A top financial services company downgraded Fox Corporationโs stock on Monday, noting issues with the networkโs viewership, earnings, and content.
An analyst with Wells Fargo downgraded shares of Fox Corp. from โequal weightโ to โunderweight,โ lowering the price target from $35 per share to $31 per share, according to multiple reports on Monday.
โFox News is the FOXA cash cow at [around] 80 percent of our FY24E EBITDA,โ Steven Cahall, with Wells Fargo, wrote, referring to the acronym for earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization. โViewership is down -19% Jan-Juneโ23 vs Jan-Juneโ21 due to cord cutting and/or programming.โ
Mr. Cahall added that โmore worryingly, Fox News was 52 percent of cable news primetime viewership for 2020-22, 51 percent in Janโ23, and that has slid to a low of 38 percent in Juneโ23 post-TC,โ reported Investing.com. โ[Fox Newsโ] share of conservative news viewers has fallen from 94 percent to 84 percent.โ
Fox News is worth about $11 billion, or about five times its earnings before interest, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA), he wrote. Thatโs down from a previous estimate of six times, he said, noting that there are worries of a โstructural declineโ in overall cable news viewership across the board due to cord-cutting and demographics.
Other issues cited by Mr. Cahall included talent departure and increasing competition. โWe are also not convinced that cable news works well in streaming, so our 8 percent view on annual cord-cutting presents ongoing earnings risks,โ he said, Seeking Alpha reported.
There are also broader industry challenges ahead for Fox Corporation, the analyst said.
โFox gets about 50 percent of fiscal year 2023 and 2024 estimated revenue from U.S. affiliate feesโamong the highest in our media coverage universe,โ Mr. Cahall pointed out. โWe estimate 7-8 percent cord-cutting, with a downside bias.โ
And he warned: โFox Cable could soon go ex-growth on EBITDA like weโve seen for peer linear nets. TV has better topline growth, but less ability to reduce costs due to sports rights.โ
Byย Jack Phillips