Montreal Gazette

NHL deal a win despite losses

Québecor says it will take five years to turn a profit on Rogers agreement

- ROSS MAROWITS

Québecor says its deal with Rogers Communicat­ions to broadcast NHL hockey games has been an early success even though the venture will take up to five years before it is profitable.

Since adding the games to its schedule this season, including the Montreal Canadiens matches on Saturday night, TVA Sports has increased its subscriber base to two million, up 25 per cent in a year.

“As a result, TVA Sports has quickly become a destinatio­n of choice for advertiser­s seeking to reach out to the French speaking sports fans,” Québecor chief executive officer Pierre Dion said Wednesday during a conference call after reporting 2014 results.

The Montreal- based company signed an $ 800- million deal in 2013 with Rogers to broadcast NHL games over 12 years starting with the current season.

The Canadiens sit atop the NHL’s eastern conference and are tied with Nashville and Anaheim for the overall league lead, on track for a spot in the playoffs.

Dion said more subscriber­s will be drawn to the network as playoffs get underway in April. As the exclusive French- language playoff broadcaste­r, Québecor sees TVA Sports attracting additional viewers to the 80 to 90 playoff games and 2016 World Cup soccer.

Until that subscriber base fills up however, the $ 65 million a year in programmin­g costs will weigh on the earnings of Québecor’s media business.

Overall, Québecor swung to a $ 59.5- million loss in the fourth quarter from a $ 300,000 profit a year earlier as it absorbed one- time charges and additional programmin­g costs.

Excluding a series of one- time charges such as restructur­ing and the impairment of assets, its continuing operations earned $ 50.3 million of adjusted income in the three months ended Dec. 31, up 3.5 per cent from a year earlier. The results excluded its English- lan- guage daily newspapers and other businesses, mostly outside Quebec, that are being sold to Postmedia for $ 316 million.

Québecor said it expects a decision on the sale from the Competitio­n Bureau on the sale in the next few weeks.

The adjusted profit amounted to 41 cents per basic share, up from 39 cents in the fourth quarter of 2013.

Overall revenue grew 2.9 per cent to $ 989.4 million.

However, Québecor’s profit and revenue were below analyst estimates of 52 cents per share of earnings and $ 1.09 billion of revenue.

Dion said the decision to sell the English- l anguage newspapers, 74 Quebec weeklies and abandon door- to- door distributi­on of community newspapers and flyers in Quebec helps Québecor to gain credit from its telecommun­ications operations, including its expanding wireless network.

For the full year, Québecor lost $ 30.1 million, down from a loss of $ 288.6 million in 2013.

However, adjusted profits from continuing operations increased 14 per cent to $ 202.3 million or $ 1.64 per share, from $ 177.3 million or $ 1.43 per share a year earlier. Revenues were $ 3.72 billion.

TVA Sports has quickly become a destinatio­n of choice for advertiser­s seeking to reach out to the Frenchspea­king sports fans

 ?? PAU L C H I A S S O N / T H E C A NA D I A N P R E S S F I L E ?? NHL commission­er Gary Bettman, with Brian Mulroney, chairman of the board of Québecor, and former hockey great Yvan Cournoyer helped launch TVA’s broadcasts of NHL games in Bouchervil­le. Québecor says its subscriber base jumped 25 per cent in a year.
PAU L C H I A S S O N / T H E C A NA D I A N P R E S S F I L E NHL commission­er Gary Bettman, with Brian Mulroney, chairman of the board of Québecor, and former hockey great Yvan Cournoyer helped launch TVA’s broadcasts of NHL games in Bouchervil­le. Québecor says its subscriber base jumped 25 per cent in a year.

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