Walt Disney Co.’s first-quarter profit rose, beating analysts’ estimates as the December hit “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” boosted the film studio and consumer-products business. 



Earnings at the ESPN sports network, closely watched by investors, declined and the shares fell. 



Profit excluding some items rose to $1.63 a share, Burbank, California-based Disney said Monday in a statement, exceeding the $1.45-a-share average of analysts’ projections compiled by Bloomberg. Revenue grew 14 percent to $15.2 billion in the period ended Jan. 2, compared with estimates of $14.7 billion.



  • Profit at Disney’s TV networks, including ESPN, fell 6 percent to $1.41 billion on lower ratings, higher program costs and subscriber losses, along with the strong dollar.
  • Studio earnings leapt 86 percent to $1.01 billion on results from “The Force Awakens”
  • Theme-park profit grew 22 percent to $981 million on attendance gains
  • Net income rose 32 percent to $2.88 billion, or $1.73 a share
ESPN posted lower earnings as programming costs rose. The network aired more college playoff games in the period, pushing expenses up. ESPN also experienced subscriber losses and foreign currency headwinds. 



Broadcast revenue, from ABC, rose 7 percent to $1.81 billion while profit declined 7 percent.

Disney fell 3.4 percent to $89.19 in extended trading after the results were announced. The shares gained 0.2 percent to $92.32 at the close in New York and have fallen 12 percent this year.

The studio division, with two straight years of record profit, has picked up some of the slack from Disney’s media networks, which have registered slowing growth yet still contribute more than half of profit. Disney cut its growth forecast for the cable business last August, leading to a drop in the stock and the shares of other entertainment companies.

“The Force Awakens” was released on Dec. 18, meaning the bulk of its $2 billion in global ticket sales occurred after the quarter ended. The movie was the top-grossing picture in U.S. history and third-largest worldwide, according to researcher Box Office Mojo. The film division has thrived on features from the Marvel and animation businesses.