Pandemic Takes Toll On Comcast's Q2; Peacock Streaming Service Draws 10M Users
In this Oct. 1, 2019, file photo the symbol for Comcast appears on a screen at the Nasdaq MarketSite, in New York. The coronavirus pandemic took a toll on Comcast in the second quarter as movie theaters closed, theme parks shut down and advertisers cut back. The company reported Thursday, July 30, 2020, that its NBCUniversal TV, film and theme park divisions, as well as its Sky unit in Europe, all suffered steep drops in revenue in the April-June quarter. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)
  • NEW YORK (AP)
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The coronavirus pandemic took a toll on Comcast in the second quarter as movie theaters closed, theme parks shut down and advertisers cut back. 

The company reported Thursday that its NBCUniversal TV, film and theme park divisions, as well as its Sky unit in Europe, all suffered steep drops in revenue in the April-June quarter.

But period was not all grim news. The Philadelphia-based company added U.S. internet customers and 10 million people have signed up for its new Peacock streaming  service since April. Peacock is free for Comcast customers and has been available to them since April, but opened to the general public, with a much-promoted free tier, on July 15. Comcast has said it hopes to have 30 million to 35 million users by 2024.

That is where the focus was on Wall Street, and shares rose almost 4% before the opening bell. 

Comcast's other entertainment divisions showed how the pandemic has hit its business. NBCUniversal revenue fell 25% to $6.12 billion. NBC reopened Universal Studios Japan and its Universal park in Orlando, Florida,  in early June, despite a surge of cases in Florida. Disney's Florida park  also reopened this month. The theme park business shrank to $87 million in revenue from $1.46 billion a year ago.

The movie division's revenue fell 18% to $1.19 billion. The pandemic has upended the movie business, shutting down Hollywood production and the distribution of films. Comcast struck an industry-changing deal with AMC on Tuesday that will let it offer its movies to customers at home much faster — after just 17 days rather than three months. 

Meanwhile, advertising revenue for NBC's cable networks, like Bravo and USA Network, fell 27% to $679 million; for the broadcast networks NBC and Telemundo, it dropped 28% to $959 million.

And cable video customers continued to shrink, extending a long-running cord-cutting trend, with sports on hold because of the pandemic. Comcast lost 477,000 video customers. It's lost 887,000 video customers in the first six months of 2020, more than double the amount shed in the same period last year.

At the same time, it's continuing to gain internet customers, and added 323,000 in the most recent quarter and 800,000 in the past six months, up from 584,000 in the first half of 2019. 

Broadband has become a requirement for the many people working and studying from home. Comcast isn't counting 600,000 customers who are on a free promotion for low-income people or who have halted payments because of financial difficulties stemming from the pandemic and its economic fallout.

The cable and home internet division's revenue was roughly unchanged at $14.43 billion.

Revenue fell 15.5% to $4.08 billion in Comcast's Sky division in Europe, which encompasses a broadcasting business, TV packages, home internet and cellphones.

Overall, Comcast's net income fell 4.4% to $2.99 billion, or 65 cents per share. Stripping out one-time items, earnings were 69 cents per share. Wall Street analysts expected 55 cents, according to FactSet.

Revenue slid 12% to $23.72 billion. Analysts predicted $23.58 billion.

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