The end of the earnings season is always a good time to take a step back and see who shined (and who not so much). Let’s take a look at how traditional media & publishing stocks fared in Q2, starting with IMAX (NYSE:IMAX).
The sector faces structural headwinds from declining linear TV viewership, shifts in advertising spend toward digital platforms, and ongoing challenges in monetizing print and broadcast content. However, for companies that invest wisely, tailwinds can include AI, the power of which can result in more personalized content creation and more detailed audience analysis. These can create a flywheel of success where one feeds into the other. Still there are outstanding questions around AI-generated content oversight, and the regulatory framework around this could evolve in unseen ways over the next few years.
The 4 traditional media & publishing stocks we track reported a mixed Q2. As a group, revenues beat analysts’ consensus estimates by 0.6% while next quarter’s revenue guidance was in line.
Luckily, traditional media & publishing stocks have performed well with share prices up 39.1% on average since the latest earnings results.
Best Q2: IMAX (NYSE:IMAX)
Originally developed for World Expo '67 in Montreal as an innovative projection system, IMAX (NYSE:IMAX) provides proprietary large-format cinema technology and systems that deliver immersive movie experiences with enhanced image quality and sound.
IMAX reported revenues of $91.68 million, up 3.1% year on year. This print exceeded analysts’ expectations by 1%. Overall, it was an exceptional quarter for the company with a beat of analysts’ EPS estimates.
“IMAX delivered outstanding financial results in the Second Quarter as the key drivers of our business worked in concert, with strong network growth worldwide, record box office in North America, and impressive market share gains driven by more releases filmed with our technology than ever,” said Rich Gelfond, CEO of IMAX.
IMAX pulled off the fastest revenue growth of the whole group. Unsurprisingly, the stock is up 14.9% since reporting and currently trades at $33.38.
With roots dating back to 1807 when Charles Wiley opened a small printing shop in Manhattan, John Wiley & Sons (NYSE:WLY) is a global academic publisher that provides scientific journals, books, digital courseware, and knowledge solutions for researchers, students, and professionals.
Wiley reported revenues of $396.8 million, down 1.7% year on year, outperforming analysts’ expectations by 5.8%. The business performed better than its peers, but it was unfortunately a mixed quarter with an impressive beat of analysts’ full-year EPS guidance estimates.
Wiley pulled off the biggest analyst estimates beat among its peers. However, the results were likely priced into the stock as it’s traded sideways since reporting. Shares currently sit at $39.96.
Following its 2023 acquisition of DISH Network, EchoStar (NASDAQ:SATS) provides satellite communications, pay-TV services, wireless networks, and broadband solutions across consumer and enterprise markets.
EchoStar reported revenues of $3.72 billion, down 5.8% year on year, falling short of analysts’ expectations by 2.2%. It was a softer quarter as it posted a significant miss of analysts’ EPS estimates.
EchoStar delivered the weakest performance against analyst estimates and slowest revenue growth in the group. Interestingly, the stock is up 137% since the results and currently trades at $77.22.
With over 2,400 hours of local news produced weekly and 640 broadcast channels reaching millions of American homes, Sinclair (NASDAQ:SBGI) operates a network of 185 local television stations across 86 U.S. markets, producing news programming and distributing content from major networks.
Sinclair reported revenues of $784 million, down 5.4% year on year. This print lagged analysts' expectations by 2.2%. More broadly, it was a mixed quarter as it also produced a beat of analysts’ EPS estimates but revenue guidance for next quarter missing analysts’ expectations.
The stock is up 3.9% since reporting and currently trades at $14.70.
Thanks to the Fed’s rate hikes in 2022 and 2023, inflation has been on a steady path downward, easing back toward that 2% sweet spot. Fortunately (miraculously to some), all this tightening didn’t send the economy tumbling into a recession, so here we are, cautiously celebrating a soft landing. The cherry on top? Recent rate cuts (half a point in September 2024, a quarter in November) have propped up markets, especially after Trump’s November win lit a fire under major indices and sent them to all-time highs. However, there’s still plenty to ponder — tariffs, corporate tax cuts, and what 2025 might hold for the economy.
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