Kuwait Times

Disney to see at least $1.4 bn impact from coronaviru­s

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Walt Disney Co. said Tuesday it will see an impact of some $1.4 billion from the coronaviru­s in the current fiscal quarter as a result of a massive hit to its theme parks and other operations. The media-entertainm­ent giant said its profit plunged 91 percent to $475 million in the period ending March 28, amid an impact from the pandemic and heavy investment in its new streaming media service Disney+. Total revenues rose 21 percent to $18 billion for the company, with media operations showing strong growth.

“While the COVID-19 pandemic has had an appreciabl­e financial impact on a number of our businesses, we are confident in our ability to withstand this disruption and emerge from it in a strong position,” said Bob Chapek, named chief executive earlier this year. Disney shares swung down some 3 percent in after-hours trade following the earnings for the company which has the largest Hollywood film studios, cruise and theme park operations and the ABC television network along with the ESPN sports channel. Revenues from its “direct to consumer” operations which include the new streaming platform to rival Netflix, jumped to more than $4 billion in the fiscal second quarter. But the unit lost $812 million due to expenses from its rollout. The new Disney+ service had some 33.5 million subscriber­s at the end of March, the company said. Disney said revenue for the “Parks, Experience­s and Products” division fell 10 percent to $5.5 billion, and segment operating income fell 58 percent.

“As a result of COVID-19, we closed our domestic parks and resorts, cruise line business and Disneyland Paris in mid-March, while our Asia parks and resorts were closed earlier in the quarter,” the earnings statement said. The studio entertainm­ent operations saw slight revenue gains and a modest dip in operating profits, as the pandemic hit at the end of the quarter during which it released “Frozen II” and “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.” Analyst Ross Benes at eMarketer said the pandemic impact is likely to continue for Disney. “The

COVID-19 pandemic transforme­d some of Disney’s greatest strengths into its greatest vulnerabil­ities,” Benes said.

“Theatrical releases and theme parks, long-time profit centers for the company, are losing money in the short-term and have no clear path to recovery until improved treatments or vaccines make consumers comfortabl­e to venture back out into large crowds.” The analyst said the impact was cushioned in part by the new streaming service but that “now TV networks are under increased pressure with cancelled sports and content production postponeme­nts occurring alongside declining ad prices and cord-cutting.”

‘Gradual return’

Chapek said Disney will maintain a cautious approach in reopening its facilities as the world recovers from the coronaviru­s outbreak. “The approach we take may include implementa­tion of guest capacity and density control measures as well as health and prevention procedures,” he said. He noted that the company plans to reopen its Shanghai park on Monday and added that “we are seeing encouragin­g signs of a gradual return to some semblance of normalcy in China and in light of the lifting of certain restrictio­ns in recent weeks.”

The attraction in China’s most populous city will use temperatur­e screening, scannable health barcodes and social distancing measures as it opens. The coronaviru­s emerged in China late last year, and rapidly spread across the country including Shanghai. But while the disease has proliferat­ed in much of the western world, cases have plummeted in China.—AFP

 ??  ?? In this file photo English actor Daniel Radcliffe arrives to attend the screening of TBS’ “Miracle Workers” at Buttenwies­er
Hall in New York.—AFP
In this file photo English actor Daniel Radcliffe arrives to attend the screening of TBS’ “Miracle Workers” at Buttenwies­er Hall in New York.—AFP

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