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In the fourth quarter, the software company topped Wall Street's fourth-quarter expectations on the top and bottom lines. Snowflake — Snowflake shares plunged 20% after the business software company announced the retirement of its CEO Frank Slootman. The company topped earnings expectations by 12 cents and said it expects revenue for the current period to range between $603 million and $605 million. The company posted revenue of $13.19 billion, falling short of the $13.56 billion analysts polled by LSEG expected. Adjusted earnings per share came in at 5 cents and topped an LSEG estimate of 2 cents per share.
Persons: — Salesforce, Frank Slootman, Duolingo, Okta — Okta, LSEG Organizations: FactSet, Paramount Global, LSEG, Revenue, StreetAccount, HP Inc, AMC Entertainment
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway asked regulators to keep its new stock purchase secret for a second quarter in a row, while the conglomerate trimmed its massive Apple stake slightly in the fourth quarter, according to a new regulatory filing. Berkshire requested that the Securities and Exchange Commission keep the details of one or more of its stock holdings confidential. Many speculated that the secret purchase could be a bank stock as the 10Q filing for the third quarter suggested that Berkshire had purchased "banks, insurance, and finance" stocks for $1.2 billion. Apple, Chevron The Omaha-based conglomerate sold about 10 million Apple shares last quarter, the filing showed. HP, Paramount Berkshire significantly reduced its stake in Paramount , holding about 63.3 million shares at the end of December, or 32% fewer shares than the number in the previous quarter.
Persons: Warren, Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett's, Buffett, homebuilder D.R.Horton, Ted Weschler, Todd Combs Organizations: Berkshire, Securities and Exchange Commission, Chevron, Verizon, Apple, HP, Paramount, Paramount Global, Liberty, Occidental Petroleum Locations: Berkshire, Chevron The Omaha, Paramount Berkshire, New York, Houston
Paramount Global is laying off hundreds of employees, just one day after the company announced CBS had record Super Bowl viewership, Chief Executive Officer Bob Bakish said Tuesday in an internal memo to employees. Paramount Global ended 2022 with about 24,500 full-time and part-time employees. Paramount Global owns a variety of assets including CBS, Paramount Pictures, Pluto TV, Paramount+ and cable networks including Nickelodeon, BET and Comedy Central. The media company had warned employees of impending cuts in an internal memo last month. Bakish said at the time that Paramount Global needed to "operate as a leaner company and spend less."
Persons: Bob Bakish, Bakish, Organizations: Paramount, MTV, PSD Bank, Paramount Global, CBS, Paramount Pictures, Pluto TV, Nickelodeon, BET, Comedy Central, Skydance Media, Warner Bros, Discovery, CNBC Locations: Duesseldorf, Germany
New York CNN —Football’s youngest fans will be able to watch Super Bowl LVIII announced by SpongeBob SquarePants and the rest of the gang from Bikini Bottom. Characters from the cartoon SpongeBob SquarePants will join the telecast live. Sandy Cheeks (voiced by Carolyn Lawrence) will make her sideline reporting debut during the Super Bowl LVIII telecast live "Super Bowl LVIII Live from Bikini Bottom". But fans of the long-running show will recognize a 2001 classic next Sunday — there will be a “Sweet Victory” performance in the Super Bowl telecast. In the 2019 Super Bowl, halftime act Maroon 5 paid tribute to the song that the SpongeBob characters sang in a 2001 episode (in the episode, the characters of the Bikini Bottom were performing in the Bubble Bowl, a spoof of the Super Bowl.)
Persons: New York CNN —, SpongeBob SquarePants, SpongeBob, Sandy Cheeks, Carolyn Lawrence, Paramount SpongeBob, Tom Kenny, Patrick Star, Bill Fagerbakke, Nate Burleson, Noah Eagle, Larry, Lawrence, Slimetime ”, Dylan Gilmore, Nick, Gen Z, Alpha, Taylor Swift’s, Travis Kelce, ” Sean McManus, Chris Nowinski, Stephen Hillenburg, Travis Scott, , Organizations: New, New York CNN, New York CNN — Football’s, Nickelodeon, CBS Sports, Super, Kansas City Chiefs, San Francisco 49ers, Paramount Global, CBS, Paramount, Allegiant, NFL, New Orleans Saints, Chicago Bears, Nick NFL, Chiefs, NFL Nickelodeon, Saints, Bears Locations: New York, Las Vegas
When Redstone's father, Sumner Redstone, the founder of National Amusements, died in 2020, Shari Redstone inherited his shares. Paramount Global has a market capitalization of nearly $10 billion and about $13 billion of net debt. If she agrees to sell either National Amusements or all of Paramount Global, she'll need buy in from other investors. Talks are further along with Redstone regarding NAI than they are with Paramount Global, two of the people said. Paramount Global charges $5.99 per month for Paramount+ with advertising.
