Video Services
•121 stocks
•
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Price Performance Heatmap
5Y Price (Market Cap Weighted)
All Stocks (121)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
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KRKR
36Kr Holdings Inc.
Video Services: production and distribution of long-form video and live streaming.
|
$10.13M |
N/A
|
|
BBGI
Beasley Broadcast Group, Inc.
BBGI has a video platform for select markets, aligning with Video Services.
|
$7.90M |
$4.26
+0.48%
|
|
PAVS
Paranovus Entertainment Technology Ltd.
Video services including livestreaming operations and video content management.
|
$6.68M |
$0.90
+9.76%
|
|
BNZI
Banzai International, Inc.
Video services/creation capabilities core to BNZI's product lineup.
|
$5.90M |
$1.34
+13.56%
|
|
XHLD
TEN Holdings, Inc. Common Stock
Provides video recording and live streaming for physical events and broadcasts.
|
$5.00M |
$0.14
-4.69%
|
|
VISL
Vislink Technologies, Inc.
Vislink provides video distribution/management services and video-related offerings beyond hardware.
|
$4.59M |
$2.08
|
|
LGCB
Linkage Global Inc Ordinary Shares
The development of short-form video editing tools supports creation of product videos for social commerce.
|
$4.34M |
$2.08
+1.64%
|
|
XELB
Xcel Brands, Inc.
Provides video content production and live streaming capabilities as part of its platform.
|
$4.31M |
$0.94
-3.62%
|
|
FGF
FG Financial Group, Inc.
Content delivery and related on-site/remote services to cinema and entertainment venues align with Video Services.
|
$3.83M |
$2.40
|
|
HOFV
Hall of Fame Resort & Entertainment Company
Video content production and distribution across networks/platforms constitutes a video services business line.
|
$2.95M |
$0.44
|
|
HAO
Haoxi Health Technology Limited
HAO produces short video content and content production services as part of its marketing solutions.
|
$2.78M |
$0.91
+2.25%
|
|
DGLY
Digital Ally, Inc.
The company leverages Video Solutions hardware with a cloud-based platform and services, i.e., video distribution/management.
|
$2.26M |
$1.31
-20.78%
|
|
FTEL
Fitell Corporation
Platform supports livestreaming/content delivery for remote coaching and community engagement.
|
$1.02M |
$0.84
+15.03%
|
|
AEHL
Antelope Enterprise Holdings Limited
Direct livestreaming marketing and broadcasting services.
|
$1.01M |
$3.47
+8.44%
|
|
BMTM
Bright Mountain Media, Inc.
Video Services related to video content creation and ad delivery across formats.
|
$823868 |
$0.01
|
|
WNLV
Winvest Group Ltd.
IQI Media provides video services including production and delivery aspects of video content.
|
$554971 |
$0.00
|
|
BOTY
Lingerie Fighting Championships, Inc.
Involves video distribution services for content beyond streaming, capturing video content distribution.
|
$536151 |
$0.00
|
|
CHR
Cheer Holding, Inc.
Video Services: CHEERS Video is a core content offering in the CHEERS ecosystem.
|
$463779 |
$0.05
|
|
SYTA
Siyata Mobile Inc.
Video services related to in-vehicle monitoring and fleet safety offerings.
|
$190113 |
$3.04
-0.98%
|
|
RLBY
Reliability Incorporated
Video Production/Video Services is a core service offered by MMG.
|
$190079 |
$0.03
|
|
KXIN
Kaixin Auto Holdings
Video Services: The AI education platform includes live streaming content delivery and video services.
|
$136593 |
$0.14
-30.44%
|
Showing page 2 of 2 (121 total stocks)
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# Executive Summary
* The Video Services industry is undergoing a fundamental business model transformation, rapidly shifting from pure subscription models to ad-supported and hybrid offerings to address consumer price sensitivity and unlock new revenue streams.
* Generative AI is emerging as a critical deflationary force and competitive differentiator, enabling significant cost reductions in content production while enhancing monetization through improved personalization and ad targeting.
* The accelerating decline of linear television continues to pressure legacy media companies, forcing an urgent and capital-intensive pivot to direct-to-consumer streaming.
* We observe a bifurcation in financial performance: technology-led and streaming-native companies are posting strong growth, while traditional broadcasters manage secular declines.
* The competitive landscape is defined by a battle for scale and differentiation, leading to distinct strategies: mass-market content plays, niche SaaS solutions, and focused live/AVOD platforms.
* Capital allocation is focused on technology, especially AI infrastructure, and content, with M&A serving as a key tool for consolidation and capability acquisition in a saturated market.
## Key Trends & Outlook
The most significant trend reshaping the Video Services industry is the definitive shift toward ad-supported consumption, which has moved from a niche alternative to the market standard in 2025. Driven by consumer subscription fatigue, ad-supported tiers now account for the majority of new subscriber growth for market leaders; Netflix, for example, saw over 55% of its sign-ups in relevant countries come from its ad plan and now counts 94 million users on the tier. This pivot unlocks the global AVOD market, projected to reach nearly $260 billion by 2025, fundamentally altering revenue models from a reliance on subscriber fees to a dual stream of subscription and advertising income. Pure-play AVOD services are also thriving, with Fox's Tubi seeing revenue growth accelerate to 35% year-on-year in Q3 FY25 as it captures a large audience of "cordless" viewers. This trend forces all players to invest heavily in ad-tech capabilities to compete effectively for advertising dollars shifting from linear TV.
