Satellite Radio Retail Sales Continue to Decline
Wednesday, November 15, 2006 at 2:27 PM
NPD Group's October sales data continues to show a consecutive decline in the satellite radio retail channel, when compaired to the same period last year. This is the third month in a row that retail sales are down year-over-year. August was down 3%, September down 12% and now in October retail sales are down 25% industry-wide when compared to the October last year. The Quick Glance:
- Sirius October 2006 Retail Sales:
Down 26% YoY - XM October 2006 Retail Sales:
Down 23% YoY
Marketshare:
- Sirius Oct '06 Retail Marketshare: 56%
- XM Oct '06 Retail Marketshare: 44%
Looking at purely the numbers, this supports the argument that the satellite radio retail channel has reached it's peak, but that only comparing the year-over-year numbers. Expecting the same - or greater - growth as last year is completely unrealistic. This is also the first time since April that Sirius didn't see better year-over-year growth, percentage wise, than XM. The Stern Effect was in full swing at this time last year, so again it's unrealistic to expect the same growth this year. I don't care what the skeptics say, it's just not possible.
2005 was a breakout year, and ridiculous money was being spent in order to maintain the momentum. This helped growth (gotta spend money to make money). From one side the critics say that satellite radio needs to control costs, from the other they say it needs to add subscribers. The key is finding that sweet spot somewhere in between.
That said, Sirius still expects to bring in more subscribers this Q4 than they did last Q4. They've reiterated their year-end guidance of 6.3M net subscribers, so they're obviously confident that they can pull it off. I'm just not exactly sure how.
NPD Group's October sales data continues to show a consecutive decline in the satellite radio retail channel, when compaired to the same period last year. This is the third month in a row that retail sales are down year-over-year. August was down 3%, September down 12% and now in October retail sales are down 25% industry-wide when compared to the October last year. The Quick Glance:
- Sirius October 2006 Retail Sales:
Down 26% YoY - XM October 2006 Retail Sales:
Down 23% YoY
Marketshare:
- Sirius Oct '06 Retail Marketshare: 56%
- XM Oct '06 Retail Marketshare: 44%
Looking at purely the numbers, this supports the argument that the satellite radio retail channel has reached it's peak, but that only comparing the year-over-year numbers. Expecting the same - or greater - growth as last year is completely unrealistic. This is also the first time since April that Sirius didn't see better year-over-year growth, percentage wise, than XM. The Stern Effect was in full swing at this time last year, so again it's unrealistic to expect the same growth this year. I don't care what the skeptics say, it's just not possible.
2005 was a breakout year, and ridiculous money was being spent in order to maintain the momentum. This helped growth (gotta spend money to make money). From one side the critics say that satellite radio needs to control costs, from the other they say it needs to add subscribers. The key is finding that sweet spot somewhere in between.
That said, Sirius still expects to bring in more subscribers this Q4 than they did last Q4. They've reiterated their year-end guidance of 6.3M net subscribers, so they're obviously confident that they can pull it off. I'm just not exactly sure how.


Sirius Satellite Radio has
Is there a rally looming for both satellite radio stocks?