Persons: Shari Redstone, Mike Blake, it's, David Ellison, Byron Allen, SpongeBob, I'm, National Amusements Shari Redstone, Brendan Mcdermid, Redstone's, Sumner Redstone, Shari, John Malone, Bob Bakish, It's, Banker Byron Trott, Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway, Skydance, Spokespeople, There's, CNBC's David Faber, Bakish, Jim Cramer Organizations: National Amusements, WSJ Tech, Reuters Paramount Global, Paramount, Paramount Global, Skydance Media, Paramount Pictures, CBS, Nickelodeon, Comedy Central, Hollywood, Allen, Co, Sun, Reuters, Amusements Inc, National, Warner Bros, Discovery, CNBC, Comcast, NBCUniversal, Paramount Global's, Amusements, U.S, Disney, Charter, CNBC Paramount Global, Viacom Locations: Laguna Beach , California, Israel, Sun Valley , Idaho, Wells Fargo, America, Berkshire, NAI, Skydance, U.S
The Google parent topped Wall Street's expectations on the top and bottom lines, but recorded advertising revenue of $65.52 billion. Advanced Micro Devices — The semiconductor company's shares slid 4.3% after posting fourth-quarter earnings Tuesday that came out in line with consensus expectations. Starbucks – Shares of the coffee chain were higher in premarket trading even after a disappointing financial update for its fiscal first quarter. Starbucks posted earnings per share of 90 cents, falling below analysts' expectations by 3 cents, according to LSEG. Manhattan Associates — The supply chain software provider surged 11% premarket after fourth quarter earnings and revenue topped analysts' highest estimates, and issued first quarter financial guidance that also surpassed expectations.
Persons: Byron Allen, Tesla, Elon Musk, Mondelez, Morgan Stanley, , Macheel, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Yun Li, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Google, StreetAccount, Paramount Global, Paramount, AMD, Microsoft, Boeing, Starbucks, Technologies, Manhattan Associates Locations: LSEG, Delaware
Alphabet — Shares fell 6.3% after the company posted disappointing fourth-quarter advertising revenue. Late Tuesday, Alphabet posted beats on both top and bottom lines, but its advertising revenue of $65.52 billion fell below analysts' forecast of $65.94 billion, per StreetAccount. Starbucks — Shares fell 0.5% after the coffee giant issued disappointing forward guidance due to a boycott in the U.S. and a weaker Chinese consumer. Adjusted earnings per share for the fourth quarter came in at $3.46 versus the $3.27 expected, per FactSet. Manhattan Associates — The supply chain software provider surged 8% after fourth-quarter adjusted earnings and revenue topped analysts' estimates, per FactSet.
Persons: Byron Allen, NYCB, Tesla, Elon Musk, Roth, Morgan Stanley, SoFi, Stryker, Genuity, , Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound, Lisa Kailai Han, Michelle Fox, Pia Singh Organizations: Boeing, Paramount, AMD, Microsoft, Starbucks, New York Community Bancorp, Bank, Technologies, Rockwell, , Wall Street, Revenue, Manhattan Associates Locations: U.S, Delaware, Georgia
Tesla — Shares of the automaker fell 8% after Tesla reported fourth-quarter results that missed estimates on the top and bottom lines and warned that vehicle volume growth may be "notably lower" in the new year. Tesla reported 71 cents in adjusted earnings per share on $25.17 billion of revenue. The company reported adjusted earnings of $3.87 per share on $17.38 billion in revenue. While Humana's fourth-quarter earnings were in line with prior guidance, the company guided for full-year earnings of $16, vastly under the $29.14 expected by FactSet. The company's fourth-quarter revenue of $2.92 billion also topped FactSet's predicted $2.89 billion.
