Walt Disney Co. reported sales and profit that fell below Wall Street expectations, held back by weakness in advertising revenue and higher-than-expected losses in streaming TV.
Earnings in the last quarter of Disney’s fiscal year fell to 30 cents a share, excluding certain items, the company said Tuesday. That missed the average estimate of 51 cents from analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Sales, at $20.2 billion, came up about $1 billion short of analysts’ projections.
Shares of Disney fell as much as 7.2% to $92.66 in extended trading after the results were announced. The stock is down more than a third this year.
Revenue from Disney’s traditional TV business, which includes networks such as ESPN and ABC, fell 5% in part due to ad sales weakness. Profit rose 6% to $1.74 billion due to lower programming costs in cable TV, particularly for sports. Disney reduced the number of Major League Baseball games it aired this season under a new contract.