comes as a standard feature in
virtually every vehicle, home stereo, and clock radio sold to U.S. consumers. Nearly 14,000 radio
stations exist nationwide. Approximately 230 million Americans choose to listen to terrestrial
radio each week. And much of the content available over terrestrial radio mirrors that provided
by satellite radio.
HD Radio: The broadcast industry has made significant strides in rolling out digital
services, and HD Radio technology is now spreading rapidly. Just last month, HD Radio received a
substantial boost from the FCC. The agency issued an implementing decision that not only enables
radio stations to broadcast higher quality digital entertainment, but also permits them to offer
multiple streams of programming and data services over their existing channels. Significantly, the
Commissions decision also allows radio broadcasters to provide digital subscription services on an
experimental basis. This flexibility surely will intensify the competition between AM/FM radio and
satellite radio, not only for listeners but also for subscription dollars.
Through the HD Digital Radio Alliancea consortium of broadcasters that includes almost all major
players, including Clear Channel Communications, CBS, and ABC Radiothe terrestrial radio
industry has committed hundreds of millions of dollars to promoting this technology. That
investment already has had proven effects. Approximately 1,200 HD Radio stations are already on
the air, and hundreds more have licensed HD Radio technology.
In addition, the availability of HD Radio receivers is steadily and rapidly increasing. A
year ago, there were only four or five HD Radio models available and the lowest price
was $599. Now there are 30 manufacturers of radios and price points under $200. HD Radio is now
available on all new BMW vehicles and in RadioShack stores. Wal-Mart, the nations largest
retailer, recently announced plans to sell HD Radio receivers. Statements and materials from the
HD Digital Radio Alliance clearly position HD Radio as a counterpoint to satellite radio.
Internet Radio: Internet radio is another formidable and fast-growing player in the audio
entertainment market. A 2006 Arbitron study found that weekly listenership to Internet radio had
increased 50 percent in just one year, and now approaches one in five Americans among key
demographic segments. In one survey, 34.5 percent of Americans aged 15-24 mentioned online
streaming as a primary source of music consumption in 2006 (up from 9.7 percent in 2004).
Internet radio broadcasts have no geographic limitations and can provide listeners with radio
programming from around the country and the world. Several Internet radio services, including
Yahoo! LAUNCHcast and Pandora, allow users to create their own radio stations based on their
listening preferences.
Internet radio, like HD Radio, is becoming a source for mobile audio entertainment as well.
Slacker, a service unveiled just weeks ago, allows users not only to customize their music
channels, but also to listen to them on portable devices, including in their cars; the service
includes a free, advertising-based version as well as a subscription option. Various Internet
radio offerings are already available on mobile phones, and Internet radio is expected to become
widely available on portable devices, including car radios, by 2008.
iPods and Other MP3 Players: MP3 players, such as iPods, also compete with satellite
radio for listeners. More than 116 million MP3 players have been sold. Like other audio
competitors, MP3 players are highly mobile. There are now a variety of accessories available to
play MP3 players in cars, through the vehicles FM radio or tape deck. In addition, Apple
recently announced that it has teamed with Ford, General Motors, and Mazda to provide iPod
integration across the majority of their brands and models. With the addition of these models,
more than 70 percent of 2007-model US automobiles are expected to offer iPod integration. Many
MP3 players also can be connected to online music subscription services, such as Real Networks
Rhapsody, Napster 2.0 and Yahoo! Unlimited.
Mobile Phones: Mobile phones represent yet another significant and expanding means of
enjoying audio entertainment. Approximately 75 percent of all Americans currently own a mobile
phone, and the possibility of content delivery has not been lost on wireless carriers. Several
major carriers are now offering audio entertainment options, and subscribers are taking advantage
of them in dramatically growing numbers. For example, Sprint currently offers over 50 channels of
radio and streaming video that subscribers can access via their devices for a monthly fee as well
as music download capabilities for a one-time fee. AT&T and Verizon Wireless provide similar
services. Approximately 23.5 million wireless subscribers currently own phones with integrated
music players. This demonstrated consumer interest in music-capable handsets likely will skyrocket
in a matter of months when AT&T and Apple make the Apple iPhone available for sale.
In addition, a number of other companies and consortiums have announced plans to
deliver broadcast audio and video content through mobile phones and other wireless
devices. Three companiesMediaFLO USA, HiWire, and Modeohave acquired nationwide or
near-nationwide spectrum to deliver audio and video content through existing wireless service
providers and are in the process of implementing, testing, and launching service. A joint venture
of Sprint and several cable companies is implementing a similar mobile entertainment platform.
