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Warner Bros. Discovery saw revenue dip but losses narrow in the last quarter of 2023. Free cash flow grew — a key metric that allows the David Zaslav-led media giant to continue chipping away at its hefty debt, which it is doing.
It ended the year with 97.7 global streaming subscribers — including 1.3 million from BluTV, the Turkish streamer it acquired in December.
Revenue of close to $10.3 billion compared with $11 billion the year before. Revenue at the television studio was hit by the impact of the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes, with production still revving up.
Theatrical revenue was higher on more releases, including Aquaman And The Lost Kingdom.
Advertising at the network segment fell 14%.
Free cash flow rose to $3.3 billion.
“After executing against our strategic plan to reposition the company, we are now on solid footing with a clear pathway to growth. We generated $6.2 billion in free cash flow and paid down $5.4 billion in debt in 2023, which puts us at 3.9x net leverage. We have an attack plan for 2024 that includes the roll-out of Max in key international markets, a more robust creative pipeline across our film and TV studios, and further progress against our long-range financial goals and are confident in our ability to drive sustained operating momentum and enhanced shareholder value,” said Zaslav.
The stock has been in the tank, down 40% this year. It popped in early trading ahead of the numbers but settled lower again.
Zaslav and WBD execs will host a call at 8 ET to go over the numbers and take questions. It’s the first call since WBD, Disney and Fox announced a sports streaming joint venture, which has already faces a legal challenge. And also the first since speculation heated up around a sale of Paramount Global, with Zaslav initially in the mix having had meetings with Shari Redstone and Bob Bakish.
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