Jump to content

CTH (company)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Nopphan (talk | contribs) at 03:38, 16 November 2016 (Misspelling). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

CTH Public Company Limited
FormerlyCable Thai Holding Public Company Limited
IndustryPay television
Founded2009
Defunct1 September 2016
HeadquartersNongbon, Prawet, Bangkok
Area served
Southeast Asia
Key people
Wichai Thongtang, Chairman
ProductsCable TV, Satellite TV
Websitehttp://www.cth.co.th

CTH Public Company Limited (CTH), formerly known as Cable Thai Holding Public Company Limited, was a Thai pay TV operator and Internet broadband services provider.

It was founded by a large group of cable television operators as Cable Thai Holding, a holding company established for dealing and share its content. It was offering pay television channels on an analog CATV system which had a largest customer base in Thailand with over 2.5 million households before started its own pay TV business as CTH.[1]

CTH holds English Premier League broadcast rights for season 2013/14 till 2015/16 in Thailand, Laos and Cambodia.[2]

History

Early history

Cable Thai Holding Public Company Limited was set up in August 2009 by over 100 Thailand cable television operators with initial capital of 50 million baht. Its mission was to provide TV program licenses, unified channel line up, marketing for member cable operators to expand their subscriber base.[3]

In February 2010, the company, headed by president Kesem Inkaew who was also president of Thailand Cable TV Association, started its CTH platform with 26 leading cable channels broadcast via ABS1 satellite for its member cable operators to redistribute to their subscribers.[4]

Renaming and expansion

Major change to the company organization happened in April 2012, when Wichai Thongtang, a businessman and former Thaksin Shinawatra lawyer, acquired 25% of CTH while Thai Rath newspaper family, headed by Vachara Vacharapol, acquired another 25% of the company. CTH also looked for another partner for 20% stake while the remaining 30% was still held by cable operators. The company capital was also raised to 1 billion baht. Wichai Thongtang became the company chairman.[5]

In August 2012, TrueVisions announced partnership with CTH to allow CTH access to nine channels produced by TrueVisions.[6]

In November 2012, CTH won the broadcast right to English Premier League from 2013–14 to 2015–16 seasons with the highest price in Asia and the second highest in the world valued $320 million.[7] [8]

The service started broadcast via cable-TV providers and on satellite via Vinasat-2 in mid-August 2013, just weeks before English Premier League started its new season.

In September 2013, CTH filed a lawsuit against Apple Inc. and its local company, Apple South Asia (Thailand), accusing of violating intellectual property rights for commercial purposes and counterfeiting or altering a registered trademark for ฿100 million after they allow an app call "Sports Channel" that allow the user to watch EPL live broadcasts to be sold on Apple's App Store. [9]

In January 2014, CTH collaborated with PSI Holdings to offered English Premier League packages in lower price aiming to expand the subscribers. CTH also acquired the broadcast rights to WWE programmes in a five-year deal to broadcast on CTH Sport Spirit channel and later on dedicated CTH WWE channel. [10]

In February 2014 the company stated that it would focus more on satellite-TV operators to expand its subscriber base and by June the company reduced its cable partners to about 100 operators from 170.[11]

In June 2014 CTH Public Company Limited chose Inview Technology and Irdeto to introduce OTT and hybrid versions of its cable services.[12][13][14]

In July 2014, CTH announced business partnership with GMM Grammy to acquired its pay-TV subsidiary, GMM B who is operating pay-TV business branded Z Pay-TV, including its channels and content such as UEFA Euro 2016 in exchange of 10% stake of CTH. [15]

Lawsuit

WWE file a lawsuit against CTH in August 2015 after they failed to pay the license fee since March 2014 and being warned that the company was in bleach of agreement. WWE was awarded $23.8 million by the federal court. CTH stopped its broadcast of WWE contents on 7 September 2015. [16]

End of broadcasting service

In November 2015, CTH began to revoke its service via over 170 local cable service providers after they turned the focus into satellite-TV after the merger of GMM B. [17] In the same month, they loss Premier League bid for the next 3 seasons to beIN Sports with a lower price than theirs from the last three years.

In late January 2016, CTH cancelled its Z Pay-TV packages provided for GMM Z customer following by the cancellation of its channels on PSI and RS Sunbox packages in February 2016. [18]

On 1 August 2016, CTH ceased its KU-band broadcast via Thaicom satellite after laid off its around 100 employess and announced to cease all of their broadcasting service on 1 September 2016 after its rival TrueVisions acquired sub-licensing rights to broadcast Premier League from beIN Sport until 2019. CTH said it can no longer withstand the impact of the economic slowdown. [19]

CTH ceased all of its broadcasting service on 1 September 2016 along with the closure of its website.

CTH reportedly has a massive losses of almost 20 billion baht. [20]

Channels

Channels produced by CTH

Sports

  • Stadium 1
  • Stadium 2
  • Stadium 3
  • Stadium 4
  • Stadium 5
  • Stadium 6
  • Stadium X

Channels produced by GMM B

Sports

  • GMM Football Extra
  • GMM Football Plus
  • GMM Football Euro
  • GMM Club Channel
  • GMM Sport Extreme
  • GMM Sport Plus

References

  1. ^ "CTH, GMM partner up". Bangkok Post.
  2. ^ "Cable Thai Holdings acquires English Premier League rights". www.epfl-europeanleagues.com. Retrieved 1 September 2016.
  3. ^ Company Information Archived web page of company website (in Thai)
  4. ^ ""Cable Thai Holding" shows its cable power (in Thai)". Dara Daily. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  5. ^ "EX-Thaksin lawyer Wichai enters cable-TV arena". The Nation. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  6. ^ "TrueVisions expands viewer base via partnership with CTH". The Nation. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  7. ^ "Phuket: CTH wins bid to broadcast EPL games in Thailand". The Phuket News. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  8. ^ "Premier League rights sold in Southeast Asian territories". Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  9. ^ "CTH sues Apple for Bt100 million over EPL app". The Nation. Retrieved 31 July 2016.
  10. ^ "WWE Partners With CTH In Thailand".
  11. ^ "Company Overview of CTH Public Company Limited". http://investing.businessweek.com/. Bloomberg Businessweek. Retrieved 26 July 2014. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  12. ^ Editor. "CTH goes OTT with Irdeto, Inview". www.rapidtvnews.com. Rapid TV News. Retrieved 22 July 2014. {{cite web}}: |last1= has generic name (help)
  13. ^ "CTH partners with Irdeto and Inview to expand its existing networks in Thailand by introducing OTT and hybrid versions of its cable services". http://inview.tv/. Inview Technology. Retrieved 26 July 2014. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  14. ^ "CTH & Irdeto to develop OTT for Thai networks". http://www.iptv-news.com/. Retrieved 26 July 2014. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  15. ^ "CTH and GMM Grammy officially announced business partnership to a pay-tv service" (PDF). GMM Grammy. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  16. ^ "WWE Wins $23M From Thai Broadcaster In Contract Dispute".
  17. ^ "Meet demanded after CTH move to drop local TV operators". Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  18. ^ "CTH spells out customer compensation over shutdown of Z Pay-TV". THE NATION. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  19. ^ Thailand, Nation Multimedia Group Public Company Limited, Nationmultimedia.com,. "CTH's cutting of Ku-band service expected to affect 40,000 - The Nation". Retrieved 2016-07-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  20. ^ "Loss-ridden CTH confirms plan to shut down on Sept 1". Bangkok Post. Retrieved 7 August 2016.