FEBRUARY 8, 2018 9:12AM PTHulu Lost $920 Million in 2017, After Parents
Invested $1 Billion

   -  dropped deeper into the red last year as it boosted spending on
   originals and launched its live TV service — and the losses are expected to
   mount in 2018.

By Todd Spangler

Variety

http://variety.com/2018/digital/news/hulu-2017-losses-920-million-1202692000/


In 2017, Hulu
<http://variety.com/2018/digital/news/hulu-60fps-winter-olympics-1202692029/>
lost
$920 million, versus a loss of $531 million a year earlier. Its four owners
— Comcast, 21st Century Fox, Disney and Time Warner — invested $1 billion
in the streamer (versus $733 million in 2016, including $583 million from
Time Warner
<http://variety.com/2016/digital/news/time-warner-hulu-investment-1201829514/>
).

The figures are based on Comcast’s 10-K disclosures
<https://www.cmcsa.com/node/30076/html>, which said it invested $300
million in Hulu last year and recorded a $276 million share of losses.
Comcast, Fox and Disney owns 30% of Hulu, and Time Warner holds 10%.

Hulu previously disclosed that it expected to spend around $2.5 billion on
content in 2017
<http://variety.com/2017/digital/news/hulu-2017-content-spending-2-5-billion-1202558912/>
.

According to estimates by BTIG Research analyst Rich Greenfield based on
the owners’ financial disclosures, Hulu’s losses will climb 80% in calendar
year 2018 to around $1.7 billion and the four parent companies will invest
an additional $1.5 billion in the venture.

Investors in Disney and 21st Century Fox should demand more disclosure
about Hulu’s financials, Greenfield says. That’s particularly relevant since
 Disney will acquire 21CF’s 30% stake in Hulu
<http://variety.com/2017/digital/news/hulu-disney-fox-deal-future-tv-streaming-1202640711/>
 under the mammoth pact the media conglomerates announced late last year.

“When Hulu’s losses and parent-company investment were relatively small,
its ability to skew financials at its parent companies was modest,”
Greenfield wrote in a blog post. But despite the growing losses “we have
virtually no disclosure on the positive impact Hulu’s spending is having on
its parent companies.”

Hulu said that as of the end of 2017, it had more than 17 million
subscribers
<http://variety.com/2018/digital/news/hulu-17-million-subscribers-svod-live-tv-1202658224/>
 for its subscription on-demand and live TV packages, which are available
only in the U.S. But it didn’t disclose how many of those had the
$40-per-month live TV service (which includes access to the SVOD library).
_______________________________________________
Medianews mailing list
Medianews@etskywarn.net
http://etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews_etskywarn.net

Reply via email to