Broadband Drags Performance as Comcast Posts Mixed Quarterly Results

Deep News
Jan 29

Comcast reported mixed fourth-quarter results on Thursday, with its profit metric exceeding analyst expectations while revenue fell slightly short of market estimates. Its broadband business once again highlighted the intense competition facing cable companies: Comcast lost 181,000 broadband subscribers in the U.S. during the quarter, although the company stated this loss was offset by growth in international subscribers. The mobile segment remained a bright spot for Comcast, adding 364,000 customers during the quarter, bringing the total subscriber base for this emerging business to over 9.3 million. Due to persistent pressure on the broadband business—primarily from competition with wireless carriers like Verizon and T-Mobile—Comcast announced a strategic shift last year to focus more effort on growing its mobile operations. Comcast Chief Financial Officer Jason Armstrong stated during an investor call on Thursday, "The competitive landscape in broadband remains intense, consistent with prior quarters, but towards the end of Q4, we felt increased competitive pressure from wireless. Against this backdrop, we continue to advance the new market expansion strategy we launched earlier this year." According to data from London Stock Exchange Group, Comcast's performance for the quarter ended December 31 compared to average analyst expectations is as follows: Adjusted earnings per share: $0.84 (expected $0.75) Revenue: $32.31 billion (expected $32.35 billion) Net profit attributable to Comcast shareholders plunged 54.6% year-over-year, dropping to $2.17 billion ($0.60 per share) from $4.78 billion ($1.24 per share) in the same period last year. Excluding the impact of one-time items such as intangible asset amortization, investment-related expenses, and prior-year tax benefits—factors the company said created an unfavorable year-over-year comparison—Comcast's adjusted net income for the quarter was $3.06 billion, or $0.84 per share. The company's adjusted EBITDA decreased by 10% year-over-year to $7.9 billion. Total quarterly revenue grew by over 1% year-over-year to $32.31 billion. Revenue from the Communications & Platforms segment, which encompasses the full suite of Xfinity-branded services including broadband, pay-TV, and mobile, declined by 1% year-over-year to $20.24 billion. Within that, revenue from U.S. broadband services decreased by 1% year-over-year to approximately $6.32 billion. The company attributed the revenue decline to a reduction in broadband subscribers, partially offset by higher average rates. In addition to losing broadband subscribers and gaining mobile users, Comcast also shed 245,000 pay-TV subscribers during the quarter, bringing the total pay-TV subscriber base to 11.27 million. Meanwhile, the Media segment, which includes NBCUniversal, saw revenue increase by 5.5% year-over-year to $7.62 billion. This marks the final earnings report in which NBCUniversal includes the full results of its cable networks portfolio, as Comcast has spun off most of its pay-TV networks—including CNBC and MSNBC—into the publicly traded entity, Versant. Domestic advertising revenue within the media business grew by 1.5% year-over-year, boosting the segment's overall revenue, aided by the acquisition of NBA broadcast rights. NBC's streaming platform, Peacock, added 3 million paying subscribers during the quarter after three consecutive quarters of essentially flat growth, ending the year with 44 million paid subscribers. The streaming service reported a loss of $552 million for the fourth quarter, widening from a loss of $372 million in the same quarter last year. The company stated that the increased loss was partly due to costs associated with the NBA rights deal, which became effective this quarter. Peacock's revenue for the quarter was $1.6 billion, compared to $1.3 billion in the prior-year period. Revenue for Comcast's Universal Studios declined by 7.4% year-over-year to $3.03 billion, impacted by a year-over-year decrease in licensing revenue and theatrical box office receipts. The performance of new releases like "Wicked: Part Two" and "The Black Phone 2" failed to match that of last year's "Wicked" and "Bad Robot." In contrast, Universal's Theme Parks business saw revenue surge by 22% year-over-year to approximately $2.9 billion, bolstered by the opening of the "Epic Universe" park last year.

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