Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Growth at Comcast buoyed by revenue from theme parks

- TALI ARBEL

NEW YORK — One of Comcast’s fastest-growing businesses hasn’t been selling cable or Internet subscripti­ons — or making movies and TV shows, or selling TV ads. It’s been theme parks.

Since 2011, when Comcast first took over NBCUnivers­al’s film and TV studios, cable and broadcast networks, TV stations and theme parks, the parks have been one of its biggest revenue drivers. It was, of course, a smaller business to begin with, leaving more room for growth, but that isn’t the whole explanatio­n.

Cable subscripti­ons dropped for a decade before growth resumed last year (although cable revenue still inexorably ticked higher). TV advertisin­g faces a threat from digital giants Facebook and Google, who can target ads precisely to users. Films are an up-and-down business.

And the company is bullish on the parks. “We’re expecting a big year,” said Comcast Chief Executive Officer Brian Roberts at an investor conference in February. It continues to spend on them. NBCUnivers­al’s capital expenditur­es will rise 10 percent this year to about $1.6 billion, largely because of parks investment.

The Universal parks in Orlando, Fla., and Hollywood, Calif., were “probably the last thing on our list” in acquiring NBCUnivers­al, the

entertainm­ent conglomera­te’s head, Steve Burke, recounted at a September 2011 investor conference.

Disney was then the reigning king of theme parks. But the Florida Universal park had opened a Harry Potter attraction in 2010, before Comcast took control, and it was a success. Since then Comcast has spent billions of dollars refurbishi­ng and expanding its park empire, moving into Asia and adding rides and attraction­s to its California and Florida destinatio­ns.

That included a second Harry Potter area in Florida and opening a Wizarding World of Harry Potter last April in California. This latest witches-and-wizards attraction “shattered attendance records,” the company said in January. Harry Potter is also in the Osaka, Japan, park, of which Comcast bought a stake in 2015.

Parks revenue has grown roughly 150 percent from 2011 to 2016, and it contribute­d more profit than the film unit and broadcast TV — NBC and Telemundo — last year.

In the first quarter, parks revenue grew 9 percent to $1.12 billion, and a key profit measure rose 6 percent to $397 million.

Harry Potter attendance kept rising in Orlando, and visitors to the parks overall spent more.

Comcast, the biggest U.S. cable company, is doing quite well stateside.

It added video and Internet customers in the JanuaryMar­ch quarter and will offer a wireless service for its customers soon. It stands to benefit from a deregulato­ry attitude in Washington, including the likely upending of net-neutrality rules opposed by broadband providers.

Comcast’s net income rose 20 percent to $2.57 billion, or 53 cents per share, in the most recent quarter; revenue grew 9 percent to $20.46 billion.

To reach internatio­nal markets, however, Comcast relies on NBCUnivers­al.

Universal’s big-budget movies do well overseas — the eighth movie in The Fast and the Furious series is expected to cross $1 billion in global box office this week; film revenue soared 43 percent to $1.98 billion during the January-March period.

The theme parks also provide Comcast with internatio­nal customers.

Comcast is spending $2.3 billion to take full control of

Universal Studios in Japan.

There’s also a Universal attraction in Singapore that Comcast doesn’t own, and it has a Beijing theme park that’s long been in the works with Chinese state-owned companies.

“We’ve used this to be a global platform for us,” Roberts has said.

Disney is busily upgrading its parks to compete for consumers’ dollars.

In Asia, there are already Disney-brand parks in Tokyo, Shanghai and Hong Kong. Disney also has iconic destinatio­ns in California and Florida.

Attraction­s based on Marvel Comics superheroe­s and the James Cameron blockbuste­r film Avatar are opening in May in California and Florida parks, respective­ly. And Star Wars attraction­s at the California and Florida parks are pegged for 2019.

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