The Walt Disney Co. saw its streaming losses narrow in the second quarter amid an exodus of 12.5 million subscribers from its Disney+ Hotstar streaming platform in India.
For the quarter, Disney exceeded Wall Streets targets on earnings per share but missed on revenue. The Mouse reported total revenue of $22.3 billion, up 4% from the year-ago quarter, and operating income of $3.6 billion, down 6%.
Disney executives previously warned Wall Street that subscriber losses were coming for the Disney+ Hotstar service amid a strategy shift to move away from low-margin subscribers. The loss of key sports rights in the region also set the stage for significant churn on the Hotstar front.
Losses in the direct-to-consumer unit were cut in half compared to the same period last year. DTC operations delivered a $512 million loss, compared to $1 billion in the same frame in 2022. Operating income for Disneys linear networks sank 23% to $1.9 billion on revenue of $6.7 billion, down 6%. Revenue for Disneys Parks, Experiences and Products arm was up 13% to $8.3 billion and operating income gained 11% to $2.4 billion.
Disney notched a gain of 800,000 subscribers in other parts of the world. In the U.S. and Canada, Disney+ lost 300,000 subscribers while the streaming-only side of Hulu gained about that same number.
Our results this quarter are reflective of what weve accomplished through the unprecedented
transformation were undertaking at Disney to restructure the company, improve efficiencies, and restore creativity to the center of our business, said Disney CEO Bob Iger. In the eight months since my return, these important changes are creating a more cost-effective, coordinated, and streamlined approach to our operations that has put us on track to exceed our initial goal of $5.5 billion in savings as well as improved our direct-to-consumer operating income by roughly $1 billion in just three quarters. While there is still more to do, Im incredibly confident in Disneys long-term trajectory because of the work weve done, the team we now have in place, and because of Disneys core foundation of creative excellence and popular brands and franchises.
On a conference call with Wall Street analysts, Iger made it clear that Disney is refocused on rationalizing the volume of content that we make, what we spend and what markets we invest in. Planning for the streaming future nonetheless means finding economics designed to deliver significant and sustained profitability, he said.
The labor conflict that has Hollywood in a state of paralysis has delivered a short-term boost for Disneys larger cost-cutting goals. Kevin Lansberry, Disneys newly appointed chief financial officer, told analysts that content spending for the companys fiscal 2023 (which ends in September) will come in at $27 billion, or about $3 billion less than forecast in part because of the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes.