Harry Potter May Boost Comcast Corp's Theme Park Sales Again
Comcast 's NBCUniversal recently hiked the price of a one-day pass to Universal Studios Hollywood by up to 20% ahead of the opening of its Wizarding World of Harry Potter attractions on April 7. The tickets, which previously cost between $95 to $105 on the surge pricing model it introduced in February, are now being sold for $115. While many parkgoers will complain about the move, it suggests that the new attractions could generate lots of fresh revenue for the company's growing theme park business.
Source: Universal Studios.
Why do theme parks matter to Comcast?To understand why theme parks matter to Comcast, we should first discuss the impact of cord-cutters, who are causing the company to shedcable video subscribers and generate weaker TV ad revenues. Comcast lost 36,000 cable video subscribers in 2015, although price hikes and bundling strategies boosted overall sales 3.6% to $21.5 billion. Its cable networks revenue inched up just 0.7% to $9.6 billion, while its broadcast television revenue dipped 0.1% to $8.5 billion.
Yet its theme park business has been booming, with revenues rising 27.3% to $3.3 billion last year. While that only accounts for 12% of NBCUniversal's sales and 4% of Comcast's total revenues, the weight of that business has steadily risen over the past few years:
Source: Comcast annual reports.
How Comcast saved Universal StudiosAfter Comcast acquired a controlling stake in NBCUniversal in 2011, it invested billions into renovating Universal Studios' aging parks. It spent $100 million to build Transformers: The Ride at Universal Orlando, which opened in 2013 and arguably raised the bar for 4D rides. It addednew Despicable Me and Fast and Furious rides to its park, and plans to open new King Kong, Hello Kitty, and Nintendo attractions in the near future.
The company added eight new restaurants to Orlando's CityWalk shopping area, with plans to open a new Volcano Bay water park next year. It also invested $1.6 billion in its Hollywood park to build new rides, hotels, and parking spaces. It's evenchasing Disney overseas with planned theme parks in Beijing, Moscow, South Korea, and Dubai. In Japan, it acquired a majority stake in Universal Studios Japan in Osaka, and is currentlymulling the development of a second Japanese park in Okinawa.
Why Harry Potter mattersBut despite all those big investments, the centerpiece of the "new" Universal Studios is the Wizarding World of Harry Potter. To add those attractions to its parks, NBCUniversal initially secured a licensing deal with Scholastic and Time Warner's Warner Bros. in 2007.
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