Deep Dive: 10 media stocks forecast to soar in the coming year

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The media landscape is going through a difficult transition, and it isn’t only because streaming is such a tricky business.

Companies such as Walt Disney Co. DIS, Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. WBD and Paramount Global PARA have made heavy investments in streaming services as their traditional media businesses wither, only to find that it is harder than it looks to emulate Netflix Inc.’s NFLX ability to make money from streaming.

Some of the companies are also saddled by debt, in part resulting from mergers that don’t hold the same shine in the current media landscape.

Needless to say, this is the age of cost-cutting for Netflix’s streaming competitors and many others in the broader media landscape.

Below is a screen of U.S. media stocks, showing the ones that analysts favor the most over the next 12 months. But before that, we list the ones with the highest and lowest debt levels.

All the above-mentioned media companies are in the communications sector of the S&P 500 , which also includes Alphabet Inc. GOOGL GOOG and Meta Platforms Inc. META, as well as broadcasters, videogame developers and news providers.

But there are only 20 companies in the S&P 500 communications sector, which is tracked by the Communications Services Select Sector SPDR ETF .

High debt

Before looking at the stock screen, you might be interested to see which of the 53 media companies are saddled with the highest levels of total debt relative to consensus estimates for earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) for the next 12 months, among analysts polled by FactSet. This may be especially important at a time when long-term interest rates have been rising quickly. Dollar amounts are in millions.

Company Ticker Debt/ est. EBIT Total debt Est. EBIT Debt service ratio Total return – 2023 Market cap. ($mil)
Dish Network Corp. Class A DISH 1,245% $24,556 $1,973 15% -57% $1,773
Madison Square Garden Sports Corp. Class A MSGS 1,125% $1,121 $100 -14% -4% $3,400
Paramount Global Class B PARA 656% $17,401 $2,654 -29% -13% $9,529
Consolidated Communications Holdings Inc. CNSL 651% $2,152 $331 -26% 6% $441
TechTarget Inc. TTGT 629% $479 $76 16% -36% $788
Cinemark Holdings Inc. CNK 616% $3,630 $589 61% 81% $1,908
Cogent Communications Holdings Inc. CCOI 548% $1,858 $339 -19% 27% $3,388
E.W. Scripps Co. Class A SSP 529% $3,084 $583 80% -42% $552
AMC Networks Inc. Class A AMCX 492% $2,945 $599 26% -29% $357
Live Nation Entertainment Inc. LYV 466% $8,413 $1,805 135% 22% $19,515
Source: FactSet

Click on the tickers for more about each company, including business profiles, financials and estimates.

Click here for Tomi Kilgore’s detailed guide to the wealth of information available for free on the MarketWatch quote page.

The debt figures are as of the end of the companies’ most recently reported fiscal quarters. The debt service ratios are EBIT divided by total interest paid (excluding capitalized interest) for the most recently reported quarters, as calculated by FactSet. It is best to see this number above 100%. Then again, these service ratios cover only one quarter.

Looking at the most indebted company by quarter-end debt to its 12-month EBIT estimate, it would take more than 10 years of Dish Network Corp.’s DISH operating income to pay off its total debt, excluding interest.

Shares of Dish have lost more than half their value during 2023, and the stock got booted from the S&P 500 earlier this year. The company has seen its satellite-TV business erode while it pursues a costly wireless build-out that won’t necessarily drive success in that competitive market. Dish plans to merge with satellite-communications company EchoStar Corp. SATS in a move seen as an attempt to improve balance sheet flexibility.

It is fascinating to see that for six of these companies, including Paramount, debt even exceeds the market capitalizations for their stocks. Paramount lowered its dividend by nearly 80% earlier this year as it continued its push toward streaming profitability, and Chief Executive Bob Bakish recently called the company’s planned sale of Simon & Schuster “an important step in our delevering plan.”

You are probably curious about debt levels for the largest U.S. media companies. Here they are for the biggest 10 by market cap:

Company Ticker Debt/ est. EBIT Total debt Est. EBIT Debt service ratio Total return – 2023 Market cap. ($mil)
Alphabet Inc. Class A GOOGL 22% $29,432 $133,096 711% 47% $1,528,711
Meta Platforms Inc. Class A META 47% $36,965 $78,129 717% 137% $634,547
Comcast Corp. Class A CMCSA 266% $102,669 $38,539 77% 33% $187,140
Netflix Inc. NFLX 197% $16,994 $8,641 192% 41% $184,362
T-Mobile US Inc. TMUS 378% $116,548 $30,838 32% -5% $156,881
Walt Disney Co. DIS 263% $47,189 $17,975 88% -4% $152,324
Verizon Communications Inc. VZ 370% $177,654 $48,031 36% -11% $140,205
AT&T Inc. T 378% $165,106 $43,681 31% -20% $100,872
Activision Blizzard Inc. ATVI 93% $3,612 $3,891 2159% 21% $72,118
Charter Communications Inc. Class A CHTR 434% $98,263 $22,651 89% 23% $62,380
Source: FactSet

Among the largest 10 companies in the S&P Composite 1500 communications sector by market cap, Charter Communications Inc. CHTR has the highest ratio of debt to estimated EBIT, while its debt service ratio of 89% shows it was close to covering its interest payments with operating income during its most recent reported quarter. Disney also came close, with a debt service ratio of 88%.

