Home Marketers Comcast Might Be Losing Revenue, But Not NBCU’s Peacock

Comcast Might Be Losing Revenue, But Not NBCU’s Peacock

SHARE:

Parts of Comcast might be struggling, but the company still feels “well positioned” in advance of the TV upfronts in May, according to Chief Financial Officer Jason Armstrong.

Comcast has confidence in “a healthy Peacock subscriber base” and strong content across entertainment and news, Armstrong told investors during the company’s quarterly earnings report on Wednesday.

Peacock, NBCUniversal’s streaming service, ended the quarter with 41 million subscribers, up from 36 million at the end of 2024, in no small part because the ad-supported tier was added to Charter’s Spectrum TV Select bundle for free in March.

In addition to the bundled Charter subscriptions, Peacock also raised its subscription rates last year, which contributed to the improved monetization, said Comcast President Mike Cavanagh.

Moving forward, said Cavanagh, streaming will be one of the six major categories that Comcast plans to invest in for growth, along with wireless, residential broadband, business services, theme parks and content.

By the numbers

Comcast’s revenue for the quarter declined roughly 0.6% compared to this time last year, from $30 billion in 2024 to $29.9 billion in 2025. (So Comcast’s revenue is down by roughly one Kris Jenner.)

Net income, meanwhile, dropped at a much higher relative rate, down 12.5% to roughly $3.34 billion for the quarter.

Where media is concerned, domestic advertising revenue dropped slightly to $1.86 billion at a year-over-year rate of 6.8%, which Armstrong attributed to tough comparisons from last year’s Summer Olympic Games and presidential election.

In contrast, revenue for NBCUniversal’s Peacock actually increased 16% YOY to $1.2 billion and earned almost $400 million of growth in EBITDA – meaning “earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization,” for the uninitiated.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

Similarly, EBITDA for the media business grew a whopping 21.5% to over $1 billion, mostly due to lower operating expenses for sports programming at Peacock and TV networks.

Proud as a peacock

For those concerned about how economic uncertainty in the United States will affect advertising budgets, Comcast shared what is starting to become a familiar sentiment this quarter: so far, they haven’t seen any negative impact.

Still, “advertising is the category that has shown the most economic-related cyclicality in our business, historically,” said Armstrong.

Plus, the impact of tariffs and businesses closing their purse strings didn’t begin until Q2.

What will keep advertisers on board, said Cavanagh, is Comcast’s current and upcoming content offerings, including Peacock’s 80,000-hour entertainment library, the NBA’s return to NBC in Q4 and upcoming blockbusters like the “Wicked” sequel. (Part One was Peacock’s most watched and purchased movie.)

Compared to other streaming services, Peacock “started late,” Cavanagh said – but that also gave NBCU more time to plan its content for a streaming ad platform, rather than shift on the fly.

“Our history of operational execution success would tell you that while sometimes we may not move first,” CEO Brian Roberts said, “once we get in motion, we do it extremely well.”

Must Read

The Arena Group's Stephanie Mazzamaro (left) chats with ad tech consultant Addy Atienza at AdMonsters' Sell Side Summit Austin.

For Publishers, AI Gives Monetizable Data Insight But Takes Away Traffic

Traffic-starved publishers are hopeful that their long-undervalued audience data will fuel advertising’s automated future – if only they can finally wrest control of the industry narrative away from ad tech middlemen.

Q3: The Trade Desk Delivers On Financials, But Is Its Vision Fact Or Fantasy?

The Trade Desk posted solid Q3 results on Thursday, with $739 million in revenue, up 18% year over year. But the main narrative for TTD this year is less about the numbers and more about optics and competitive dynamics.

Comic: He Sees You When You're Streaming

IP Address Match Rates Are a Joke – And It’s No Laughing Matter

According to a new report, IP-to-email matches are accurate just 16% of the time on average, while IP-to-postal matches are accurate only 13% of the time. (Oof.)

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
Comic: Gamechanger (Google lost the DOJ's search antitrust case)

The DOJ And Google Sharpen Their Remedy Proposals As The Two Sides Prepare For Closing Arguments

The phrase “caution is key” has become a totem of the new age in US antitrust regulation. It was cited this week by both the DOJ and Google in support of opposing views on a possible divestiture of Google’s sell-side ad exchange.

create a network of points with nodes and connections, plain white background; use variations of green and grey for the dots and the connctions; 85% empty space

Alt Identity Provider ID5 Buys TrueData, Marking Its First-Ever Acquisition

ID5 bought TrueData mainly to tackle what ID5 CEO Mathieu Roche calls the “massive fragmentation” of digital identity, which is a problem on the user side and the provider side.

CTV Manufacturers Have A New Tool For Catching Spoofed Devices

The IAB Tech Lab’s new device attestation feature for its Open Measurement SDK provides a scaled way for original device manufacturers to confirm that ad impressions are associated with real devices.