Persons: Tesla, LSEG, Chris Woronka, Raymond James, Wilma Burdis, Truist, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh, Samantha Subin Organizations: Hertz, JPMorgan, IBM, LSEG, Boeing —, Bank of America, Federal Aviation, Alaska Airlines, Paramount Global, Skydance Media, Nokia —, Nokia, FactSet, Avis Budget Group, Citi Locations: Las Vegas
Pfizer — Shares dropped 4.2% after the drugmaker said it would halt development of its twice-daily experimental weight loss pill. Marvell Technology — The semiconductor stock fell more than 5% after Marvell issued lower-than-expected revenue guidance for the fourth quarter. Ulta Beauty — The stock gained nearly 12% after the beauty products retailer reported third-quarter earnings that beat analysts' expectations. Ulta reported earnings of $5.07 per share, higher than the $4.95 per share analysts polled by LSEG were expecting. Dell — Stock in the computer maker fell nearly 6% on the heels of a mixed third-quarter earnings report.
Persons: Pfizer, Andrew Nowinski, Nelson Peltz, Alibaba, Morgan Stanley, Tesla, Coinbase, Ulta, LSEG, Jessica Fye, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Organizations: Pfizer —, Paramount Global, Wall Street Journal, Apple, Disney —, Trian Fund Management, Marvell Technology, Marvell, Invest, Nasdaq, Dell —, Wall, LSEG, JPMorgan Locations: , Wells Fargo
Ulta Beauty — The beauty stock rallied nearly 11% after posting third-quarter results that surpassed analysts' estimates. Samsara — Samsara shares popped 16% after the cloud company posted better-than-expected quarterly results and shared stronger-than-expected guidance. The chip company posted third-quarter earnings that topped Wall Street's estimates but shared weaker-than-expected guidance for the current quarter. Ambarella — Shares slipped 1% after Ambarella reported third-quarter gross margins of 62.6%, down from 63.5% in the year-ago period. Otherwise, the semiconductor design company posted quarterly results that topped estimates.
Persons: Tesla, Nelson Peltz, Alibaba, Morgan Stanley, Wells, Dell, Altimmune, Ambarella, Jefferies, Yun Li, Michelle Fox, Sarah Min, Alex Harring, Brian Evans, Jesse Pound Organizations: Disney — Disney, Trian Fund Management, Pfizer, Paramount Global, Street Journal, Paramount, Apple, Marvell Technology, Invest, Nasdaq, Dell —, LSEG, JPMorgan, Norfolk Southern, Bank of America, CSG Locations: Texas, China, Wells Fargo, Norfolk, Ohio
Zoom Video Communications — The software stock added nearly 2% ahead of its third-quarter earnings due after market close. The Professional Fighters League announced on Monday that it completed its acquisition of mixed martial arts brand Bellator from Paramount. Penn Entertainment — The gambling stock jumped 7% on the heels of a Bank of America upgrade to buy from neutral. Boeing — The aerospace stock jumped 4% after Deutsche Bank upgraded the shares to a buy rating from hold. Chegg — Shares of the education technology company dropped 5% following a downgrade to underweight from equal weight by Morgan Stanley.
Persons: Wells, Sam Altman, Greg Brockman, Raymond James, Morgan Stanley, Krispy Kreme, Iovance, Goldman Sachs, Terri Kelly, Kelly, Peter Grom, , Alex Harring, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: Communications, FactSet, Paramount, Professional Fighters League, Bellator, Penn Entertainment, Bank of America, ESPN Bet, Spectrum Brands, Microsoft —, Microsoft, Nvidia, Boeing, Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan, Caterpillar —, HSBC, United Rentals — United Rentals, Bristol Myers, Energizer Holdings, UBS, RBC Capital Markets Locations: FactSet
In this article WBDPARA Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTDavid Zaslav, CEO and president of Warner Bros. Media company valuations have been plummeting amid streaming video losses, traditional TV subscriber defections, and a down advertising market. Warner Bros. Warner Bros. Warner Bros.
