
Adjusted earnings per share rose 16% from a year ago to US$1.61 for Disney’s fiscal third quarter.
Analysts had expected US$1.47, according to the consensus estimate from LSEG.
For the full year ending in September, the company projected adjusted EPS of US$5.85, a 10-cent increase from a prior forecast.
The rosy earnings report was released a day after Disney announced a major deal with the National Football League, which will take a 10% equity stake in Disney’s ESPN sports network.
The value of the deal was not disclosed.
Disney is working to build its streaming business in both sports and entertainment as traditional TV viewing declines.
It is also expanding its popular theme parks and cruise lines.
ESPN’s new direct-to-consumer platform, priced at US$29.99 per month, is set to launch on August 21.
Earlier in the day, Disney struck a deal to become the exclusive US domestic home of all WWE Premium Live Events, including WrestleMania, starting 2026.
Disney is paying US$1.6 billion for the rights, the Wall Street Journal reported today.
CEO Bob Iger said the launch of the ESPN app and the NFL deal, along with a coming integration of Hulu into Disney+, would create “a truly differentiated streaming proposition”.
“With ambitious plans ahead for all our businesses, we’re not done building, and we are excited for Disney’s future,” Iger said.
The company projected it would add 10 million Disney+ and Hulu subscribers in the current quarter, most of them from an expanded partnership with cable operator Charter.
Shares of Disney were down about 2% in premarket trading.
In the just-ended quarter, operating income in the entertainment division fell 15% to US$1 billion.
Disney attributed the drop to lower results from traditional television networks and the strong performance of the film “Inside Out 2” a year earlier.
Disney’s parks division reported a 13% increase in operating income to US$2.5 billion.
Profit at domestic parks rose 22% even with new competition in Orlando, Florida, from Universal’s Epic Universe, which opened in late May, as visitors increased their spending.
“Walt Disney World in Orlando posted record revenue for the quarter,” Disney CFO Hugh Johnston said.
At the sports unit, operating income rose 29% to US$1 billion.
Domestic ESPN profit fell 3%, partly from higher programming and production costs, including rate increases for NBA games and college sports.