Satellite Television Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Satellite Television stocks.

Satellite Television Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Oct 2 TEF Telefonica Stock Rises 24% Year to Date: Redeem Gains or Stay Invested?
Oct 2 SIRI 1 Bargain-Basement Stock-Split Stock to Buy Hand Over Fist in the 4th Quarter and 1 Highflier to Shy Away From
Oct 2 SATS EchoStar Gets Some Much-Needed Breathing Room, But Little Else
Oct 1 SIRI SiriusXM to Report Third Quarter 2024 Operating and Financial Results
Oct 1 SATS Dish sale funds EchoStar in near term to develop business: CEO
Oct 1 JBLU JetBlue Gains 29.1% in a Month: What Should Investors Do Now?
Oct 1 SATS EchoStar to Divest Its DISH Business to DIRECTV, Stock Sinks 12%
Oct 1 SATS What's Next For EchoStar 5G Network Amid DirecTV-Dish Merger?
Oct 1 SIRI SiriusXM Stock Tanks 56.8% Year to Date: Time to Buy the Dip?
Oct 1 SATS EchoStar Divests Pay-TV Business to DIRECTV for Debt Relief
Oct 1 SIRI 2 Unstoppable Warren Buffett Stocks That Are Screaming Buys for the Remainder of 2024 (and Beyond)
Sep 30 SIRI Sirius XM Holdings Inc. (SIRI): Warren Buffett’s Stock Recommended by Analysts
Sep 30 SATS Ergen Still Needs Creditors He Once Spurned to Seal Dish-DirecTV Deal
Sep 30 SATS Top Midday Decliners
Sep 30 SATS Wall Street Lunch: DirecTV To Buy EchoStar's Video Business
Sep 30 BCE Rogers could turn MLSE into sports powerhouse worth $16.5 billion, say analysts
Sep 30 SATS Update: EchoStar to Sell Dish DBS to DirecTV; to Issue $5.1 Billion in Senior Secured Notes due 2029
Sep 30 SATS Why EchoStar Stock Crashed 18% Today
Sep 30 SATS DirecTV agrees to buy Dish for $1
Sep 30 SATS Pre-Markets Lower Ahead of Jobs Data This Week
Satellite Television

Satellite television is a service that delivers television programming to viewers by relaying it from a communications satellite orbiting the Earth directly to the viewer's location. The signals are received via an outdoor parabolic antenna commonly referred to as a satellite dish and a low-noise block downconverter.
A satellite receiver then decodes the desired television programme for viewing on a television set. Receivers can be external set-top boxes, or a built-in television tuner. Satellite television provides a wide range of channels and services. It is usually the only television available in many remote geographic areas without terrestrial television or cable television service.
Modern systems signals are relayed from a communications satellite on the Ku band frequencies (12–18 GHz) requiring only a small dish less than a meter in diameter. The first satellite TV systems were an obsolete type now known as television receive-only. These systems received weaker analog signals transmitted in the C-band (4–8 GHz) from FSS type satellites, requiring the use of large 2–3-meter dishes. Consequently, these systems were nicknamed "big dish" systems, and were more expensive and less popular.Early systems used analog signals, but modern ones use digital signals which allow transmission of the modern television standard high-definition television, due to the significantly improved spectral efficiency of digital broadcasting. As of 2018, Star One C2 from Brazil is the only remaining satellite broadcasting in analog signals, as well as one channel (C-SPAN) on AMC-11 from the United States.Different receivers are required for the two types. Some transmissions and channels are unencrypted and therefore free-to-air or free-to-view, while many other channels are transmitted with encryption (pay television), requiring the viewer to subscribe and pay a monthly fee to receive the programming.

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