Warner Bros. Discovery’s revenue fell in the first quarter and the media company posted a steep loss amid continued softness in the advertising market.
The Wall Street Journal reports the company, formed last year as a result of Discovery’s merger with AT&T’s WarnerMedia, posted revenue of $10.70 billion, below analysts’ expectations of $10.75 billion. Adjusted to reflect year-ago results that account for the merger, revenue fell 6% from a year ago.
In the company’s cable-networks business, revenue fell 12% to $5.58 billion, dragged down by a 15% drop in ad sales. The company said the U.S. audience for entertainment networks and news channels continued to shrink and advertising markets were soft.
David Zaslav |
Chief Executive David Zaslav said the company’s unit that houses its streaming platforms, the direct-to-consumer segment, will be profitable this year, a year earlier than the company had previously forecast. Media companies have broadly been refocusing their streaming businesses on reaching profitability amid mounting losses throughout the sector.
Warner Bros’ direct-to-consumer unit added 1.6 million subscribers during the first three months of the year and posted its first adjusted quarterly profit. The direct-to-consumer segment, which includes HBO, HBO Max and Discovery+, ended the quarter with 97.6 million subscribers.
Revenue from the direct-to-consumer business fell 2% while adjusted earnings, stripping out interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, came to $50 million, compared with a loss of $654 million a year ago.
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