Persons: David Zaslav, John Malone, Malone, David Faber, Zaslav, Faber, Bob Bakish, Simon & Schuster, Shari Redstone, David A, Peacock, Brian, Roberts, Puck's Dylan Byers, Warner Organizations: Warner Bros ., Liberty Media, Liberty Global, Qurate Retail Group, CNBC, Reuters Warner Bros, Media, Warner Bros, Discovery, Sirius XM, Sirius, Paramount Global, Paramount, Viacom, CBS, Allen, Co . Media, Technology Conference, Grogan, CNBC Paramount Global, Comcast, U.S, NBC Locations: U.S, Sun Valley , Idaho
But Disney+, Paramount+, Peacock and others continue to lose money. Most analysts say that there are too many streaming services and that the weakest will ultimately close or merge with bigger competitors. The entertainment industry’s underlying cable television and box office problems also remain dire, in some cases growing worse during the five months it took to restore labor peace. In July, Disney announced that it was exploring a once-unthinkable sale of a stake in ESPN, the cable giant that has powered much of Disney’s growth over the past two decades. Paramount Global’s once-venerable cable portfolio, centered on Nickelodeon and MTV, has also been pummeled by cord cutting; Paramount shares have dropped nearly 50 percent since May.
Persons: ” Zack Stentz, , “ Thor, , Max, Peacock, Paramount Global’s Organizations: Netflix, Hulu, Warner Bros, Discovery, Paramount, Comcast, Disney, ESPN, Nickelodeon, MTV
Hilton Grand Vacations — The stock declined roughly 7% after the lodging company said it would acquire Bluegreen Vacations for about $1.5 billion . Hilton Grand Vacations also posted its third-quarter results, posting revenue of $1.02 billion, down from $1.12 billion a year earlier. Berkshire Hathaway —The B-class shares of Warren Buffett's investment company fell nearly 2% after Berkshire reported its third-quarter results on Saturday. Constellation Energy — The energy company gained nearly 7% after raising its earnings guidance for the full year. The company anticipates adjusted EBITDA of $3.80 billion to $4 billion, while its previous guidance was $3.3 billion to $3.7 billion.
Persons: Raymond James, SolarEdge, Wells, Albemarle —, Berkshire Hathaway, Warren, Dan Eggers, Davidson, Yun Li, Alex Harring, Pia Singh, Jesse Pound, Tanaya Macheel Organizations: Hilton, Paramount Global, Bank of America, Albemarle, UBS, Berkshire, Dish, Constellation Energy, Dominion Energy, Barclays, Holdings, D.A, Booking Holdings Locations: Berkshire
Dish Network — Shares dropped 6.2% premarket after the company missed Wall Street's expectations on both revenue and earnings, driven by substantial losses in its pay-TV retail wireless subscribers. Dish lost 26 cents per share in the third quarter, while analysts expected earnings of 5 cents per share, according to LSEG, formerly Refinitiv. Nvidia — The semiconductor stock added 1.1% premarket Monday, lifted by Bank of America's optimism about Nvidia's quarterly earnings due Nov. 21. Affiliated Managers Group — Shares of the asset manager company gained 2.5% third quarter earnings and revenue topped analyst estimates. AMG posted revenue of $525.2 million, exceeding analysts' estimate of $509.4 million.
Persons: Tesla, RingCentral, Schuster, SATS, Jane, FactSet, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Theobald, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Reuters, Hilton, Paramount, CBS, Bank of America, Dish, Citigroup —, CNBC, Citigroup, Bora Bora, Nvidia, Bank of, UBS, Dominion Energy, Barclays Locations: Berlin, China, Albemarle
Expedia — Shares surged 17% during midday trading Friday, a day after the vacation booking platform delivered a stronger-than-expected earnings report for the third quarter. Analysts polled by LSEG forecasted earnings of $4.93 per share and $3.86 billion in revenue. Paramount Global — The media conglomerate stock climbed 12% after reporting a third-quarter earning s beat on the top and bottom line. On Thursday, the company reported an adjusted 30 cents per share on $7.13 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by LSEG forecast 10 cents and $7.10 billion. The company reported revenue of $285.9 million against estimates from analysts polled by FactSet of $275 million.
