HBO Max/HBO Gain 3 Million Subscribers in Q1, WarnerMedia Profit Pinched by Streaming Investments in Final Quarter With AT&T

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AT&T, in its Wall Street swan song as an entertainment entity, reported solid subscriber pickup for HBO Max and HBO for the first quarter of 2022. The now-divested WarnerMedia unit was again a drag on profitability because of continued investments in HBO Max and the launch of CNN+ — reflecting a key reason AT&T spun it off.

WarnerMedia is now part of Warner Bros. Discovery, after AT&T divested the media division and officially merged it with Discovery earlier this month. But for the first three months of the year, WarnerMedia was still part of AT&T.

Worldwide, HBO Max and HBO added 3.0 million subscribers sequentially (and 12.8 million subscribers year over year) to end Q1 with 76.8 million total. That included 48.6 million domestic HBO Max and HBO subscribers, up 1.8 million from the prior quarter. The 3 million quarterly net gain for HBO Max/HBO matched that in the year-earlier period.

The growth for HBO Max/HBO stands in contrast to Netflix’s Q1 results reported earlier this week — whose subscriber growth slammed into a wall, missing expectations with a surprise loss of 200,000 subs.

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WarnerMedia revenue for the first quarter was $8.7 billion, up 2.5% versus the year-ago quarter, driven by higher subscription revenues (up 4.4% to $4 billion, primarily thanks to HBO Max) and higher content and other revenues. Ad revenue was $1.7 billion, down 3% year over year due to a decline in linear TV audiences and “tough comparisons” to the prior-year political environment, partially offset by higher sports.

WarnerMedia’s operating income was $1.3 billion, down 32.7% year over year, which AT&T said was a result of “continued investments in HBO Max” as well as in the launch of CNN+ — the news cabler’s new subscription-streaming service — as well as incremental ad-revenue sharing costs.

The HBO Max/HBO monthly domestic subscriber average revenue per unit (ARPU) was $11.24 in Q1, up from $11.15 in the prior quarter but down from $11.72 in Q1 2021.

For AT&T, shedding WarnerMedia — ending its ill-fated run in the entertainment biz — has reverted the company into a pureplay communications provider. Rather than needing to invest billions in streaming content, the telco going forward is plowing its capital into 5G and fiber deployments. In announcing the Q1 results, AT&T chief John Stankey touted the company’s biggest first-quarter postpaid phone net adds in more than a decade.