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Disney streaming turns a profit in first financial report since Iger challenge

Theme parks also continued to do well and the company boosted its outlook for the year.

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The Walt Disney Co swung to a loss in its second quarter because of restructuring and impairment charges, but its adjusted profit topped expectations and its streaming business turned a profit.

Theme parks also continued to do well and the company boosted its outlook for the year.

While Disney said on Tuesday that it foresees its overall streaming business softening in the current quarter due to its platform in India, Disney+Hotstar, it expects its combined streaming businesses to be profitable in the fourth quarter and to be a meaningful future growth driver for the company, with further improvements in profitability in fiscal 2025.

The direct-to-consumer business, which includes Disney+ and Hulu, posted a quarterly operating income of 47 million dollars (£37 million) compared with a loss of 587 million dollars a year earlier.

Revenue rose 13% to 5.64 billion dollars (£4.5 billion).

The King’s Man premiere – London
Bob Iger said that Disney’s streaming business will start cracking down on password sharing (Ian West/PA)

Disney+ core subscribers climbed by more than 6% in the second quarter.

Yet the improved picture for Disney on streaming arrives with its cable business in decline. That segment saw revenue slide 8% in the most recent quarter.

“Looking at our company as a whole, it’s clear that the turnaround and growth initiatives we set in motion last year have continued to yield positive results,” Bob Iger, Disney’s managing director, said in a prepared statement.

Speaking during Disney’s conference call, Iger said that the company plans to add an ESPN tab to Disney+ by the end of the year, a manoeuvre that was previously made with Hulu.

This will give US subscribers access to some live sports and studio programming within the Disney+ app.

ESPN, Fox and Warner Bros Discovery announced plans in February to launch a sports streaming platform in the fall that will include offerings from at least 15 networks and all four major professional sports leagues.

Iger also said that next month the company will start cracking down on password sharing for its streaming service in some markets, and will expand that crackdown globally in September.

While Disney has quality streaming content, Iger said that the company must now focus on building out its technology, similar to what rivals like Netflix have been doing. Those actions, including the password crackdown, are expected to improve profits.

It’s the first financial report since shareholders rebuffed efforts by activist investor Nelson Peltz to claim seats on the company board last month, standing firmly behind Iger as he tries to energise the company after a rough stretch.

Thomas Monteiro, senior analyst at Investing.com, said that some Disney investors may have been expecting more from the quarterly report, but that “the company has tilted its operation back to its core business model, which is more conservative by nature.”

Mr Monteiro was focused on the company’s efforts to turn its streaming division profitable.

“The big surprise of the day came on the streaming front, which finally managed to bring profits – way ahead of predictions – amid Hollywood’s massive strike period,” Mr Monteiro said.

“This indicates that perhaps the more global, low-production-cost Netflix-like model is probably the way to go in an operation that needs to rethink its growth expectations as a whole.”

Disneyland Expansion
Disney said its theme parks revenue has risen 7% (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

But Disney acknowledged wrestling with higher costs at its theme parks during the quarter due to inflation.

The company said that there was increased spending by guests at Walt Disney World due to higher ticket prices, while Disneyland guests boosted their spending due to an increase in ticket prices and hotel room rates.

Overseas, Hong Kong Disneyland benefited from the opening of World of Frozen, a section of the park that includes rides based on the popular Frozen movies, in November.

Similar to many tourist destinations, Disney is continuing to adjust to post-pandemic travel.

“While consumers continue to travel in record numbers, and we are still seeing healthy demand, we are seeing some evidence of a global moderation from peak post-Covid travel,” chief financial officer Hugh Johnston said during the call.

For the period ended March 30, Disney lost 20 million dollars, or a penny per share.

That compares with a profit of 1.27 billion dollars, or 69 cents per share, a year ago.

Restructuring and impairment charges surged to 2.05 billion dollars from 152 million dollars in the prior-year period.

Adjusted earnings, which stripped out the charges and other items, were 1.21 dollars per share, easily beating the 1.12 dollars per share that analysts polled by Zacks Investment Research predicted.

Disney said that due to its second-quarter performance, it now has a full-year adjusted earnings per share growth target of 25%. It previously predicted growth of at least 20%.

Disneyland Union
Last month, character performers at Disneyland in California and the union organising them, Actors’ Equity Association, said they had filed a petition for union recognition (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Content sales and licensing revenue tumbled 40% because Disney did not release any significant movie titles during the second quarter as compared with the prior-year period, which included the release of Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.

The year-ago results were also helped by the ongoing performance of Avatar: The Way of Water, which was released in December 2022.

Shares fell more than 8% in morning trading.

In February The Walt Disney Co said that it was making “significant cost reductions” and reduced its selling, general and other operations expenses by 500 million dollars in its first quarter.

The company cut thousands of jobs in 2023.

In March, allies of Governor Ron DeSantis and Disney reached a settlement agreement in a state court fight over how Walt Disney World would be developed in the future following the takeover of the theme park resort’s government by the Florida governor.

Last month, character performers at Disneyland in California and the union organising them, Actors’ Equity Association, said they had filed a petition for union recognition.

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