On the heels of the death of one its star performers in a murder-suicide, World Wrestling Entertainment net earnings were slammed by a 52% decline, due to an under-performing theatrical release.
WWE took a $15.7 million charge related to the poor box-office performance of "The Condemned," which starred wrestler "Stone Cold" Steve Austin. The film, which was ripped by critics,
took in $7 million in box office receipts.
Net profits for WWE's second quarter sank to $7 million from $14.7 million the year before. Revenues increased 15% to $137.5 million.
The company's
revenues improved largely because of record results for its regular Wrestlemania pay-per-view event. Its television entertainment division nudged up 1% in net profits over the year before to $33.4
million.
WWE noted its consumer product sales grew 29%; digital media revenues were 30% higher over the second quarter of 2006.
Taking out the film charge, WWE said it improved cash
flow--earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization--by 18% to $27.7 million, said Linda McMahon, WWE's chief executive officer. In June, WWE performer Chris Benoit killed his wife,
Nancy, and 7-year-old son, Daniel, then killed himself. Since then, WWE's stock has dropped 8%. Not helping the stock performance was a U.S. House committee request last month for the WWE to turn
over any information it had on steroid and drug abuse in pro wrestling.
advertisement
advertisement