Disney offered a first glimpse under ESPN‘s hood ahead of earnings next month when it plans to break out Sports as its own business segment — part of a restructuring initiated by CEO Bob Iger.The new division saw revenue of $13.2 billion and operating income of close to $1.5 billion for the first nine months of fiscal 2023. In comparison, the entire Entertainment segment, which includes everything but sports, had $31 billion in sales but just $1.2 billion in profits for the same period, according to an SEC filing. That’s an indication of why, starting with its fourth-quarter/full-year earnings report next month, Disney will showcase three new divisions called Sports, Entertainment and Experiences. Breaking out ESPN from the entertainment pack, a decision announced back in February, was one of Iger’s most dramatic moves since he returned to helm Disney nearly a year ago. He’s seeking strategic minority partners for the sportscaster.ESPN revenue came mostly from affiliate fees ($8+ billion). Advertising was $3.2 billion and subscription fees $1.1 billion.Disney provided a few years’ worth of comps. Sports revenue for fiscal 2022 was $17.3 billion, with operting profit of $2.7 billion. In 2021, it was, respectively, at about $16 billion and $2.7 billion.The Sports segment includes sports-focused global television and DTC video streaming content production and distribution led by ESPN and including its eight ESPN branded television channels, ESPN on ABC, the ESPN+ DTC video streaming service, ESPN branded channels outside of the U.S., and Star-branded sports channels in India.Star India contributed $637 million in revenue and a $444 million operating loss for the first nine months of 2023, so ESPN alone would have had a profit closer to $1.9 for the first three months of FY 2023.Experiences (formerly Disney Parks, Experiences & Products) won’t change all that much with revenue of $24.4 billion for the nine months and operating profit of $7.2 billion. One change here is that the division won’t include royalties on merchandise licensing revenues generated on IP created by the entertainment segment, which will get to keep it.
Thursday, 19 October 2023
Deadline: Disney Unveils ESPN Financials As It Preps Standalone Sports Segment
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