
Warner Bros. Discovery (NASDAQ:WBD) reported fourth-quarter financial results that fell short of analyst profit expectations, highlighting the ongoing challenges of balancing a legacy linear television business with an aggressive pivot to global streaming.
The New York-based media conglomerate posted a net loss of $252 million, or 10 cents per share, for the final three months of 2025.
The results missed the consensus Wall Street estimate of a 2-cent-per-share profit, as surveyed by Zacks Investment Research.
Despite the bottom-line miss, the company’s top-line performance remained resilient.
Revenue for the period hit $9.46 billion, exactly matching analyst forecasts and reflecting steady performance across its studio and networks segments.
The quarterly loss was impacted by a combination of high content production costs and a continued decline in the linear advertising market.
While the "Networks" segment, which includes brands like TLC, Animal Planet, and Discovery, continues to generate significant cash flow, it faces secular headwinds as cord-cutting persists.