The sports streaming venture formed by Walt Disney, Warner Bros Discovery and Fox Corp expects to have five million subscribers in its first five years, Fox CEO Lachlan Murdoch said on Monday.
The companies last month announced plans for the sports-centric service that is hoping to get younger viewers and will launch later this autumn, Reuters reported.
“We’re running really hard and fast to get the service up and running before the start of the college football season this year,” Murdoch said at the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media and Telecom conference in San Francisco.
Pricing for the service — which would have rights to the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, Major League Baseball, and college competitions — could be higher than what people have talked about, Murdoch added.
CNBC reported in February the yet-to-be-named service is expected to be priced at above $40 per month, adding the firms have identified an executive who would be named at a later date.
Murdoch said the companies will get paid on a per-subscriber basis and he does not have any concerns about regulatory hurdles about the joint venture.
The new entity will be jointly owned by the three media companies, with equal board representation, and agree to license their sports content on a non-exclusive basis, Reuters reported last month, as media companies are betting on the sports-streaming service to drive subscriptions.
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