(Reuters) -Comcast reported a larger-than-expected decline in broadband customers in the first quarter on Thursday, hit by intense competition from wireless carriers that bundle mobile services with high-speed internet plans.
Shares of the company were down about 4% in premarket trading.
Broadband customers decreased by 199,000 in the quarter, higher than the 139,000 losses it reported in the last three months of 2024.
FactSet analysts had expected the company to shed 146,100 broadband customers.
U.S. telecom operators have boosted their plans with attractive trade-in deals and price guarantees as they compete for a shrinking pool of new users.
The media giant responded in mid-April with new pricing plans along with five-year price locks for new broadband customers to stem subscriber losses in its Xfinity Internet service.
Comcast’s studio revenue was up 3% to $2.83 billion, helped by the continued success of films “Wicked” and “Nosferatu” released in the fourth quarter.
The company’s first-quarter revenue of $29.89 billion beat estimates of $29.77 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.
Streaming service Peacock reported an adjusted core loss of $215 million, narrower than $639 million reported a year earlier.
Total paid subscribers at Peacock rose to 41 million, compared with 36 million at the end of last year, helped by its distribution deal with Charter Communications last year.
Revenue at Comcast’s theme park business fell 5.2% to $1.88 billion in the quarter, due to the Los Angeles wildfires in January, impacting several services in Hollywood.
The company’s much-awaited “Epic Universe” theme park is set to launch next month with five immersive worlds and more than 50 attractions.
(Reporting by Harshita Mary Varghese in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)
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