Persons: Expedia, Bill Holdings, KeyBanc, DraftKings, Carl Icahn, Insulet, Gartner, FactSet, , Jesse Pound, Hakyung Kim, Alex Harring, Darla Mercado Organizations: LSEG, Apple, Paramount Global, Wall, FactSet, Revenue, Bank of America, Citi, JPMorgan Chase —, JPMorgan, Gartner, Lionsgate Entertainment, CNBC, Starz, Lionsgate Locations: CashApp
Fortinet — Shares dropped 23.1% after the cybersecurity company missed earnings expectations and gave a weak outlook for the current quarter. Fortinet posted $1.33 billion in revenue for the third quarter and said to expect between $1.38 billion and $1.44 billion in the current quarter. Both underwhelmed analysts polled by LSEG, who anticipated $1.35 billion in revenue for the third quarter and a current-period estimate of $1.5 billion. Revenue for the third quarter came in at $285.9 million, above the $275 million forecast from analysts polled by FactSet. Meanwhile, the company saw adjusted EBITDA at $6.1 million, while analysts had anticipated a loss of $0.6 million.
Persons: Fortinet, LSEG, Block, Bill Holdings, Bill, Expedia, Nation's, Taylor Swift, FactSet, Carvana, , Wall, Uber, Jesse Pound, Yun Li, Michelle Fox Organizations: Apple —, Paramount, LSEG, Holdings, Revenue, FactSet, & $
Insulet — Shares added nearly 10% after beating both earnings and revenue estimates in the third quarter. Revenue came in at $432.7 million, while analysts polled by FactSet anticipated revenue of $414.3 million. Expedia — Stock in the travel booking company surged 9% after beating both revenue and earnings estimates in the third quarter. Paramount Global — The media conglomerate stock ticked up nearly 6% following a third-quarter earnings beat . Floor & Decor Holdings — The flooring retailer slipped more than 15% after missing third-quarter revenue forecasts.
Persons: FactSet, Apple, Expedia, LSEG, Block, Fortinet, Carvana, DraftKings, Darla Mercado, Scott Schnipper Organizations: LSEG, Revenue, Apple, Paramount Global, Paramount, Holdings, FactSet
Paramount Global 's controlling shareholder is open to a merger or selling the company at the right price, according to people familiar with her thinking. Spokespeople for Redstone and Paramount Global declined to comment. Paramount Global's market value was below $8 billion as of Friday. Discovery could merge with Paramount Global, though putting together Warner Bros. and Paramount Pictures may hold up deal approval with U.S. regulators. Paramount Global isn't actively working with an investment bank on a sale, according to people familiar with the matter.
Persons: Shari Redstone, David A, CNBC Shari, Jon Miller, SpongeBob, Guggenheim, Michael Morris, Morris, Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway, Bob Bakish, Bakish, Wells, Steven Cahall, Cahall, CNBC's David Faber, Lina Khan, Laura Martin, haven't, Simon, Simon & Schuster, Sumner Redstone, NAI, Jim Cramer Organizations: National Amusements, Paramount Global, Allen & Company Sun Valley, Grogan, CNBC, Paramount, Redstone, Integrated Media, Advancit, Paramount Pictures, CBS, MTV, Nickelodeon, Comedy Central, BET, Showtime, NFL, Champions League, Viacom, Berkshire, Paramount Global's, Tech, Apple, YouTube, National Football, Federal Trade, Big Tech, Comcast, NBC, Fox, Disney, Needham & Co, Netflix, Bain, Co, Warner Bros, Sky, Scripps, Discovery, Simon &, MSD Partners Locations: Sun Valley , Idaho, Los Angeles , California, U.S
Disney also agreed to drop eight of its less-viewed networks, signaling the end of bloated cable TV bundles. Broadcasters could negotiate fees that included adding new cable TV channels. The new type of bundle deal combining traditional channels with streaming services provides a way forward for the media business. Pity the cable TV channels that few people watch, said one TV station group executive. Paramount Global has created numerous spin-offs of its main cable channels, with Nickelodeon siring five programming offspring, Nick Jr., Nick at Nite, TeenNick, Nicktoons and Nick Music.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, John Malone, Walt Disney, , Craig Moffett, , you’re, Rich Greenfield, Jonathan Miller, Nick Jr, Nick, Nick Music, Moffett, Dawn Chmielewski, Kenneth Li, Josie Kao Organizations: REUTERS, Liberty Broadband, Charter Communications, Reuters, Disney / Charter, Disney, Broadcasters, Cable, P Global Market Intelligence, Netflix, Leichtman Research, Paramount, ESPN, FX, Integrated Media Co, Warner Bros Discovery, American Heroes Channel, Paramount Global, Nickelodeon, Nick, Thomson Locations: U.S, Greenfield, Los Angeles, New York
The greatest interest was in shopping discounts (50%); 45% expressed interest in a bundle of more than one streaming service. "There's a way to differentiate yourself by tapping into those opportunities," he said of respondents' interest in other services. Of all countries surveyed, the appetite for streaming bundles was the strongest in the US, with 59% interested in streaming packages that included other streaming services or broadband/internet. Disney offers Disney+, ESPN+, and Hulu for one price and is in the process of migrating Hulu content into Disney+. EY also asked about recent price hikes for streaming services and found rising subscription fees haven't caused widespread cancellations.
