Disney swings to a quarterly loss as pandemic pressures parks, while Disney+ subscribers top estimates

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Disney (DIS) swung to a fourth-quarter loss and saw revenue slide over last year, as the still-raging coronavirus pandemic continued to weigh on its theme parks, studio and media businesses.

However, the results still came in better-than-feared, and the company’s nascent streaming service saw subscribers jump more than anticipated. Shares jumped 5.9% in after-hours trading.

Here were the main results from Disney’s fiscal fourth-quarter report, compared to consensus estimates compiled by Bloomberg:

  • Q4 revenue: $14.71 billion vs. $14.20 billion expected and $19.1 billion year-over-year

  • Q4 adjusted loss per share: 20 cents vs. 73 cents expected versus earnings of $1.07 per share year-over-year

Given the impact of the pandemic on many of Disney’s legacy businesses, investors were poised to focus closely on growth at Disney+, the company’s one-year-old streaming service. Disney reported that Disney+ had brought on 73.7 million subscribers as of the end of the fourth quarter, topping estimates for 65.5 million.

“Even with the disruption caused by COVID-19, we’ve been able to effectively manage our businesses while also taking bold, deliberate steps to position our company for greater long-term growth,” Disney CEO Bob Chapek said in a statement. “The real bright spot has been our direct-to-consumer business, which is key to the future of our company, and on this anniversary of the launch of Disney+ we’re pleased to report that, as of the end of the fourth quarter, the service had more than 73 million paid subscribers – far surpassing our expectations in just its first year.”

Stay-in-place orders during the pandemic have helped boost engagement on Disney’s and other media company’s streaming platforms. While still trailing Netflix’s (NFLX) global subscriber base of nearly 200 million, Disney+’s breakneck growth in part led Disney to announce a major reorganization in October to help get more premium content straight to consumers through streaming.

The new structure put Disney’s creators together under one unit to generate studio, general entertainment and sports content, while leaving another unit to focus on distribution to determine which platform to use to release the content, whether on Disney+ or another of the company’s streaming platforms, on TV or in theaters.

The restructuring was announced after the end of Disney’s fiscal fourth quarter, so any tangible results of these changes will come in the report for the current quarter. However, Disney did release its live-action Mulan during the September quarter directly to Disney+ at $30 per month, circumventing the issue of pandemic-induced theater closures and presaging Disney’s latest strategic direction.