Charter Chief Financial Officer Jessica Fischer said at an investor day late last year that “delevering would only make sense if the market valuation of our shares fully reflected the intrinsic value of the cash-flow opportunity, if debt capacity in the market were limited or if our expectations of cash-flow growth, excluding the impact of our expansion were significantly impaired.”

Meanwhile, Kevin Lansberry, Disney’s interim CFO, said during the company’s latest earnings call that it had “made significant progress deleveraging coming out of the pandemic” and that it would “approach capital allocation in a disciplined and balanced manner.”

Disney’s debt increased when it bought 21st Century Fox assets in 2019, and the company suspended its dividend in 2020 in a bid to preserve cash during the pandemic.

When Disney announced its quarterly results on Aug. 9, it unveiled a plan to raise streaming prices in October. Several analysts reacted positively to the price increase and other operational moves.

Read: The long-simmering rumor of Apple buying Disney is resurfacing as Bob Iger looks to sell assets

The largest companies in the sector, Alphabet and Meta, have relatively low debt-to-estimated EBIT and very high debt-service ratios. Netflix has debt of nearly twice the estimated EBIT, but a high debt-service ratio. For all three companies, debt levels are low relative to market cap.

Low debt

Among the 52 companies in the S&P Composite 1500 communications sector, these 10 companies had the lowest total debt, relative to estimated EBIT, as of their most recent reported fiscal quarter-ends:

Company Ticker Debt/ est. EBIT Total debt Est. EBIT Debt service ratio Total return – 2023 Market cap. ($mil)
New York Times Co. Class A NYT 0% $0 $414 N/A 32% $6,968
QuinStreet Inc. QNST 18% $5 $26 -153% -35% $513
Alphabet Inc. Class A GOOGL 22% $29,432 $133,096 711% 47% $1,528,711
Shutterstock Inc. SSTK 26% $63 $241 39% -20% $1,502
Yelp Inc. YELP 31% $106 $344 78% 55% $2,909
Meta Platforms Inc. Class A META 47% $36,965 $78,129 717% 137% $634,547
Scholastic Corp. SCHL 54% $108 $201 319% 12% $1,314
Electronic Arts Inc. EA 73% $1,951 $2,678 605% -2% $32,425
World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. Class A WWE 93% $415 $448 479% 66% $9,455
Activision Blizzard Inc. ATVI 93% $3,612 $3,891 2159% 21% $72,118
Source: FactSet

New York Times Co. NYT takes the prize, with no debt.

Wall Street’s favorite media companies

Starting again with the 52 companies in the sector, 46 are covered by at least five analysts polled by FactSet. Among these companies, 12 are rated “buy” or the equivalent by at least 70% of the analysts:

Company Ticker Share “buy” ratings Aug. 25 price Consensus price target Implied 12-month upside potential
Thryv Holdings Inc. THRY 100% $21.11 $35.50 68%
T-Mobile US Inc. TMUS 90% $133.35 $174.96 31%
Nexstar Media Group Inc. NXST 90% $157.08 $212.56 35%
Meta Platforms Inc. Class A META 88% $285.50 $375.27 31%
Cars.com Inc. CARS 86% $18.85 $23.79 26%
Alphabet Inc. Class A GOOGL 82% $129.88 $150.04 16%
Iridium Communications Inc. IRDM 80% $47.80 $66.00 38%
News Corp. Class A NWSA 78% $20.74 $26.42 27%
Take-Two Interactive Software Inc. TTWO 74% $141.42 $155.96 10%
Live Nation Entertainment Inc. LYV 74% $84.79 $109.94 30%
Frontier Communications Parent Inc. FYBR 73% $15.24 $31.36 106%
Match Group Inc. MTCH 70% $43.79 $56.90 30%
Source: FactSet

News Corp. NWSA is the parent company of MarketWatch.

Finally, here are the debt figures for these 12 media companies favored by the analysts:

Company Ticker Debt/ est. EBIT Total debt Est. EBIT Debt service ratio Total return – 2023 Market cap. ($mil)
Thryv Holdings Inc. THRY 227% $433 $191 53% 11% $730
T-Mobile US Inc. TMUS 378% $116,548 $30,838 32% -5% $156,881
Nexstar Media Group Inc. NXST 358% $7,183 $2,009 63% -8% $5,511
Meta Platforms Inc. Class A META 47% $36,965 $78,129 717% 137% $634,547
Cars.com Inc. CARS 223% $451 $202 41% 37% $1,253
Alphabet Inc. Class A GOOGL 22% $29,432 $133,096 711% 47% $1,528,711
Iridium Communications Inc. IRDM 306% $1,481 $483 54% -7% $5,977
News Corp. Class A NWSA 261% $4,207 $1,611 109% 15% $11,940
Take-Two Interactive Software Inc. TTWO 272% $3,492 $1,283 -40% 36% $24,017
Live Nation Entertainment Inc. LYV 466% $8,413 $1,805 135% 22% $19,515
Frontier Communications Parent Inc. FYBR 453% $9,844 $2,173 85% -40% $3,745
Match Group Inc. MTCH 287% $3,839 $1,337 540% 6% $12,177
Source: FactSet

In case you are wondering about how the analysts feel about debt-free New York Times, it appears the analysts believe the shares are fairly priced at $42.60. Among eight analysts polled by FactSet, three rated NYT a buy, while the rest had neutral ratings. The consensus price target was $43.93. The stock trades at a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 27.7, which is high when compared with the forward P/E of 21.7 for the S&P 500 .

This article was originally published by Marketwatch.com. Read the original article here.

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