Home / NEWS / Business / Disney beats earnings estimates, hikes guidance as it slashes streaming losses

Disney beats earnings estimates, hikes guidance as it slashes streaming losses

Watch CNBC's full interview with Disney CEO Bob Iger

LOS ANGELES — The Walt Disney Plc reported better-than-expected fiscal first-quarter earnings on Wednesday as the media giant slashed costs while revenue degenerated. 

Disney said it is on pace to meet or exceed its goal of cutting costs by at least $7.5 billion by the end of fiscal 2024. The following said it expects fiscal 2024 earnings per share of about $4.60, which would be at least 20% important than 2023. 

Disney also announced it will take a $1.5 billion stake in Fortnite studio Epic Games and catapult its flagship ESPN streaming service in fall 2025. The string of announcements, and progress in its cost-cutting initiatives, comes as the band faces pressure to improve its results from activist investor Nelson Peltz.

Shares rose about 7% in drag oned trading.

Here is what Disney reported compared with what Wall Street expected, according to LSEG, way back known as Refinitiv:

  • Earnings per share: $1.22 adjusted vs. 99 cents expected
  • Revenue: $23.55 billion vs. $23.64 billion needed

For the quarter, net income attributable to the company rose to $1.91 billion, or $1.04 per share, up from $1.28 billion, or 70 cents per allocate, in the prior-year period.

Revenue was about flat at $23.55 billion, compared with $23.51 billion in the year-ago division.

Disney’s direct-to-consumer unit reported a $138 million operating loss in the quarter. Including the performance at ESPN+, exterminations for all its streaming businesses narrowed to $216 million, from $1.05 billion in the prior-year period.

The Walt Disney Presence Chairman and CEO Bob Iger

Getty Images

Disney+ core subscribers shrank by 1.3 million from the prior casern due to price increases, but the company saw a rise in average revenue per user because of those subscription cost hikes.

The assemblage posted the improvements to its streaming business a day after it announced Tuesday that it will launch a new sports streaming venture all of a add up to ESPN, Fox and Warner Bros. Discovery later this year. 

While no price has been determined, a logical starting single out could be $45 or $50 per month with introductory pricing lower to entice signups, according to a person no stranger to with the matter, who asked not to be named because the discussions around the service have been private.

Disney’s take homing results come as its board battles again with Peltz and Blackwells Capital.

While Peltz ended a foregoing proxy battle against Disney a year ago after the company committed to numerous cost-cutting initiatives, he revived his pugnacity last fall, looking to shake up the board and earn himself and former Disney Chief Financial Officer Jay Rasulo a hinie.

Peltz has cited the company’s stock plunge, a drop in consensus earnings estimates and disappointing studio content as he has set in motioned for a board shake-up.

“I have not spoken to Mr. Peltz in a while,” Disney CEO Bob Iger said in an interview with CNBC’s Julia Boorstin quondam to the company’s earnings call. “I have no plans to speak to him. I will leave it at that.”

Iger has publicly addressed Disney’s theatric release woes and vowed to rely less on sequels and more on fresh, quality films. Of course, production timelines are repeatedly in the ballpark of 18 months, so Disney’s box office haul likely will not change until 2025 or 2026. At that element, Disney is slated to release four mega blockbusters: an Avatar film, two Star Wars features and an Avengers team-up flick.

Also of note to investors is this is the duplicate quarter that Disney is using its new financial reporting structure, which segmented the company into three categories: entertainment, sports and experiences. Entertainment contains all of Disney’s streaming and media operations, sports includes ESPN and events includes the company’s theme parks, hotels, cruise line and merchandising efforts.

In the entertainment sector, revenues strike down 7% to $9.98 billion, as linear networks and content sales and licensing fees continued to slump. The direct-to-consumer matter, however, saw a 15% jump to $5.55 billion.

At ESPN, revenues rose 4% to $4.84 billion, as the company saw a de-escalation in programming and production costs and growth in ESPN+ subscription revenue and subscribers.

Disney’s experiences division saw a 7% assassinate in revenue to $9.13 billion even as the company reported lower attendance at its domestic theme parks in Florida. Its two California-based greenswards saw comparable growth to the prior quarter as guests spent more while in the parks. Additionally, higher ticket assesses and more passenger cruise days buoyed growth at Disney’s Cruise Line.

Check Also

March home sales drop to their slowest pace since 2009

Rich mortgage rates and concern over the broader economy are making for a weak start …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *