NEW DELHI, Might 4 (Reuters) – Hundreds of thousands of soccer followers on the earth’s two most populous nations might not be capable to watch the World Cup that begins subsequent month, resulting from a impasse over broadcast rights in India and no official choice in China.
In India, a Reliance-Disney three way partnership has provided $20 million for 2026 World Cup broadcast rights, a fraction of FIFA’s ask, which was not acceptable to soccer’s world governing physique, two sources instructed Reuters on Monday. Sony 6758.T held talks but in addition determined to not make a suggestion for FIFA rights for India, a 3rd supply with direct data mentioned.
There has additionally been no deal announcement for China, which FIFA says accounted for 49.8% of all hours of viewing on digital and social platforms globally through the 2022 World Cup.
FIFA didn’t reply to a Reuters request for remark. Reliance-Disney, a three way partnership led by billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance RELI.NS, didn’t reply to requests for remark, and neither did Sony.
The shortage of a confirmed broadcast settlement with India or China is uncommon at this stage.
In previous World Cups, together with 2018 and 2022, Chinese language state broadcaster CCTV secured the rights properly prematurely and started airing promotional content material and sponsor-driven commercials weeks earlier than the match.
CCTV, which has in depth attain throughout tv and digital platforms, didn’t instantly return a request for remark.
China accounted for 17.7% and India 2.9% of the worldwide linear TV attain of the 2022 match. The 2 international locations collectively accounted for 22.6% of whole world digital streaming attain for that World Cup.
The 2026 match kicks off on June 11, leaving barely 5 weeks for a deal to be finalised, broadcast infrastructure to be arrange and promoting stock to be bought.
HUGE SOCCER FOLLOWING IN INDIA, CHINA
For India, FIFA initially sought $100 million for broadcast rights for the 2026 and 2030 World Cups, the sources mentioned, declining to be named as a result of the talks are personal.
When the World Cup final aired in India in 2022, Reliance’s then-standalone media arm secured the rights for about $60 million, which was introduced round 14 months earlier than the occasion in Qatar. The match drew over 110 million digital viewers throughout its platforms.
Reliance and Disney DIS.N have since fashioned a three way partnership to emerge as a dominant power in India’s media and streaming panorama, and the $20 million FIFA supply underscores the negotiating energy the Indian group instructions.
FIFA had considerably lowered its ask from the $100 million earlier, however has not been eager on the $20 million determine Reliance provided, one supply mentioned.
Reliance-Disney, which has spent billions on cricket broadcast rights, believes the World Cup can have decrease viewership in India because the match is being held in the USA, Canada and Mexico, and most matches will air previous midnight in India, the sources mentioned.
China has round 200 million soccer followers, greater than another nation, however has did not construct world-class groups, partly resulting from a top-down strategy the place golf equipment decide gamers from a really small pool of pre-screened candidates.
The second supply added that soccer doesn’t command the business premium in India like its hottest sport cricket, and an promoting slowdown linked to the Iranian warfare has additional eroded income expectations.
“Soccer is a distinct segment section in India,” mentioned the supply.
Sony, which has TV channels and a streaming app in India, additionally determined to not buy broadcast rights from FIFA because it didn’t make financial sense for the group, mentioned the third trade supply.
“Not a lot time is left however I received’t name it a stalemate. It’s extra like we’re on the finish of a chess recreation with a few strikes left,” mentioned Rohit Potphode, managing associate for sports activities at promoting company Dentsu India.