Persons: EY, Tom Loozen, Peacock, HBO Max, David Zaslav, They're, Bob Iger, Loozen Organizations: EY Global Telecommunications Leader, Media, Comcast, Warner Bros, Discovery, AMC, Paramount, Walmart, Sky . Disney, Disney, ESPN, HBO, Apple, Hulu, Star, Paramount Global, Showtime Locations: Canada, EU, Asia, Hulu
"The strike is not something we wanted," said Sarandos, whose company is negotiating jointly with competing movie studios like Disney and Paramount whose parent companies also own streaming services. Some big-media companies that own streaming services, like Paramount and Disney, have seen their shares drop even in the renewed bull market of the past year. LightShed Partners analyst Rich Greenfield says Netflix made $6.5 billion last year excluding interest, taxes, and non-cash charges, while rival streaming services at Paramount, Disney and NBC lost more than $8 billion. That's a relatively small number for an industry with revenues topping $70 billion, $31.6 billion of it last year at Netflix. Paramount Global's Paramount+ service lost $1.8 billion last year, but saw losses shrink in the first quarter.
Persons: Mike Blake, Mark Mahaney, Ted Sarandos, Greg Peters, Michael Pachter, Robert Iger, Iger, CNBC's David Faber, Max, Rich Greenfield, Mahaney, hasn't, Jake Urbanski, Jamie Lumley, Peters, Spencer Neumann Organizations: Guild of America, Netflix, Alliance, Producers, Wednesday, Writers Guild of America, Screen, American Federation of Television, Radio Artists, Disney, Paramount Global, Amazon, Wedbush Securities, Television Producers, CNBC, Walt Disney Co, Sun, Paramount, Warner Bros, LightShed, NBC, Hollywood, Moody's Investors Service, Writers ' Guild of America, WGA, Twitter, Hulu, Comcast, Apple Locations: Los Angeles , California, U.S
(Photo by Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Netflix)The main takeaway from Netflix 's second quarter earnings is business is ... good. Netflix added 1.2 million subscribers in the United States and Canada in the quarter — its largest regional quarterly gain since 2021. This is not the story for the rest of the media industry. That means Netflix will actually have even more cash than it previously expected. Next quarter, Netflix forecast subscriber gains will be about 6 million again.
Persons: Netflix Ted Sarandos, Charley Gallay Organizations: Netflix, Raleigh Studios Hollywood, Disney, Warner Bros, Paramount Global, Comcast Locations: ANGELES , CALIFORNIA, Los Angeles , California, United States, Canada
Fox Corp. , Disney , Warner Bros. Media executives' messaging to advertisers could center around value this year, particularly as companies continue to offer more content on their streaming services. Cost cuttingWhile media executives will try to convince advertisers to maximize their spending, they'll be pushing that narrative while making fewer shows. The logo of the streaming service Paramount+ on a logo wall at the Paramount+ launch event. Jörg Carstensen | Picture Alliance | Getty ImagesParamount, in particular, has seen a big reliance on franchises, especially for its Paramount+ streaming service.
The race between the biggest media and entertainment companies to add streaming subscribers, knowing consumers will only pay for a limited number of them, is finished. Disney announced its flagship streaming service, Disney+, lost 4 million subscribers during the first three months of the year, dropping the company's total streaming subscribers to 157.8 million from 161.8 million. Disney on Wednesday announced streaming losses narrowed to $659 million from $887 million. NBCUniversal's Peacock gained 2 million subscribers last quarter, giving it 22 million subscribers. Paramount Global added 4.1 million subscribers in the quarter, putting it at 60 million subscribers.
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