Comcast, led by chairman and CEO Brian Roberts, reported first-quarter results for its entertainment unit and other operations.
Peacock, the NBCUniversal streamer under parent Comcast, narrowed its loss to $215 million, from $639 million in the year-ago period, and overall revenue rose 16 percent to $1.2 billion. Peacock ended March 2024 with 41 million paying subscribers, compared with 36 million for the year-end 2024 quarter and the previous third quarter of 2024.
The media conglomerate reported first quarter overall revenues at $29.8 billion, compared to a year-earlier $30.05 billion. Adjusted EBITDA for the media division rose to $9.5 billion. Comcast beat on a consensus estimate for revenues at $29.68 billion for the first quarter. Net income attributable to Comcast came to $3.37 billion, down 12.5 percent from a year-earlier $3.85 billion.
Revenue for content and experiences, or the conglomerate’s media and entertainment businesses, edged up just under 1 percent to $10.45 billion. NBCUniversal’s studios’ unit revenue rose 3 percent to $2.82 billion, as higher content licensing revenue offset lower theatrical revenue. And the unit’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) jumped in the first quarter to $298 million, compared to a year-earlier $244 million.
Quarterly revenue for the media unit, which includes NBCUniversal, rose 1.1 percent to $$6.44 billion, while the EBITIDA jumped 21.5 percent to $1 billion.
In the broadband division, the cable giant lost 199,000 domestic subscribers, a bigger decline than the 144,173 subscriber loss projected, and a steeper decline than the loss of 65,000 customers in the first quarter of 2024.
Comcast signed up 323,000 new domestic wireless lines, up from the 289,000 subscribers added last year. The conglomerate also continued to lose video subscribers, with customer losses of 427,000 during the latest quarter, which compares to 487,000 lost during the first quarter of 2024, as the cable bundle continues to come under pressure.