Warner Bros. Discovery, Inc. (WBD) Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 total revenues were $10.0B, down 2% reported (1% ex-FX); Adjusted EBITDA rose to $2.7B (+10% reported, +11% ex-FX), driven by DTC and Studios; net loss was $(0.5)B due to $1.9B pre-tax acquisition-related amortization, content step-up, and restructuring .
- DTC subscribers reached 116.9M (+6.4M sequential), DTC Adjusted EBITDA was $409M (vs. $(55)M) with 5% ex-FX decline in global ARPU to $7.44 as mix shifted toward international and ad tiers .
- Management guided to approximately $1.3B of DTC Adjusted EBITDA in 2025 and “at least 150M” global subscribers by end of 2026; 2025 sports rights costs will weigh on EBITDA but reverse in 2026 by “several hundred million” in expense savings .
- No consolidated revenue/EPS guidance; Networks saw domestic audience declines and softness in linear advertising; multi-year affiliate renewals secured rate increases, though future rate growth moderates to low-single-digits; near-term catalysts are global Max launches, hard bundles, the DC slate (Superman in July 2025), and Mattel/DC multi-year licensing .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
- What Went Well
- DTC scale and profitability: subscribers +6.4M q/q to 116.9M; DTC Adjusted EBITDA $409M (+$464M y/y), supported by ad-lite growth and international expansion .
- Studios strength: Studios revenues +16% ex-FX to $3.657B; Adjusted EBITDA $950M (+78% ex-FX), with TV revenue +64% ex-FX and lower theatrical marketing costs .
- Strategic distribution progress: multi-year renewals with five of six largest U.S. pay-TV providers; overall affiliate rate increases and hybrid structures to support ecosystem longevity .
- Notable quote: “Max is one of the world’s very few global and profitable streaming services… we expect direct-to-consumer EBITDA to nearly double in 2025.” – David Zaslav .
- What Went Wrong
- Networks headwinds: revenues −4% ex-FX; advertising −16% ex-FX on 28% domestic audience declines; sports costs (e.g., CFP) lifted cost of revenues .
- ARPU pressure: Global DTC ARPU fell 5% ex-FX to $7.44; management expects near-term ARPU deterioration with international expansion, ad tiers, and hard bundles .
- Cash conversion softness this quarter: Q4 FCF $2.429B vs $3.310B y/y (−27%), impacted by higher net content investment (prior year strikes lowered investment) .
- Games business impairments: Q4 games content expense included $50M impairments; full-year games impairments $384M; 2024 games performance was disappointing .
Financial Results
Segment Performance
KPIs (DTC)
Free Cash Flow and Leverage
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Max is one of the world’s very few global and profitable streaming services… we expect direct-to-consumer EBITDA to nearly double in 2025.” – David Zaslav .
- “We added about 6.5 million subscribers in the fourth quarter and nearly 20 million subscribers in less than a year.” – David Zaslav .
- “We are targeting substantive completion [of the corporate reorganization] in early Q2… and plan to provide incremental guidance to create more clarity on global linear networks vs streaming and Studios.” – Gunnar Wiedenfels .
- “We now have a clear path to reach at least 150 million global subscribers by the end of 2026… Max rolls out to over 40% of the addressable global market where it is not yet available.” – Shareholder Letter .
- “We will see several hundred millions of dollars of sports expense come out in 2026… a few hundred million dollar improvement in 2026 over ’25.” – Gunnar Wiedenfels .
Q&A Highlights
- DTC scale and diversity: management emphasized a unique global offering with premium franchises and local content; experimentation with sports/news distribution models across regions .
- Bundling/aggregation: rising momentum for consumer-friendly bundles with global and regional partners; hard bundles can include carriage/penetration commitments (e.g., Sky) .
- Networks trajectory: renewals achieved, but future affiliate rate increases slow; ad market shows “mild positive signals” though linear ratings need work; more efficient use of HBO/WB libraries to support networks .
- Sports rights: disciplined approach; no need to add rights unless ROI is compelling; 2025 cost overlap (NBA half-season plus new rights) reverses in 2026 .
- Free cash flow/leverage: continued deleveraging focus; ~$19B debt repaid since merger; working capital expected strong in 2025; capex up modestly for production capacity .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus estimates (S&P Global) for Q4 2024 EPS, revenue, and EBITDA were unavailable due to data access limitations at the time of query. As a result, we cannot provide beat/miss analysis versus consensus for this quarter [GetEstimates error: “Daily Request Limit Exceeded”].
- Based on company-reported results, DTC and Studios outperformed y/y while Networks faced ad softness; estimate revisions may skew toward higher DTC profitability trajectory and 2026 margin expansion as sports costs fall .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- DTC inflection is real: profitability and scale now drive the narrative; 2025 DTC Adjusted EBITDA target of ~$1.3B underpins medium-term value creation .
- Near-term ARPU pressure is strategic: mix shift to international, ad tiers, and wholesale bundles should expand reach and LTV, with ARPU normalizing over time .
- Studios EBITDA rebound: stronger TV deliveries post strikes and a rebalanced slate (including DC’s Superman) improve 2025 Studios outlook .
- Networks stabilized by renewals: affiliate deals provide rate increases and visibility, but linear ad weakness persists; expect moderated rate growth ahead .
- 2025 sports cost headwinds should flip to tailwinds in 2026 as NBA expense rolls off, lifting segment EBITDA by “a few hundred million” .
- FCF and deleveraging continue: Q4 FCF $2.429B; net leverage 3.8x; management prioritizes debt reduction with target gross leverage of 2.5–3.0x .
- Strategic partnerships and licensing (e.g., Sky bundles; Mattel/DC multi-year deal from 2H26) augment monetization and franchise value across platforms .
Additional Relevant Press Releases (Q4 context)
- Mattel awarded global multi-year DC licensing from 2H26, reinforcing DC’s revitalization and consumer products opportunities tied to upcoming DC slate .
Prior Two Quarters’ Earnings Reference (for trend analysis)
- Q3 2024: revenue $9.623B; Adjusted EBITDA $2.413B; DTC subs 110.5M; FCF $0.632B; affiliate rates +~5% domestically; Olympics effects observed in Networks .
- Q2 2024: revenue $9.713B; Adjusted EBITDA $1.795B (impacted by $9.1B Networks goodwill impairment); DTC subs 103.3M; ad-lite expansion; strategic bundling to reduce CAC .
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