
Paramount Global executives said
upfront deals' dollar volume was “consistent” with year-ago results, with streaming accounting for 30% of upfront sales this year.
During its second-quarter earnings phone call with
analysts, the company said sports programming pricing and volume witnessed double-digit percentage hikes. Executives did not reveal other financial details.
Last year, Paramount Global said it
sold $1 billion in upfront advertising commitments for its streaming platforms including Paramount+.
Sports programming has been a key driver for this upfront market.
Recently, NBCU
pointed to sports in wrapping up its overall upfront deals -- 15% higher to an estimated $7.5 billion, according to analysts.
Fox Corp. rose about 10% to $2.7 billion, while Disney was also
“consistent" at roughly $9.45 billion.
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A year ago, Media Dynamics estimated the entire linear TV upfront business dropped 4% from 2023-2024 to $18.4 billion.
For the 2022-2023 TV
season, the CBS Television Network was estimated to have pulled in $2.6 billion in prime-time upfront advertising sales.
For the current second-quarter period, its core linear TV/media
advertising revenue declined 4% to $1.7 billion. Affiliate revenue was down 7% to $1.8 billion.
Overall TV/media revenue fell 6% to $4.0 billion, with continued linear TV viewership continuing
to decline. This came amid higher pricing increases for ad inventory.
Filmed entertainment grew 2% to $690 million mostly from “Mission Impossible -- The Final Reckoning.”
Direct-to-consumer revenue -- coming largely from Paramount+ -- rose 15% to $2.2 billion. Subscription revenues rose 22% to $1.7 billion.
Streaming advertising revenue, however, sank 4% to
$494 million in the period. Management pointed to a glut of industry-wide inventory, which pulled down pricing as the main reason for lower revenues.
For the second quarter, global Paramount+
subscribers were at 77.7 million -- up from 68 million in the year-ago period but down 1.3 million (79 million) from the first quarter of this year.
Analyst tout strong business trends for
Paramount+ in terms of viewing. Management said for the third consecutive quarter in a row watch time per subscriber at Paramount+ was up 11% from the year-ago period.
Michael Morris, media
analyst at Guggenheim Securities, says: “We continue to see DTC revenue and engagement tailwinds as positive, though challenged by ongoing linear declines and pressure at filmed entertainment in
the near-term.”