Kabel Deutschland

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Kabel Deutschland Holding AG
Type Aktiengesellschaft
Traded as FWBKD8
Industry Telecommunications, media
Founded 2003
Key people Adrian von Hammerstein (CEO), Tony Ball (Chairman of the supervisory board)
Products Cable Television
Broadband Internet Access
Fixed Telephony
Mobile Telephony
Revenue €1.599 billion (2010/2011)[1]
Operating income €207.0 million (2010/2011)[1]
Profit decrease (€45.3 million) (2010/2011)[1]
Total assets €2.014 billion (March 2011)[1]
Total equity decrease (€1.633 billion) (March 2011)[1]
Employees 2,710 (average, 2010/2011)[1]
Website www.kabeldeutschland.com

Kabel Deutschland is the largest cable operator in Germany.

Contents

[edit] Company

Kabel Deutschland operates in 13 of the 16 states (i.e. all but Baden-Württemberg, North Rhine-Westphalia and Hesse). In 2006, of the 15.4 million households passed by their cable the company served 9.6 million, however only one third of these are direct customers of Kabel Deutschland, since especially in large apartment complexes the in-house cable networks are owned by cable service companies or housing associations.[2] According to IFRS rules, in fiscal 2005 / 2006 revenues amounted to €1.012 billion, the EBITDA amounted to €401.3 million.[3]

Kabel Deutschland was founded in January 1999 by the former German telecom monopolist Deutsche Telekom in order to spin off its entire cable TV business as required by regulatory terms. The cable network was established from the mid-1980s on by the German federal post office, and successor of Deutsche Telekom, Deutsche Bundespost. Kabel Deutschland was split into nine regional companies, of which three are sold to other investors until 2002. The remaining six are sold in 2003 to the US investment firms Providence Equity Partners, Apax Partners and Goldman Sachs Capital Partners. From February 2006 to September 2010, Kabel Deutschland was majority-owned by Providence Equity Partners.[4]

[edit] Products & Services

With a basic plan Kabel Deutschland offers about 30 free-to-air analogue TV and an equal number of FM & Digital Radio channels. All analogue TV channels are available in digital DVB-C encoding, too, plus an additional 70 channels not available analogue.
On top of that, about 100 digital Pay TV channels can be ordered as a subscription-based service This includes Germany's Pay TV broadcasters Sky Deutschland and Arena as well as Kabel Deutschland's own offerings.

Kabel Deutschland broadcasts from Astra's 3A satellite at 23.5° east.

Furthermore, Kabel Deutschland offers Internet (Kabel Internet, up to 100 MBit/s downstream and 6 MBit/s upstream) and telephone services (Kabel Phone).

For historic reasons, Kabel Deutschland cannot offer its products directly to all are connected via Kabel Deutschland's network, since only one third of all viewers are direct customers. In the early 1980s, when the cable network was established, Kabel Deutschland's predecessor Deutsche Bundespost had to leave in-house cables to other companies or the house owners.[5] This turned out to be a significant obstacle since Kabel Deutschland now has to make single contracts with hundreds of small cable operators.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Annual Report 2010/2011". Kabel Deutschland. http://www.kabeldeutschland.com/fileadmin/redaktionselemente/investor_relations/dokumente/jahresberichte/kdg_holding/KDH_2011_E.pdf. Retrieved 17 November 2011. 
  2. ^ Kabel Deutschland: The Cable Network
  3. ^ Kabel Deutschland: Financials
  4. ^ Kabel Deutschland: Company History
  5. ^ Kabel Deutschland: Cable TV Network History

[edit] External links

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages