SAG Strike’s ETF Impact Is Up In the Air

November 25, 2008 at 2:00 pm by Kevin Grewal      Bookmark and Share

entertainment and media exchange traded funds (etfs)The failure of attempts to negotiate contracts between the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) and Hollywood studios may stir up a strike and be detrimental to entertainment and media related exchange traded funds (ETFs).

These feuds seem to be common to the industry, and even with the help of federal mediator Juan Carlos Gonzales, the two parties still can’t come to a compromise.  SAG states that “management continues to insist on terms we cannot responsibly accept,” and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) states that due to economic conditions, it is not realistic for SAG to ask for a better deal then the one accepted earlier this year.  SAG is seeking union coverage for all internet-only productions, regardless of budget and residual payments for Internet productions replayed online and continued actor protection during times of no work, states the the Los Angeles Times.

What influence could a strike have?  After all, the industry considers itself fairly “recession proof”, still attracting financiers rolling the dice on Hollywood.  Additionally, of the approximately 120,000 actors that SAG represents, about 80% of them aren’t working actors.  Of the actors who are working, the average salary is between $50,000 and $60,000. With current economic conditions, one would think they wouldn’t give up work.

With investors and an array of actors on hand, movies, television shows and internet content are still being created and will continue to be created.  Hopefully, this potential strike won’t be as devastating as when the Writers Guild of America hit the picket lines, costing Los Angeles close to $2.5 billion.

PowerShares Leisure & Entertainment (PEJ): down 54.3% year-to-date

PowerShares Dynamic Media (PBS): down 56.3% year-to-date

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  • Michael Russnow
    You ought to look at the following short video produced in Cologne, Germany by TV Star Andreas Stenschke. It points to what is at stake for writers, actors and directors regarding the potential loss of income when reruns of TV shows and movies go to the Internet rather than on cable and broadcast TV, where they currently show. It is particularly relevant as the Writers Guild is now in a battle with the AMPTP over their reneging of the Internet residual formula agreed to at the end of the strike in February. Link to the video is:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-PPZV3dTzbg

    The Europeans' (and other international artists) situation is absurd and the AMPTP producers and networks would like nothing more than to remake that as their modus operandi on our shores as well.
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