Generative AI is being aggressively deployed across the value chain to combat rising costs and enhance user engagement. Companies are leveraging AI to dramatically reduce content production expenses, with Paramount Skydance aiming to cut film costs by 35% over the last 24 months and Netflix accelerating VFX work tenfold. Simultaneously, AI is a revenue driver, powering sophisticated recommendation engines and ad-targeting systems, as seen with Bilibili's 10% ECPM improvement, and creating new product features, exemplified by Vimeo attributing approximately 40% of new Enterprise bookings in Q4 2024 to its AI tools.
The greatest opportunity lies in effectively monetizing the massive audience shift to ad-supported streaming, where companies with superior ad-technology and desirable content can capture a disproportionate share of the ~$260 billion AVOD market. The primary risk is for legacy media companies, such as Paramount Skydance and Disney, that must manage the rapid erosion of their profitable linear TV business while simultaneously funding the high-cost, intensely competitive transition to streaming, creating significant margin pressure.
## Competitive Landscape
The Video Services market is intensely competitive, driving consolidation and forcing companies to adopt differentiated strategies to survive. In the U.S. premium SVOD market, Netflix holds a 26% share, followed by Paramount+ and Hulu each at 14%, Disney+ at 13%, and Peacock at 11%. Amazon Prime Video leads the overall U.S. streaming market with a 22% share as of 2025.
Some of the largest players, like Netflix, compete by building vast, vertically-integrated content libraries to become indispensable global entertainment providers. Netflix's plan to spend $18 billion on content in 2025 and its expansion into games and live events to maximize engagement and justify its subscription cost exemplifies this model. This strategy relies on enormous scale, strong brand recognition, and the ability to amortize content spend over a massive global subscriber base, but it is vulnerable to extremely high and escalating content costs.
In contrast, others leverage technological dominance to build massive ecosystems monetized through advertising, a strategy perfected by Google's YouTube. YouTube's position as the #1 platform for streaming watch time, combined with Alphabet's projected CapEx of $91-$93 billion in 2025 primarily for AI and cloud infrastructure, shows a strategy centered on technological dominance and ad monetization. This approach benefits from unmatched technological infrastructure and vast pools of user data for targeting.
A third approach avoids the direct content battle altogether, focusing instead on providing high-margin, specialized video software for businesses, as exemplified by Vimeo. Its 78% gross margin in Q3 2025 and focus on AI-powered tools for businesses, which drive approximately 40% of new Enterprise bookings, is clear evidence of this model's success. This niche SaaS model offers high gross margins and predictable revenue. The key competitive battlegrounds are now in advertising technology and the application of AI to reduce costs and increase engagement.
## Financial Performance
Revenue growth shows a clear bifurcation across the industry, driven by exposure to the industry's key trends. Growth leaders are streaming-native platforms successfully monetizing large, engaged audiences through advertising and subscriptions. Netflix, for instance, reported a 17% year-over-year revenue growth in Q3 2025, demonstrating the success of its hybrid model and price adjustments. In contrast, legacy media companies battling the secular decline of linear TV face significant headwinds. Paramount Skydance's overall revenue grew by only 1% year-over-year in Q2 2025, masking a 6% decline in its legacy TV Media segment, which illustrates the pressures from cord-cutting.
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Profitability margins diverge significantly based on business model and technological leverage. High margins are commanded by companies with differentiated, low-cost models like SaaS or technology-driven advertising platforms. Vimeo, a SaaS provider, achieved a 78% gross margin in Q3 2025, exemplifying the profitability of its niche model. Similarly, Alphabet's Google Services segment reported a strong 38.5% operating margin in Q3 2025, showcasing the power of a technology-led advertising ecosystem.
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Capital is being aggressively deployed into technology and strategic M&A. The primary strategic priority is to build a durable competitive advantage for the next phase of the streaming wars, driving massive investment in core technologies, particularly AI. Alphabet's projected $91-$93 billion in 2025 CapEx, mostly for AI servers and data centers, represents the high end of technology investment. At the same time, companies are using M&A to acquire scale, content, or new capabilities to accelerate their transformation. Paramount Skydance's merger with Skydance Media injected $1.5 billion in new capital, and its $7.7 billion acquisition of exclusive UFC rights for 2026-2032 exemplifies using M&A to secure critical, long-term content.
The balance sheets across the major players are generally strong and liquid, providing the necessary resources for high investment levels. Alphabet, for example, reported $98.5 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities as of September 30, 2025, and generated $24.5 billion in free cash flow in Q3 2025. This financial strength is a key competitive advantage, enabling companies to fund massive content and technology investments while maintaining flexibility.
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