News Corp. Earnings Jump in Second Quarter

Updated 8:00 p.m. ET

News Corp. reported higher second quarter
profits thanks to big gains at its cable and broadcast TV networks.

Net income was $1.06 billion, or 42 cents a share, up 65%
from $642 million, or 24 cents per share, a year ago. This year's net includes
$169 million in one-time gains, as well as a $36 million charge related the
company's newspapers in the U.K. and Australia. Without those charges, net
income would have been 39 cents a share vs. 29 cents a year ago.

There was also an $87 million charge against earnings
related to the costs of the ongoing investigation of the company's phone
hacking scandal, which led to the closing of the U.K. paper The News of the
World
last year. So far this year, News Corp. has paid $104 million on the
scandal. About 15% of that has gone to victims to settle cases.

Revenues rose 2% to $8.98 billion, led by gains in cable
networks, television and filmed entertainment.

"The significant growth we reported in the quarter in
the Cable Network Programming, Television and Filmed Entertainment segments
clearly validates our strategy to develop and distribute superior wide-ranging
content," said CEO Rupert Murdoch in a statement. "I am particularly
pleased with the success of our business strategies in spite of the uncertain
economic conditions that we continue to face."

Operating income for News Corp.'s cable network programming
unit rose 20% to $882 million from $735 million a year ago.  Revenue rose
9%. Earnings rose $55 million, or 25%, at the regional sports networks because
of reduced rights costs caused by the NBA lockout.

Advertising revenue at the domestic cable channels grew 6%
thanks to higher prices and ratings growth at FX. Those gains were partially
offset by advertising declines at the RSNs which lost revenues because of the
loss of NBA games due to the lockout. Excluding the RSN's advertising revenues
at the domestic cable networks were up 14%, led by FX.

Affiliate revenue rose 9% at the domestic cable channels.

Operating income for the television unit, which includes Fox
Broadcasting, rose 25% to $189 million from $151 million. The company said the
growth was the result of increased broadcast network ad revenues driven by a
stronger fall schedule led by The X Factor and New Girl, Major
League Baseball and National Football League programming. Retransmission consent
revenues rose 100%.

Programming costs were up because of the new series and the
cost of producing additional World Series games.

At the local stations, a decline in political advertising pushed
ad revenue lower.

"The advertising markets, while not quite as robust as they
were six-plus months ago, remain solid, Deputy Chairman and COO Chase Carey
told analysts during the company's earnings call. "In the March quarter, the
broadcast network is still seeing scatter pricing at a premium to the strong
upfront pricing and the stations excluding last year's Super Bowl are seeing
the March quarter up around 5% on last year with the business getting
stronger."

On the cable side, Carey said FX continues to see "strong
double digit growth while local sports at the lower end are up mid-single
digits."

News Corp. offered financial guidance saying that, excluding
the costs of the phone hacking investigation, which it declined to project,
total segment operating income for the year is expected to grow at a rate in
the low- to mid-teens from 2011's $4.975 billion.

Jon Lafayette

Jon has been business editor of Broadcasting+Cable since 2010. He focuses on revenue-generating activities, including advertising and distribution, as well as executive intrigue and merger and acquisition activity. Just about any story is fair game, if a dollar sign can make its way into the article. Before B+C, Jon covered the industry for TVWeek, Cable World, Electronic Media, Advertising Age and The New York Post. A native New Yorker, Jon is hiding in plain sight in the suburbs of Chicago.