Video Infrastructure Isn’t Dead—It’s Changing Owners
The post discusses Harmonic’s reported exit from its video business, citing recent company metrics including $98.2M in quarterly broadband revenue (+9%), $346.9M in bookings (3.5x book-to-bill), and a claimed 62% market share for CableOS in Distributed Access Architecture. It argues that demand for video/streaming infrastructure remains strong but that growth is shifting toward hyperscalers and cloud-native vendors as operator capex declines (from 26.9% of revenue in 2022 to 22.9% in 2024). The author highlights MediaKind and One Equity Partners’ strategy to combine Harmonic’s video segment into a larger platform, estimating $100M+ in recurring revenue and $150M+ in appliance revenue for the combined business.
Key Takeaways
- Harmonic’s growth engine is now broadband: $98.2M quarterly revenue (+9%), $346.9M bookings, and 3.5x book-to-bill; CableOS claims 62% share in DAA.
- The post argues video infrastructure demand remains strong, but value capture is shifting to hyperscalers and cloud-native vendors.
- Operator capex pressure is a core driver: capex fell from 26.9% of revenue (2022) to 22.9% (2024), squeezing legacy hardware-centric models.
- MediaKind + One Equity Partners are betting on consolidation and scale, targeting an estimated $100M+ recurring revenue and $150M+ appliance revenue across the combined video platform.
- The strategic fork: invest to modernize for cloud-native, AI-driven, live-first workflows—or harvest margins from the installed base.
Why It Matters
This is the “video infra isn’t shrinking, it’s getting re-platformed” moment. As operators cut capex, they’re less willing to fund bespoke, hardware-heavy roadmaps—pushing spend toward cloud and managed stacks where hyperscalers set the pace. Private equity-backed rollups (MediaKind + Harmonic’s video assets) are a counter-move: aggregate scale, keep serving the long tail of operators, and re-architect fast enough to stay relevant. For streaming execs and engineers, the meme is clear: if your video stack isn’t cloud-native and live-first, it may still generate revenue—just not growth.
Read full article at linkedin.com