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Cable TV companies could lose nearly $1 billion in the next year from people ditching their subscriptions

Cable TV companies could lose nearly $1 billion to people cutting the cord over the next year, according to a new study by management consulting firm cg42.

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The firm estimates that 800,000 cable customers will ditch their subscriptions in the next 12 months. Cg42 expects each customer to be an average loss of $1,248 annually, and losses to approach $1 billion over the year.

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Netflix CEO Reed Hastings Ken Ishii/Getty

Cg42 also found that the average cord-cutter saves $104 per month by canceling. Some in the industry have argued that cutting the cord doesn't actually save you money if you subscribe to a bunch of streaming services like Netflix, HBO, and so on. But that point of view neglects the reality that many cable subscribers pay for those streaming services already.

Rising prices

A loss of cable subscribers, and the revenue that comes with them, doesn't mean a completely equal loss in total revenue for the industry, however. That's because pay TV providers will likely continue to wring more money out of each subscriber.

According to Leichtman Research’s annual study, pay TV prices have gone up 40% in the last five years at a steady pace. In 2011, US subscribers to pay TV, on average, paid $73.63 for cable or satellite. But in Leichtman's latest study, that number is $103.10.

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Where are they going?

As people flee the high prices of cable, there are a slew of services stepping into the gap to offer more flexible streaming TV services tailored toward younger people. The pioneer is Sling TV, which offers a "skinny bundle" package of 25 channels for $20 per month. But there are other live TV alternatives from companies like Hulu, AT&T, and Amazon reportedly on the way. Expect this space to heat up over the coming months.

Then there are the traditional on-demand streaming companies. Cg42 found that 73% of cord cutters subscribe to Netflix, 59% to Hulu Plus, and 44% subscribe to Amazon Prime.

Cg42's study was based on an online survey of 1,119 US consumers.

Disclosure: Mathias Döpfner, CEO of Business Insider's parent company, Axel Springer, is a Netflix board member.

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