FILE - In this Feb. 8, 2011 file photo, people stand near the entrance to the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank , Calif. The Walt Disney Co.'s profit for the third-quarter beat analyst estimates but revenue came up short due to unchanged revenue at its movie studio despite a surge in profit from "The Avengers." ( AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
FILE - In this Feb. 8, 2011 file photo, people stand near the entrance to the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank , Calif. The Walt Disney Co.'s profit for the third-quarter beat analyst estimates but revenue came up short due to unchanged revenue at its movie studio despite a surge in profit from "The Avengers." ( AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
FILE - In this May 4, 2012 file photo, writer and director, Joss Whedon, from the film "The Avengers," poses for a portrait in Beverly Hills, Calif. Disney Executive Officer, Robert Iger, said on Tuesday, August 7, 2012, during a company earnings call, that Whedon is returning to write and direct the sequel adapted from the Marvel Comics tales. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles, File)
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? A box office blast from "The Avengers" and an enthusiastic response to the revamp of Disneyland's California Adventure theme park helped The Walt Disney Co. reap a better-than-expected third-quarter profit.
Disney's movie studio was behind much of the earnings gain as studio profit surged to $313 million from $49 million a year ago, backed by upbeat ticket sales to movies like "The Avengers" and "Brave." However, revenue missed expectations as studio revenue was roughly flat at $1.63 billion, much less than the $1.77 billion analysts expected. Smaller revenue from DVD and Blu-ray disc sales than a year ago was a key factor in the miss.
CEO Bob Iger said attendance at Disney California Adventure accounted for about half of the visits to its Anaheim, Calif., parks, up from just a quarter previously. The success comes on the heels of the June unveiling of a $1 billion-plus overhaul that included the addition of an area based on the movie "Cars." Total revenue in the parks and resorts segment gained 9 percent to $3.44 billion, benefiting from a full quarter of operations of its newest cruise ship, the Disney Fantasy, higher Disneyland attendance and higher ticket prices. Last year, parks results were hurt by the earthquake and tsunami in Japan.
Net income for the three months ended June 30 rose 24 percent to $1.83 billion, or $1.01 per share. That beat the 93 cents per share expected by analysts polled by FactSet. Revenue rose 4 percent to $11.09 billion, well short of the $11.32 billion expected by analysts.
Disney took issue with the analysts' expectations, which it said detracted from its highest quarterly earnings ever. The company does not issue formal earnings guidance.
"The so-called revenue miss is a miss of estimates by people who, in my opinion, don't have the ability to see or estimate what our revenue was going to be, certainly accurately, or as accurately as we do," Iger said in an interview with Fox Business Network that is set to air Wednesday.
Iger told analysts on a conference call that he expects the fortunes of Disney's movie studio to get better.
"We feel good about our slate," he said. "We do believe were going to continue to improve returns on that business led by the franchises and the big brand power of our films."
Iger added that Joss Whedon would return to write and direct the sequel to "The Avengers," the No. 3 highest grossing film of all time, as well as develop a TV show for broadcast network ABC. Although the sequel's release date isn't set, Disney plans to release a slew of sequels featuring Avengers characters including "Iron Man 3" in May, "Thor: The Dark World" in November, and "Captain America: The Winter Soldier" in April 2014.
The Burbank, Calif.-based studio is in the midst of a turnaround in an attempt to erase a big loss on "John Carter," a film that was shepherded to the big screen by former studio chairman Rich Ross. In May, Disney hired former Warner Bros. president Alan Horn as studio chair to improve results.
Anthony DiClemente, an analyst with Barclays, said the outperformance by the studio and high expectations for its future line-up are valuable because movie profits are usually unpredictable hit-or-miss affairs.
"It's the gift that's going to keep on giving," he said. "The more optimistic view is to look at this studio-driven beat as being higher quality than it would normally be."
Revenue from TV businesses such as ESPN and ABC rose 3 percent to $5.08 billion, largely in line with forecasts. Ad revenue at ESPN rose in the "mid-teen" percentages thanks to higher prices, sales volume and bigger audiences. Consumer products revenue grew 8 percent to $742 million. The company's interactive games division saw revenue fall 22 percent to $196 million as there were fewer significant titles compared to a year ago.
Disney's stock fell 44 cents to $49.29 in after-hours trading, having closed the regular session up 16 cents at $49.81 before the report.
Shares are not far off a 52-week high of $50.54 set on July 27.
Associated Presshypertrophic cardiomyopathy kaye stevens michael jordan engaged kid cudi notre dame football breedlove florida state football
No comments:
Post a Comment