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Disney returns to profit as streaming success offsets pandemic-hit parks

Reuters

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Disney returns to profit as streaming success offsets pandemic-hit parks

REOPENING. Tokyo Disneyland resort staff members greet visitors during the reopening of Tokyo Disneyland along with Tokyo DisneySea in Urayasu, Japan, July 1, 2020.

File photo by Issei Kato/Reuters

Investors overlook a 53% decline in park revenue in the 4th quarter of 2020 and welcome Disney+ streaming reaching 94.9 million subscribers

Walt Disney Company swung to a surprise quarterly profit on Thursday, February 11, as The Mandalorian and Soul lifted its fast-growing streaming business, outweighing pandemic worries about its hobbled theme park operations.

Investors overlooked a 53% decline in park revenue in the quarter and welcomed Disney+ streaming reaching 94.9 million subscribers. Shares rose 3.1% to $194 after they closed at an all-time high in regular trade.

The Star Wars-inspired Mandalorian series and Pixar’s animated Soul movie helped position the year-old Disney+ as a credible threat to the dominance of Netflix in the streaming video wars.

Including Hulu and ESPN+, Disney’s paid streaming membership topped 146 million.

“Disney+ has been a massive success and is a testament to Disney’s brand equity and expertise in storytelling,” eMarketer analyst Eric Haggstrom said. “This has been one of the most successful consumer product launches in recent memory.”

The company posted earnings of 32 cents per share for October through December. Wall Street had expected a loss of 41 cents per share, according to the average forecast of analysts surveyed by Refinitiv.

Quarterly revenue fell to $16.25 billion from $20.88 billion a year earlier, but was still above analysts’ average estimate of about $15.93 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

During the pandemic “we have made significant changes while finding new and innovative ways to conduct our businesses,” chief executive Bob Chapek said on a conference call with analysts. “But at the same time, we have chartered a course for an even more deliberate and aggressive [streaming] push.”

As the coronavirus pandemic drags on, Disney’s theme parks in California, Hong Kong, and Paris remain closed and others have limited attendance to allow for social distancing. The company expects Disneyland in California and Disney Paris to remain closed through March and hopes its park in Hong Kong can reopen sometime before April, chief financial officer Christine McCarthy said.

The movie studio has delayed several major releases as many theaters remain shut. While the company has moved some films to streaming, Chapek said Disney still plans for Marvel action movie Black Widow to be released in theaters. The film starring Scarlett Johansson is currently scheduled to debut May 7.

The media and entertainment distribution unit, which includes streaming, the movie studio, and traditional TV networks, reported operating income of $1.5 billion, a 2% decline from a year earlier.

At the parks and consumer products division, operating loss from the parks and consumer products business hit $119 million, compared with a profit of $2.52 billion a year earlier.

The closures and reduced operations cost about $2.6 billion, Disney estimated.

Looking ahead, the company said it expected costs to comply with government regulations and to implement safety measures at parks and in TV and film production to reach $1 billion in fiscal 2021.

The direct-to-consumer segment, which houses Disney+, reported an operating loss of $466 million, compared with an operating loss of $1.11 billion in the year-earlier quarter. – Rappler.com

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