@emergingsoul - not sure about that, but my experience in the early days of video streaming was that while I had enough bandwidth by static packet burst testing, there was some choke point at times, enough to throw the stream into buffering. This was some years ago, and I got Verizon Fios, which was better, but they never really supported the MOCA thing --to send signal over coax already wired into an abode. Meaning that once over a threshold, it’s more about continuity of signal than raw bandwidth numbers.
Now, in Texas, I have Google fiber, which, even at the lowest tier, is over 500M download on wi-fi via static packet test. I use an ethernet wired connection to stream movies, and it’s been pretty faultless. Since video content places greater demands than audio only streaming, I would assume that the same applies.