Charter loses home Internet customers, blames end of COVID subsidy program

Charter CEO Tom Rutledge gesturing with his hands and speaking at a conference.

Enlarge / Charter CEO Tom Rutledge speaks during The New York Times DealBook conference in New York on Thursday, Nov. 10, 2016.

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The two largest home Internet providers in the US both lost subscribers in the second quarter of 2022.

On Friday, Charter Communications reported a loss of 42,000 residential Internet customers, leaving it with 28,259,000 households buying Spectrum Internet service. Charter also gained 21,000 small and medium business (SMB) customers, bringing it up to 1,994,000 in that category.

Charter is the second biggest Internet provider after Comcast. Last week, Comcast reported a loss of 10,000 residential broadband customers, leaving it with 29,826,000 Internet-subscribing households. Comcast also gained 10,000 business broadband customers, giving it 2,337,000 business subscribers.

The subscriber losses are unusual. For Comcast, it was the first quarter ever in which it failed to gain broadband subscribers.

Charter had gained over 7 million home Internet customers since its 2016 purchase of Time Warner Cable turned it into the second biggest cable company with 20.7 million residential Internet subscribers at that time. Charter added more than 1.1 million home Internet customers in 2021 and another 164,000 in the first quarter of 2022.

Charter blames end of COVID subsidy program

Charter’s slowdown might have started earlier if not for the COVID-related Emergency Broadband Benefit (EBB) program, which provided $50-per-month subsidies for people with low incomes and those who lost income during the pandemic. Charter said it lost 59,000 residential and SMB subscribers in Q2 as a result of that program being replaced with the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP), which offers $30 a month and has more restrictive eligibility requirements.

“During the second quarter, we added 38,000 Internet customers when excluding an unfavorable impact related to the discontinuation of the Emergency Broadband Benefit program and additional definitional requirements of the Affordable Connectivity Program,” Charter CEO Thomas Rutledge said in a call with analysts, according to a Seeking Alpha transcript.

Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) and other grant programs. Rutledge pointed out that, in addition to the RDOF and various state grant programs that have given Charter money, the US government’s $42 billion Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment program “coming next year… will allow for additional construction, which we hope to bid on and be successful with.”

Although Charter is the only high-speed wireline provider in many parts of its territory, company executives said competition from fiber and fixed wireless played some role in the customer loss. Fixed wireless is still “relatively small. It’s not the major component of our quarterly performance, but it is a factor,” Rutledge said.

Charter also lost 240,000 residential TV customers and 265,000 residential voice customers in Q2. Average monthly revenue from residential subscribers rose from $113.28 to $116 in the second quarter. That includes broadband, TV, and landline phone service.

One bright spot for Charter is that it added 344,000 residential and SMB mobile subscribers, giving it 4.3 million mobile lines. “Our mobile business is growing at an extremely rapid pace,” Rutledge said. Charter offers mobile service using the Verizon Wireless network.

Disclosure: The Advance/Newhouse Partnership, which owns 12.4 percent of Charter, is part of Advance Publications. Advance Publications owns Condé Nast, which owns Ars Technica.

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