Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) released its fourth-quarter and full-year 2024 financial results today, revealing a complex tale of resilience and reckoning as the media giant navigates a rapidly shifting industry landscape. Total Q4 revenues dipped to $10.027 billion, a 1% decline (ex-FX) from $10.284 billion in Q4 2023, while the full-year tally slid 4% (ex-FX) to $39.321 billion from $41.321 billion. Despite revenue setbacks, a robust direct-to-consumer (DTC) segment—bolstered by a 6.4 million subscriber surge to 116.9 million globally—and a studios rebound lifted adjusted EBITDA by 11% (ex-FX) to $2.722 billion in Q4. Yet, a hefty $11.311 billion annual net loss, driven by a $9.1 billion goodwill impairment in its networks segment, underscored persistent challenges in its legacy linear business.
The DTC segment, encompassing Max, discovery+, and HBO, emerged as a bright spot. Q4 revenues rose 6% (ex-FX) to $2.651 billion, fueled by an 8% (ex-FX) increase in distribution revenue to $2.315 billion and a 27% (ex-FX) ad revenue jump to $235 million, thanks to a 20% subscriber boom and ad-lite tier growth following Max’s Latin American and European launches. Adjusted EBITDA flipped from a $55 million loss in Q4 2023 to a $409 million gain, a $464 million swing, driven by a 13% (ex-FX) expense cut to $2.242 billion, with lower content and marketing costs. Full-year DTC revenues edged up 2% (ex-FX) to $10.313 billion, adding 19.2 million subscribers since 2023’s 97.7 million, though global ARPU dipped 5% (ex-FX) to $7.44 due to lower international rates.
The studios segment also shone in Q4, with revenues climbing 16% (ex-FX) to $3.657 billion, propelled by a 64% (ex-FX) TV revenue spike to an unspecified figure, reflecting higher inter-segment licensing and post-strike telecast deliveries. Theatrical revenue fell 9% (ex-FX) with fewer releases, and games dropped 29% (ex-FX) against 2023’s Hogwarts Legacy high, but adjusted EBITDA soared 76% (ex-FX) to $950 million, aided by a 27% (ex-FX) SG&A cut to $533 million. For the year, studios revenues slipped 5% (ex-FX) to $11.607 billion, with EBITDA down 23% (ex-FX) to $1.652 billion, hit by $384 million in game impairments.
Networks—home to CNN, Discovery, and TNT—faced headwinds. Q4 revenues fell 4% (ex-FX) to $4.768 billion, with distribution down 4% (ex-FX) to $2.610 billion amid a 9% domestic linear subscriber drop, offset slightly by 6% affiliate rate hikes. Advertising cratered 16% (ex-FX) to $1.615 billion, reflecting 28% audience declines and a soft ad market, though content revenue soared 74% (ex-FX) to $452 million from licensing deals. Adjusted EBITDA dropped 13% (ex-FX) to $1.917 billion, with full-year revenues off 4% (ex-FX) to $20.175 billion and EBITDA down 10% (ex-FX) to $8.149 billion, stung by a $9.1 billion goodwill writedown signaling linear’s fading value.
Financially, WBD’s Q4 net loss widened to $(494) million from $(400) million, with a $1.9 billion pre-tax hit from amortization and restructuring, though cash flow remained solid at $2.715 billion (down 24% from $3.578 billion), yielding $2.429 billion in free cash flow (down 27%). For 2024, the $11.311 billion net loss dwarfed 2023’s $3.126 billion, incorporating $7.5 billion in acquisition costs and impairments. Debt management progressed, with $0.5 billion repaid in Q4, trimming gross debt to $40 billion and net debt to $34.6 billion (3.8x leverage), bolstered by $5.4 billion in cash—a stark contrast to cable’s $147 monthly average (CordCutting.com).
CEO David Zaslav, in prepared remarks, framed 2024 as a “pivotal year,” noting, “Our DTC growth—19 million subscribers since last year—shows we’re building a future-ready company despite linear pressures.” Analysts on X saw a split narrative: “Max is WBD’s lifeline, but networks’ $9B haircut screams cable’s collapse,” one posted. With 27.6 million U.S. households ditching cable since 2017 (Feb. 26 story), WBD’s 11% annual EBITDA drop to $9.032 billion reflects that shift, yet its $4.427 billion yearly free cash flow (down 28%) and $632 million debt reduction signal fiscal discipline. As streaming nears 42% of U.S. viewing (Statista), WBD’s Q4 hints at a leaner, DTC-led path—though its linear legacy remains a costly anchor.
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