Disney Profit Misses Estimates as Streaming Costs Rise, Ad Sales Soften

Walt Disney Co. shares fell to their lowest level since the early days of the pandemic after the entertainment giant said it’s evaluating costs and seeking “meaningful efficiencies” after earnings missed Wall Street estimates.

(Bloomberg) — Walt Disney Co. shares fell to their lowest level since the early days of the pandemic after the entertainment giant said it’s evaluating costs and seeking “meaningful efficiencies” after earnings missed Wall Street estimates.

Losses at the company’s direct-to-consumer arm, driven by its Disney+ streaming service, more than doubled to $1.47 billion in its fiscal fourth quarter, due to higher programming expenses and the cost of global expansion. Weakness in cable-television advertising revenue also hurt Disney’s performance. 

Sales, at $20.2 billion, came up about $1 billion short of analysts’ projections. Earnings, excluding certain items, fell to 30 cents share, missing the average estimate of 51 cents from analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Disney shares fell as much as 12% on Wednesday to a low of $88.25. It’s the biggest intraday stock drop and lowest the shares have traded since March 2020.

Chief Executive Officer Bob Chapek, nearly three years into that position, faces a pivotal moment where the company’s massive investments in streaming need to pay off. Chapek reiterated his forecast that Disney+ will be profitable in fiscal 2024. He said price increases and the introduction of a new ad-supported version will help the company’s direct-to-consumer unit reach that goal.

“Our financial results this quarter represent a turning point as we reached peak DTC operating losses, which we expect to decline going-forward,” Chapek told investors on a call Tuesday.

Although spending on content will remain near $30 billion next year, the company is seeking to reduce expenses in other areas of its business, such as marketing. Core Disney+ subscribers will increase only slightly in the first quarter, Disney said, before accelerating in the second quarter. The company forecast high-single-digit growth in operating income and sales for fiscal 2023.

 

The company beat expectations for streaming subscriber additions in the fourth quarter, signing up 12.1 million new customers at its flagship Disney+ service alone. Total subscribers, including those for its Hulu and ESPN+ products, rose to almost 236 million. Those numbers come after rival Netflix Inc. beat internal forecasts as well as Wall Street expectations in the most recent quarter, adding 2.41 million customers. 

 

Disney has made streaming a major focus for growth. On Dec. 8, the company will begin selling the ad-supported version of Disney+ at a monthly price of $8. The price of its ad-free version will jump 38% to $11 per month. The company reported a decline in its average revenue per Disney+ subscriber, as more customers subscribed through a discounted bundle with the company’s other services. The bundled offering now makes up about 40% of domestic subscribers.

“Our experts say that ad-tiers can be more profitable for Disney+ than its traditional tier,” Third Bridge analyst Jamie Lumley said, adding that “Disney is in a better position than Netflix” because of existing ads infrastructure through Hulu and ABC.

Profit at Disney’s theme-park unit more than doubled to $1.51 billion, due to higher attendance and increased guest spending, but fell short of what analysts were projecting. Hurricane Ian reduced operating income by $65 million.

“The parks number is much lower than we expected,” Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Geetha Ranganathan said on Bloomberg TV. Inflation could be crimping consumer demand in what has been a strong growth area.

“These results don’t look that rosy anymore,” Ranganathan said.

Revenue from Disney’s traditional TV business, which includes networks such as ESPN and ABC, fell 5% in part due to ad sales weakness. Profit rose 6% to $1.74 billion due to lower programming costs in cable TV, particularly for sports. Disney reduced the number of Major League Baseball games it aired this season under a new contract.

(Updates shares in first and fourth paragraphs.)

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