Jeff Shell, who leads Comcast Corp.’s NBCUniversal entertainment division, made the prediction Monday at an investor conference. He cited high demand for commercial slots from advertisers, along with the strength and popularity of the U.S. team.
“Depending on how ratings are, it could be our most profitable Olympics in the history of the company,” Shell said at the Credit Suisse conference. The 17-day games are set to begin in late July.
Despite growing concern over the pandemic in Japan, NBC executives are proceeding as if the Olympics will begin as scheduled. The company plans more than 7,000 hours of programming across its broadcast and cable channels, as well as on its Peacock streaming service.
NBC executives are betting that pent-up demand following last summer’s postponement will drive higher viewership and turn around recent ratings declines.
In March 2020, before the pandemic forced the games to be delayed, NBC said it sold more than US$1.25 billion in ads, a record, for the Olympics. The company hasn’t updated sales data for the rescheduled games.
Comcast paid US$4.4 billion for U.S. rights to televise the Olympics from 2014 to 2020, or about US$1.1 billion a year on average. It then agreed to pay another US$7.75 billion to air games from 2021 to 2032, or about US$1.3 billion a year on average.
Though TV viewership has declined during recent Olympic Games, NBC still makes money on the event. The 2016 Olympics in Rio delivered a US$250 million profit.
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