Comcast Profit Jumps 26% on Growth of Broadband
The distribution business continues to look bright for Comcast, which reported profit and revenue increases on Wednesday that surpassed analystsâ already sunny projections.
In the second quarter â" Comcastâs first full quarter owning 100 percent of NBCUniversal, in which it had previously held a 51 percent stake â" earnings rose to $1.7 billion, or 65 cents a share, from $1.35 billion, or 50 cents a share, in the period a year earlier. Wall Street analysts had been expecting earnings of 63 cents a share.
Total revenue rose 7 percent, to $16.3 billion, from the second quarter of 2012, lifted by the continued growth of the companyâs broadband Internet and business products. Free cash flow increased 25 percent, to $1.9 billion. Comcast was the first major television and Internet provider to report quarterly earnings, so its healthy results may augur more good news when others report in the weeks to come.
It is broadband, not cable television, that is generally bolstering cable companiesâ results these days, because nearly nine out of 10 American households already subscribe to some sort of TV, but only two-thirds subscribe to broadband.
Comcast has been losing TV subscribers to DirecTV and Verizon FiOS for years. It lost another 159,000 in the second quarter, but the rate of loss has slowed lately. The company squeezed a 2.7 percent revenue gain from its television business, largely through rates increases and subscribers who chose more expensive packages.
Its revenue gain on the broadband side, however, was 8 percent.
âCable had outstanding growth, particularly in high-speed Internet, and NBCUniversal had strong performance across all of its businesses,â Brian L. Roberts, the chief executive of Comcast, said in a statement. He credited the companyâs âfocus on delivering innovative products and a superior customer experience is driving our success, including stronger video, voice and business services results in cable.â
