Combined distribution revenues at the nine major publicly traded cable network companies in the United States grew 9.3% year over year in the second quarter of 2021 as digital subscription fees and contractual rate hikes boosted distribution revenues. All nine companies reported year-over-year growth, led by a 67.2% gain at Spanish-language network owner Hemisphere Media Group Inc, according to data from S&P Global.
Historically, fluctuations in distribution revenue at cable networks were caused by changes in license fees and subscribers. Distribution revenues, however, are increasingly being manipulated by new streaming businesses. All four of the companies, which were able to grow distribution revenue by double digits in the second quarter, have supplemented traditional carriage fees at linear networks with subscription revenues from on-demand services.
Hemisphere Media Group became the sole owner of Pantaya LLC on March 31, 2021, and subscription revenue generated by the subscription streaming service is now recognized in the company's reported distribution revenues. The Pantaya service is nearing 1 million subscribers, with a goal of reaching about 2.5 million by 2025.
Comcast's NBCUniversal Media segment grew reported distribution revenues by 19.0% year over year to $2.45 billion in the second quarter. The company's Peacock streaming service generated $122 million in revenue during the quarter. Distribution revenue at the group's regional sports networks was negatively impacted in the second quarter of 2020 by credits paid to consumers for fewer live sporting events, which resulted in a favorable year-over-year comparison. The company also forged new carriage agreements with higher rates at the end of 2020, which contributed to the year-over-year growth in revenue.
AMC Networks Inc. grew reported distribution and other revenue by 13.6% to $426.7 million in the quarter. AMC includes revenue from content licensing deals with distribution revenue. Content licensing revenues fell 10% in the quarter due to production delays from Covid-19 shutdowns. The company noted a 21% increase in streaming revenues in the quarter. AMC began including revenue from its suite of subscription streaming services in its reported domestic operations in 2021.
Discovery was the fourth company to grow reported distribution revenues by double digits, recording a 12.0% year-over-year increase in the second quarter. Distribution revenue growth was primarily driven by a growing Discovery+ subscriber base. The Discovery U.S. Networks business segment derives only 42.0% of its total revenue from distribution, which is the smallest portion of any group in S&P Global’s database.
US basic cable networks owned by Fox Corp. generated the highest concentration of total segment revenue from distribution revenue in the quarter, with its $1.03 billion equating to 73.3% of the total. On the company's earnings call, management cited double-digit pricing growth at Fox News Channel as being a key driver to the overall strength. Future distribution revenue growth at Fox is expected to slow in the next few quarters, as the company will catch up with year-over-year comps from a previously favorable renewal cycle.
Looking at the first half of the year, all nine US cable network groups were able to grow distribution revenue at a combined rate of 6.8%.