The Walt Disney Company reported fiscal second-quarter earnings that beat analysts’ expectations on Tuesday.
Here’s how the company did compared with what Wall Street expected:
- Adjusted earnings: $1.84 per share vs. $1.70 per share forecast by Thomson Reuters
- Revenue: $14.55 billion vs. $14.11 billion forecast by Thomson Reuters
Shares of Disney initially gained more than 1 percent in after-hours trade.
Disney said that the success of Marvel’s “Black Panther” helped drive the 21 percent year-over-year revenue growth for its studio entertainment business.
In the current quarter, Marvel’s “Avengers: Infinity War” had the biggest opening weekend of all time, both domestically and globally. The latest installment of the Avengers franchise crossed $1 billion at the global box office in just 11 days. That pace is faster than any other movie in history.
In a Tuesday call with analysts, Chairman and CEO Bob Iger said Disney “delivered nine of the top 10 biggest domestic box office openings of all time — all of them released within the last six years.”
Disney’s studios saw $2.45 billion in revenue for the quarter. Analysts had forecast revenue of about $2.19 billion for the segment, according to a StreetAccount consensus estimate.
Here’s what each business unit reported in revenue compared with what analysts expected, according to StreetAccount consensus estimates:
- Media and networks: $6.14 billion vs. $6.09 billion expected
- Parks and resorts: $4.88 billion vs. $4.69 billion expected
- Studio: $2.45 billion vs. $2.19 billion expected
- Consumer and interactive: $1.08 billion vs. $1.14 billion expected
Disney’s earnings report comes after its blockbuster deal to acquire many parts of Twenty-First Century Fox. The boards of both companies asked longtime CEOIger to stay on through the end of 2021.
If completed, Disney would get Fox’s television and film studios, regional sports networks, cable channels National Geographic and FX. The entertainment giant would also grow its international presence through Asian pay-TV operator Star India and a stake in Sky TV. It would also get Fox’s stake in Hulu. That plus its existing position would give Disney a controlling stake in the streaming service.
On Monday, CNBC reported that Comcast plans to make an all-cash bid for Fox if the Justice Department approves AT&T’s acquisition of Time Warner. Comcast’s offer would top Disney’s and include a full acquisition of Sky, sources said.
Iger declined to comment to CNBC on Comcast’s reported plans, saying he didn’t want to speculate on the matter. He said, however, that he’s confident that Disney’s deal with Fox will close.
CNBC previously reported that fear of being outspent on content content was one of the main reasons Rupert Murdoch decided to sell those Fox assets. Tech giants like Netflix and Amazon have poured money into their streaming services, making the content bidding wars increasingly competitive.
Disney’s proposed acquisition of Fox assets would broaden the company’s content portfolio, making it more competitive.
Fox is slated to report earnings after the market close on Wednesday.
Shares of Disney have fallen about 6 percent so far this year.
This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.
Disclosure: Comcast is the owner of NBCUniversal, parent company of CNBC and CNBC.com. Comcast is a also a co-owner of Hulu.
Source: Tech CNBC
Disney gains after earnings beat