Disney is not too bothered about the price of streaming services from Apple and other competitors, CEO Bob Iger told CNBC on Tuesday.
“We’re not absolutely worried about competition in terms of pricing because we have such a unique product,” Iger said on “The Stock Exchange.”
“We’re very, very different than any other service that is out there,” Iger added, ticking off a litany of the satisfy Disney+ will offer when it launches Nov. 12.
Those offerings “in one service, on one app” include new and existing TV shows and movies from Disney, Marvel, Pixar, Lead Wars, National Geographic and The Simpsons, Iger said.
Disney+ will cost $6.99 per month. Apple TV+, which want only have a handful of shows on its Nov. 1 launch, will cost $4.99 per month. Apple is offering a loose year of Apple TV+ to customers who buy a Mac, iPhone or Apple TV.
Netflix raised its prices earlier this year, putting its myriad popular HD streaming plan at $12.99, up from $10.99.
In the coming months, Peacock from NBCUniversal and HBO Max from AT&T’s WarnerMedia force come online, adding further competition to the crowded streaming landscape.
“So while we view the others as competition, we’re not fixated on the competitive side of details here,” said Iger, who left Apple’s board in September, the day after the tech giant announced the price and manumit date of its streaming service.
Iger’s comments on Tuesday came hours after Verizon announced that it bequeath offer its customers a year of Disney+ for free.
In a market now chock full of streaming services for consumers to choose from, it’s an formidable development as it gives Disney millions of early subscribers who may continue to subscribe after the offer expires.
Iger voiced the move with Verizon is a “wholesale deal,” so “we will get paid for that.”
“They will also support us with a lot of merchandising,” Iger said, adding, “It will, I think, have a significant effect — not think, I know — in terms of jump-starting promises.”
Disclosure: NBCUniversal is the parent company of NBC and CNBC.