News Corp said revenue declined 7.8% in its latest quarter as strong digital gains at Wall Street Journal parent Dow Jones were offset by weakness at its foreign-news and entertainment operations.
The New York-based media company, which also owns HarperCollins Publishers and many newspapers in the U.K. and Australia, swung to a loss of $730 million from a profit of $10 million a year earlier. Results were dragged down by $1.13 billion in impairment and restructuring charges primarily tied to its pay-TV service in Australia and a coupon company that has been sold.
Revenue fell to $2.27 billion from $2.46 billion for the quarter ended March 31. The slide stemmed in part from the depreciation of the Australian dollar and British pound against the U.S. dollar, a weak print-advertising market and lower subscription revenue at Foxtel, its Australian pay-TV service. The coronavirus pandemic weighed on results in the latter part of the quarter.
Robert Thomson |
Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or Ebitda, fell 2% to $242 million.
News Corp said the Journal experienced a sharp increase in subscriptions since the start of the pandemic. In the past week, the Journal reached approximately 3 million total subscribers, a record—over 2.2 million of which were digital-only subscribers.
As the impact of the coronavirus pandemic deepened, News Corp laid off hundreds of staffers in Australia and the U.S., including at News Corp headquarters in New York; at the New York Post; and at Move Inc., the operator of realtor.com, according to a News Corp spokesman.
Rupert Murdoch |
News Corp’s largest unit, the news and information-services business that includes Journal parent Dow Jones, the Times of London and New York Post, reported a 7.7% decline in revenue to $1.13 billion, reflecting a $25 million, or 2%, negative impact from foreign-currency fluctuations.
Advertising revenue for the news unit declined 14%, while circulation and subscription revenue rose 1% overall. At Dow Jones, circulation revenue was boosted in part by a 20% increase in digital subscribers, as well as subscription-price increases. Dow Jones’s advertising revenue fell 2% in the quarter due to an 18% decline in print advertising, which was partially offset by a 25% growth in digital advertising.
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