Comcast
tops estimates; posts video subscriber gains
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[April 27, 2016]
By Malathi Nayak
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Comcast Corp on
Wednesday posted better-than-expected results, bolstered by the biggest
first-quarter gain in pay-TV customers in nine years and growth in its
business services, high-speed Internet and entertainment units.
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The largest U.S. cable operator said total revenue rose 5.3 percent
to $18.8 billion, beating analysts' consensus estimate of $18.64
billion according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Net income attributable to Comcast grew 3.6 percent from the
year-ago period to $2.13 billion, or 87 cents per share, the company
said in a statement.
Profit of 84 cents per share, excluding gains from sales and
acquisition-related items, surpassed analysts' consensus estimate of
79 cents.
Comcast, based in Philadelphia, added 53,000 pay-TV subscribers in
the quarter ended March 31, after losing 8,000 in the year-ago
period.
The number of new television subscribers is closely followed on Wall
Street as pay-TV operators fight to keep customers from switching to
lower-priced video streaming services such as Netflix Inc <NFLX.O>
and Hulu.
Comcast has been investing to improve customer service and enhance
features of its set-top boxes and TV interface to retain and attract
subscribers. The company has also rolled out slimmer bundles of TV
channels and online video streaming services.
Comcast and rivals such as satellite-TV operators Dish Network Corp
and AT&T Inc have raised 2016 rates to cover rising costs to provide
broadcast programs and sports content.
Comcast's business services unit posted $1.3 billion in revenue, up
18 percent from a year ago.
Comcast, which is also the largest U.S. high-speed Internet
provider, said Internet revenue grew 8 percent to $3.3 billion, as
customer additions rose 8 percent to 438,000. The gain was the
biggest for any first quarter in four years.
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The NBCUniversal division, which includes news cable networks, NBC,
Telemundo, film studios and theme parks, posted a 4 percent rise in
overall revenue to $6.9 billion.
Revenue at its Universal film studio, which did not have major
releases in the first quarter, totaled $167 million, down 43.1
percent from a year earlier when its "Fifty Shades of Grey" turned
out to be a blockbuster.
Revenue at Universal theme parks soared 53.6 percent to $375
million, boosted by Harry Potter attractions and the addition of
Universal Studios Japan. Comcast bought a majority stake in the
Japanese studio for $1.5 billion in September.
Advertising revenue at cable networks were unchanged from a year ago
at $851 million. Ad revenue at broadcast networks dipped 17.2
percent from a year to 1.3 billion.
Shares of Comcast closed at $61.05 on Nasdaq on Tuesday.
(Reporting by Malathi Nayak; Editing by Richard Chang)
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