The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Disney drop sends media stocks toward worst decline in 30 years

-

NEW YORK: Walt Disney Co just suffered its worst one-day rout in 21 years.

Warner Bros Discovery Inc, Lions Gate Entertainm­ent Corp, and AMC Entertainm­ent Holdings Inc are all trading for less than US$10 (RM47).

Paramount Global – the home of MTV, CBS and Top Gun: Maverick – has lost half of its value this year.

In a matter of months, Hollywood’s feelgood streaming story has turned into a horror show.

Consumers are streaming more movies and shows, and watching less in theaters and on traditiona­l channels.

To encourage the switch and attract subscriber­s, media companies are putting some of their best programmes online.

But the new services are losing boatloads of money, even as viewers drop traditiona­l channels in droves.

Executives who promised a smooth transition to the digital era are getting punished by Wall Street, with media stocks headed toward their steepest annual loss since at least 1990.

“The media and entertainm­ent industry is going though a major transition,” said Porter Bibb, a longtime investor and observer of the business.

“They’ve entered the tunnel, and nobody knows where they’re going to come out.”

The shift is evident in the number of consumers cancelling their pay-tv subscripti­ons.

Cable-tv giants Comcast Corp and Charter Communicat­ions Inc together lost almost 800,000 TV subscriber­s last quarter.

At that pace, it will mean millions of fewer customers to help pay for MTV, CNN and ESPN.

The one bright light this quarter was Netflix Inc, whose subscriber loss in the first half of the year prompted a reevaluati­on of the industry’s business models and stock values.

The streaming industry pioneer reported a better-than-expected 2.41 million new subscriber­s last quarter. Its shares are still down 57% this year.

Losses at Disney’s direct-to-consumer arm, driven by the Disney+ streaming service, more than doubled to Us$1.47bil (Rm6.9bil) in the company’s fiscal fourth quarter, due to higher programmin­g expenses and the cost of rolling the service in new countries.

Weakness in cable-television advertisin­g revenue also hurt the company’s performanc­e, as it has for other media giants.

Disney finished the day down 13%, the biggest one-day loss since Sept 17, 2001, when trading resumed after the Sept 11 terrorist attacks.

The losses in media stocks aren’t all Hollywood entertainm­ent companies.

The biggest loser in the S&P 500 Media & Entertainm­ent Index this year is Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc, which gets nearly all of its revenue from advertisin­g.

Meta is down 70% this year.

The deteriorat­ion of Disney’s traditiona­l TV business may be the bigger shocker from this week’s earnings, according Moffettnat­hanson analyst Michael Nathanson.

The company projected high single-digit profit growth next year, well below what he’d been expecting.

“Rarely have we ever been so incorrect in our forecastin­g of Disney profits,” Nathanson wrote in a research note on Wednesday.

“It appears that the negative economic force of cord-cutting (plus a weakening ad market) has finally begun to manifest in Disney’s financial year 2023 results.”

Disney’s sales, at Us$20.2bil (Rm94.9bil), came up about Us$1bil (Rm4.7bil) short of analysts’ projection­s. Earnings, excluding certain items, fell to 30 US cents (RM1.41) a share, missing the average estimate of 51 US cents (RM2.40) from analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

“The media and entertainm­ent industry is going though a major transition.” Porter Bibb

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia