Ottawa Citizen

The Lion King helps Disney profit roar

- LISA RICHWINE and NEHA MALARA

Walt Disney Co’s theme parks unit and a remake of The Lion King boosted quarterly earnings past Wall Street targets on Thursday as costs rose ahead of the launch of the company’s big streaming entertainm­ent bet.

Shares of Disney rose more than three per cent to US$137.54 in after-hours trading.

Disney is trying to transition from a cable TV leader to a powerhouse in the streaming video market dominated by Netflix Inc.

Its family friendly digital entertainm­ent service, Disney+, is set to debut on Tuesday.

Excluding certain items, Disney earned US$1.07 per share for the quarter that ended in September, above average analyst estimates of 95 cents per share, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

Speaking on CNBC television, Disney chief executive Bob Iger said the company had reached a deal to have Disney+ distribute­d on Amazon.com Inc’s Fire TV devices. Investment­s to build streaming media services increased from a year earlier.

The direct-to-consumer and internatio­nal unit reported an operating loss of US$740 million from July through September, up from

US$340 million the previous year, but less than the US$900 million that Disney had forecast.

Disney+ will offer a deep library of TV shows and movies from Disney, Pixar Animation, Marvel Studios, the Star Wars franchise and the National Geographic Channel, plus original programmin­g such as a new High School Musical series and a remake of Lady and the Tramp.

It will cost US$7 per month, less than the US$13 for Netflix’s most popular plan.

The offering is a cornerston­e of a major shift in Disney’s strategy to capture audiences that have ditched cable and migrated online.

The company also offers ESPN+, which streams sports not seen on the ESPN cable channel, and recently took full control of online video service Hulu.

At the same time, Disney is integratin­g film and TV businesses it purchased from 21st Century Fox to feed its digital ambition.

At the theme parks and consumer products unit, operating income rose 17 per cent to US$1.4 billion.

Disney opened a costly Star Wars-themed land at Walt Disney World in Florida during the quarter. A nearly identical section debuted at Disneyland in California in May.

The movie studio benefited from remakes of The Lion King and Aladdin, plus Pixar sequel Toy Story 4.

Profit at the division jumped 79 per cent to nearly US$1.1 billion.

The company’s media networks division posted a three-per-cent decrease in operating income to US$1.8 billion, Disney said.

Sports network ESPN experience­d higher programmin­g, production and marketing costs.

Overall revenue rose 34 per cent to US$19.10 billion, edging past analysts’ average estimate of US$19.05 billion.

Reuters

 ?? DISNEY PICTURES ?? The Lion King remake helped lift profit to nearly US$1.1 billion for Disney’s movie studio.
DISNEY PICTURES The Lion King remake helped lift profit to nearly US$1.1 billion for Disney’s movie studio.

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