The Wall Street Journal - 21.03.2020 - 22.03.2020

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B12| Saturday/Sunday, March 21 - 22, 2020 **** THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.


It’s ‘Game On’ for Many


Working From Home


Videogames are surging but their shares aren’t


Working from home generally
means actually working, but video-
game companies know better.
As an unprecedented number of
employees and students are con-
fined to their homes to wait out the
coronavirus pandemic, a large num-
ber of them seem to be passing the
time with games. Verizon said
Tuesday that game traffic over its
networks has surged 75% from the
previous week. That compares with
a 12% uptick in video traffic over
the same time. Steam, a network
that powers online games for PCs,
has shown concurrent usage break-
ing 20 million players at peak times
this week—a record for the service.
That is good news for game
makers, but investors haven’t bid
up the sector the way they have
some other popular “stay-home”
stocks. Shares of console game
publishers Activision Blizzard and
Electronic Arts are down 16% and
18% over the last month, respec-
tively. Granted, that is better than
the S&P 500’s 29% plunge. But even
Netflix has performed a little better
over that time, despite the fact that
the popular streaming company
and its peers have been forced to
shutter production on several pro-
grams as Hollywood also reels from
the coronavirus outbreak.
So there may be some opportu-
nity here. While the game industry

certainly isn’t immune to a reces-
sion, it has proven resilient in past
downturns. Doug Creutz of Cowen
notes that game stocks outper-
formed the market handsomely be-
tween 2007 and 2009, during the
financial crisis.
The industry will also likely
benefit in the short term by the
cancellation of major league sport-
ing events and other live enter-
tainment options. Games such as
EA’s popular “FIFA” and “Madden
NFL” series could prove extra pop-
ular when ESPN is featuring stone-
skipping competitions.
There are still some risks. Many
game studios are located in the
San Francisco Bay Area and Seat-
tle, where the majority of workers
are now working from home.
There has been no indication yet
that the shift has affected games
in the pipeline, though Jefferies
analysts noted Wednesday that “it
would be foolish to think a long-
term disruption would not affect
the product cycle.”
But for the moment, the outlook
still looks solid. Microsoft and
Sony have recently reaffirmed
plans to launch new Xbox and
PlayStation consoles this fall. Gam-
ers, meanwhile, have plenty to
keep them occupied—assuming
their bosses don’t find out.
—Dan Gallagher

Plenty of people were discovering the joys of ‘Fornite’ this past week.

EPIC GAMES


HEARD


ON


THE
STREET

FINANCIAL ANALYSIS & COMMENTARY


Spotify Wants to Be Part of Your Road Mix


Music-streaming services are trying to lure drivers away from local radio stations. It hasn’t been easy. New technology may help.


Top Note
Monthly reach by platform, 2019

Radio

Search sites

Social media sites

E-commerce sites

Video sites

News sites

Sports sites

Note: U.S. consumers ages 18 and older
Source: Nielsen

244.5million

190.9

177.8

144.5

143.0

105.4

57.3

ISTOCK

can survive and come out as viable
companies after the virus fades.
On the first measure, they
should be able to stay afloat for
about a year, according to analyst
Harry Curtis of Instinet, based on
borrowing capacity and ability to
cut costs and defer capital expen-
ditures. But then what?
Cruise companies point out chal-
lenges they have faced before from
accidents to recessions to travel
scares. Bookings plunged after 9/11,
but industry leader Carnival’s share

Cruise Operators Face Choppy


Waters Even if They Stay Afloat


“Float” is taking on a new
meaning at cruise lines these
days.
The three big, U.S.-listed op-
erators,CarnivalCorp.,Royal
Caribbean CruisesandNorwe-
gian Cruise Line Holdings,have
“voluntarily and temporarily
suspended operations” out of
U.S. ports, according to their in-
dustry body. The move is, of
course, neither voluntary nor
quite so temporary given several
high-profile incidents of corona-
virus outbreaks on vessels
world-wide.
Even without passengers or
crew, giant cruise ships cost a
bundle to finance and maintain.
The largest ones, which can en-
tertain close to 7,000 passengers
with theaters, ice rinks and doz-
ens of pools and restaurants,
cost well over $1 billion to build.
Members of the Cruise Lines In-
ternational Association were
planning to operate about 278
vessels this year, including 19
new ones.
Coronavirus may shut down
the three big operators for way
more than a month or even a
season. Their collective market
value, about $75 billion at the
beginning of the year, was barely
$13 billion on Thursday. While
well below the fully depreciated
value of their vessels and other
property net of debt, that dis-
count is only meaningful if they

price recovered in a little over two
months after heavy discounting
filled its berths. More people
cruised in 2009 than in 2008.
Making people forget about
scenes like the grim quarantine on
the Diamond Princess as a fifth of
its passengers were sickened may
be more challenging. A big appeal
of cruises is that passengers have
nothing to worry about on their
traveling hotel, however exotic
their ports of call. While accidents
like the Costa Concordia disaster
or incidents like Carnival’s infa-
mous “poop ship” have faded in
cruisers’ memories, the world is
now far more frightened of deadly
infectious diseases and how easily
they spread in enclosed spaces.
A record 32 million people were
expected to take a cruise this year,
up from fewer than 20 million a
decade earlier. If coronavirus is
still prevalent and not easily treat-
able a year from now, the industry
may face even deeper distress.
Talk of the Trump administration
offering aid has faded as oppo-
nents point out that cruise lines
register their vessels in places like
Liberia and Panama to avoid taxes
and regulation.
Many people will be itching for
a carefree vacation once the world,
and their finances, start getting
back to normal. Cruises can offer
decent value for money, but they
will be a much tougher sell this
time around. —Spencer Jakab

