Los Angeles Times

THEME PARKS GIVE FIRM A BOOST

NBCUnivers­al sees revenue, adjusted earnings climb in the first quarter.

- By Meg James

Universal was ready for its close-up in the first quarter of the year with strong performanc­es from several films, including “Get Out,” “Fifty Shades Darker” and “Sing,” while visitors flocked to the Harry Potter attraction at the company’s Los Angeles-area theme park.

NBCUnivers­al set a high bar for rival media companies, with revenue up 14.7% to nearly $7.9 billion in the January-through-March quarter compared with the same period a year ago. Adjusted earnings increased 24.4% to $2 billion; standout performers included the company’s Universal Filmed Entertainm­ent unit and its Universal Studios theme parks.

But Wall Street was interested in whether labor tenquarter. sions in Hollywood could interrupt NBCUnivers­al’s momentum. The Writers Guild of America has voted to give its leaders the ability to call for a strike as soon as next week if the union is unable to reach a new contract with a group representi­ng producers, which includes NBCUnivers­al.

“Strikes aren’t good for anybody,” NBCUnivers­al Chief Executive Steve Burke said on an earnings call Thursday morning, adding that he was optimistic a deal would be reached.

NBCUnivers­al is wholly owned by cable television giant Comcast Corp. Since the Philadelph­ia company acquired NBCUnivers­al from General Electric Co. six years ago, Burke and his team have more than doubled operating profit at NBCUnivers­al to more than $8 billion.

NBCUnivers­al continued its gains in the first quarter, with its four business segments each delivering strong results.

Universal’s film unit generated $1.98 billion in revenue, up 43% from the same period last year, which saw fewer box-office hits. The film studio’s adjusted earnings jumped 120% to $368 million.

Attendance was up at Universal theme parks in California, Florida and Japan; their revenue jumped 9% to $1.12 billion. Adjusted earnings (before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on) rose 6% to $397 million.

Television also improved its financial picture. Revenue at the NBC broadcast group, which includes the flagship network, television stations and Spanish-language Telemundo, grew 5.9% to $2.2 billion in the The results were boosted by increases in retransmis­sion consent fees paid by pay-TV operators. Adjusted earnings were up 13.4% to $322 million.

Revenue rose 7.6% at NBCUnivers­al’s cable networks group to $2.64 billion. Adjusted earnings at the unit — which includes USA Network, Syfy, Bravo, E!, NBC Sports and MSNBC — jumped 16.8% to $1.1 billion. Cable channels remain NBCUnivers­al’s most profitable division, and MSNBC commentato­r Rachel Maddow helped that network in prime time.

The only sour note was a 2.9% decline in cable channel advertisin­g, caused by lower ratings at the general entertainm­ent channels.

Overall, Comcast’s revenue rose 8.9% to $20.5 billion. Net income was $2.56 billion, or 53 cents a share, up from $2.13 billion, or 43 cents, in the year-earlier period.

Analysts projected earnings of 44 cents a share on $20.1 billion in revenue, according to FactSet.

“I couldn’t be more pleased with the performanc­e of our company and the trajectory that we’re going,” Comcast Chairman and Chief Executive Brian Roberts said on the call.

Comcast shares rose 2%, or 80 cents, to $39.59.

meg.james@latimes.com

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? THE HARRY POTTER attraction at Universal Studios, above, helped NBCUnivers­al’s revenue rise 14.7%. The company, wholly owned by Comcast, also benefited from movies including “Get Out” and “Sing.”
Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE HARRY POTTER attraction at Universal Studios, above, helped NBCUnivers­al’s revenue rise 14.7%. The company, wholly owned by Comcast, also benefited from movies including “Get Out” and “Sing.”

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