The above list is by no means exhaustive. To be a competitor, businesses and technologies need
not be exact copies of one another. There are numerous other audio entertainment options
available today as well as a constantly growing array of choices in the works. Moreover, it is
clear that these providers view themselves as being in direct competition with each other. In
public filings and statements, various members of the radio broadcasting industry have
emphatically stated that they compete directly with satellite radio and other forms of audio
entertainmenta view that is underscored by the fervent opposition they expressed toward the
pending transaction before the ink on the merger agreement was even dry. By the same token,
Sirius and XM have listed a wide range of audio entertainment competitors in their SEC filings.
Just by way of example, NAB recently explained in the context of the FCCs ongoing media
ownership proceeding that local radio stations compete for listeners with other forms of audio
delivery offering an almost unlimited array of content. iPods and other MP3 players, music
services, podcasting and the Internet streaming of U.S. and foreign radio stations literally
provide content from around the world to listeners in each local radio market in America. Such
statements remove any doubt concerning the diversity and multiplicity of options available in
the audio entertainment market today.
B. Given the Widespread Competition in the Audio Entertainment Market, the Merged Company Will Not Have the Ability to Harm Existing Competitors or New Market Entrants.
In an attempt to cast doubt on the merits of a Sirius-XM merger, some broadcasters now appear to be
reversing course and questioning whether satellite radio fully competes with AM/FM radio and other
audio services. Pointing to differences between various audio services, some even try to make the
case that satellite radio is a market onto itself and, therefore, that the proposed merger will
create a monopoly that will have the ability and incentives to harm competition and consumers.
Of course, this artificially narrow characterization conflicts with the expansive audio market that
broadcasters publicly have described elsewhere.
But broadcasters cannot have it both ways. As the industrys own prior statements make clear, the
fact is that the market for audio entertainment is highly competitive now, and it will continue to
be so after a Sirius-XM merger.
Given the realities of todays audio entertainment landscape, there is no legitimate basis for
concern that this merger will enable the new company to charge monopoly prices or otherwise harm
consumers or competitors. In reality, a combined satellite radio provider will be unable to
exercise market power, let alone dominate the market.
As explained above, although satellite radio has proven to be an appealing and popular new
product, it accounts for only a small slice of the audio entertainment market. The combined
company will serve only a minor fraction of the consumers who purchase or use audio
entertainment services. Given that Sirius and XM together account for only
about 3 percent of all radio listening, we will have every incentive to offer prices that will
attract more subscribers, not drive them away.
In addition, customers can and do easily substitute other audio entertainment options for
satellite radio, and this will continue to be the case after the merger. Indeed, many of the
existing options are potentially more appealing and less costly to consumers. For example, AM/FM
radio, as well as HD Radio, currently offers much of the same content as satellite radio for free
to all consumers. And the ubiquitous nature of AM/FM radios provides consumers with broad
exposure to the programming of broadcasters. The merged companys prices will continue to be
constrained by these inescapable facts. Similarly, online music subscription services and
podcasting enable consumers to replicate most of the content and the user experience available
through satellite radio. Moreover, Internet radio is capable of offering more variety and choice
than any other option, and allows listeners to have substantial control over content selection and
information about artists.
As a further illustration of the substitutable nature of various audio services, several audio
providers actively have been expanding their capabilities so that their services more closely
resemble satellite radio. For example, terrestrial radio has increased its format options while
reducing commercials. HD Radio provides higher-quality sound that is comparable to satellite
radio, as well as expanded genres and music formats. New automobiles increasingly come with input
jacks that can be used to connect MP3 players or factory-installed iPod integration kits, similar
to satellite radio. Likewise, vehicles soon will support Internet radio and music over mobile
phones.
Given the existing and emerging capabilities of a range of audio entertainment services, it is not
surprising that consumers routinely avail themselves of multiple options. In addition, many users
of newer services, such as MP3 players and satellite radio, continue to rely on terrestrial radio.
These factors will continue to exist, and to impact the behavior of satellite radio and other
market participants after the merger.
Finally, aside from this existing, vibrant competition, entry by new competitors and expansion of
current services will remain viable notwithstanding the pending merger. New wireless networks are
already under construction, which will support mobile audio services via devices such as mobile
phones and Internet radio over WiFi and WiMAX. In addition, there appears to be little limit to
the growth of Internet radio and podcasting. Other types of spectrum also are available that are
capable of supporting services comparable to satellite radio. For example, audio entertainment
services similar to satellite can be deployed using the frequencies allocated to the Wireless
Communications Service. Indeed, this spectrum originally was identified for satellite radio, but
was reallocated pursuant to congressional mandate. The FCC could authorize audio entertainment
services using spectrum alternatives without regard to a satellite radio merger.
III. CONCLUSION
Chairman Inouye, Vice Chairman Stevens, and members of the Committee, the audio entertainment
market today is vibrant, competitive, and innovative, and every indication is that it will be
even more so in the future. We believe that the combination of Sirius and XM will be good for
consumers as it will intensify this competition, expand the
choices for consumers, and reduce prices. We appreciate this opportunity to share our
views with you, and I look forward to answering any questions you may have.
Thank you.