Scuttled
Share-price performance

Source: FactSet

Carnival
Norwegian Cruise Line

Royal Caribbean Cruises

25

–100

–75

–50

–25

0

%

Oct.
2019

Nov. Dec. Jan.
’20

Feb. March

Your car is one of the last places
where tech companies still struggle
to reach you. That will likely change
as music-streaming services like
Spotify gradually loosen radio’s grip
on American car journeys.
Traditional radio is still a key
companion to travel, particularly
to and from work. Most Americans
commute in their cars, where AM/
FM stations dominate the dash-
board. While terrestrial television
has lost millions of viewers to
streaming services like Netflix and
Hulu, radio still reaches 92% of
Americans over 18 every week, ac-
cording to Nielsen data.
The coronavirus crisis may
change that in the short term as
more people work from home.
Longer term, the pandemic could
even encourage more Americans
to embrace home-working semi-
permanently.
Yet U.S. drivers will probably
remain a highly valuable radio au-
dience by global standards. Last
year, Americans listened to an
hour and 40 minutes of radio ev-
ery day on average. Consulting
firm Deloitte estimates that each
listener is worth $67 in radio in-
dustry revenue annually, com-
pared with $25 in the U.K. and
just $2 in China.
Spotify, Apple Music and Ama-
zon Music have been trying for
yearstomuscleinonradio’s
patch, with little to show for it.
Between 2014 and 2018, the num-
ber of daily radio minutes listened
to by adults aged 18 years or over
in the U.S. fell by a modest 2% a
year on average, Deloitte’s analysis
shows.Thatisdespitethefact
that Apple CarPlay is available in
many newer Ford, Bentley and
Buick models, while Uber riders
have been able to stream music
from their Spotify account during
their car trips since 2014.
Yet Nielsen’s 2019 data shows
that the pace of decline in time
spent listening to radio picked up

slightly to 3% compared with a
year earlier. It could gather further
momentum as more high-tech cars
roll off assembly lines.
While U.S. consumers replace
their smartphones every two to
three years, they are much slower
to upgrade their wheels. The aver-
age vehicle on U.S. roads was 12
years old in 2019, according to IHS
Markit data. As older models are
gradually replaced with newer
ones, music streaming in the car
will become more seamless. Some
new electric cars, including certain
Tesla models, don’t even have an
option to play AM radio stations
as the vehicles’ electronics inter-
fere with the frequency.
The rollout of 5G over the next
few years will also improve con-
nectivity. And as unlimited data

plans become commonplace, digi-
tal streaming in cars should get a
boost. For now, cost-conscious lis-
teners opt for free radio to con-
serve their smartphone data.
In a bid to attract more drivers,
Spotify last year launched Your
Daily Drive in the U.S., a service
with a mixture of curated music
and news content. To encourage
more to switch, Spotify needs to
offer more of the local traffic,
weather and news updates that lis-
teners usually turn to radio for.
This month, the company hired ra-
dio veteran Kevin Weatherly to
help it get the right mix.
This all points to stiffer compe-
tition for major U.S. radio station
owners, including Nasdaq-listed
iHeartMedia and Cumulus Media.
True, local stations offer a

sense of community and present-
ing talent that music-streaming
services will find hard to replicate.
And radio stations have spent
years building up loyal audiences.
But Spotify doesn’t need to con-
vert a majority of radio listeners
to get a big lift to its U.S. business.
Over 60 million Americans had a
music-streaming account in 2019,
equivalent to a quarter of the pop-
ulation over the age of 18. Assum-
ing radio listeners are no different
from the population as a whole,
Spotify would have to sign up only
3% of those that don’t already
have an account to grow its U.S.
subscriber base by one-fifth.
The biggest winners, however,
might not be streaming platforms
but recording giants Universal Mu-
sic Group, Sony Music Entertain-

ment and Warner Music Group.
Spotify and Apple Music would
hand over more than half of any
new in-car streaming revenue to
the record labels in the form of
royalties for playing their songs.
Record labels have no big in-
centive to defend radio from the
onslaught. Quite the opposite.
Terrestrial stations currently pay
no royalties to artists or labels
whose tracks are played on U.S.
airwaves. This has been a source
of tension for decades, but the ra-
dio industry argues that airplay is
a form of free advertising for new
tracks and musicians. The more
radio listeners that can be
switched over to services like Spo-
tify that do pay royalties, the big-
ger the boost to record labels’
streaming revenue.
Compared with television, radio
has been remarkably sheltered from
digital competition. As it loses its
privileged position in new car mod-
els, though, the U.S. commute will
come into play. Stay tuned.
—Carol Ryan

OVERHEARD


These are testing times on Wall
Street, but it is no longer testing
time on Wall Street.
Each year over 100,000 men and
women eager to earn the right to
put the vaunted “CFA” credential on
their business cards sit down to
take a grueling test. Just 41% of
those who took the first level of the
Chartered Financial Analyst exam
last year managed to pass despite
many spending hundreds of hours
studying the materials. The pass
rates last year were barely higher
for the second and third exams at
just 44% and 56%, respectively.

Fewer than a fifth get through
the whole thing.
But the only thing more dan-
gerous than hanging out on a
trading floor these days is cram-
ming yourself into a room for
hours with hundreds of strangers.
The CFA Institute has announced
that it is postponing the June
exam to avoid the spread of
Covid-19. The “earliest possible
date” for the exam will be in De-
cember.
The news will be disappointing
to aspiring financiers who were
hoping to make use of enforced
stays at home to hit the books.
So much for something to take
their minds off of melting stock
and bond prices.
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