Viacom 4Q earnings, revenue up on 'Transformers'

NEW YORK (AP) - Viacom turned the success of "Transformers: Dark of the Moon" into a pile of money in its latest quarter, as earnings tripled and revenue grew 22 percent.

Viacom, the owner of Paramount Pictures, MTV and Comedy Central, on Thursday said earned $576 million, or $1 per share in the July to September quarter. That's triple the $189 million, or 31 cents per share, it earned in the same period last year, when results were still weighed down by Harmonix, the money-losing division that made the "Rock Band" video game. Viacom sold the unit later last year.

Excluding special items, adjusted earnings were $1.06 cents per share in the latest quarter, Viacom's fiscal fourth. That was 3 cents above the average analyst estimate as polled by FactSet.

Viacom's revenue rose 22 percent to $4.05 billion from $3.33 billion. Analysts polled by FactSet were been expecting $3.75 billion.

The Paramount Pictures studio was the star of the quarter, with revenue up 46 percent to $1.8 billion. Viacom's TV networks saw revenue rise 8 percent, to $2.3 billion, driven by increases in advertising and fees paid by cable and satellite-TV companies.

Viacom's board said it's expanding its stock buyback program to $10 billion from $4 billion, "demonstrating our confidence in Viacom's long-term outlook." The company has bought back shares worth $2.5 billion so far in 2011.

Class B shares of the New York company rose 3.31 cents to close at $43.61 Thursday.

Paramount released "Transformers" in June and it blossomed into the studio's first film to gross $1 billion at the box office. It was the fourth-highest grossing movie of all time.

Then, just ahead of Halloween, the studio released "Paranormal Activity 3." It had the best opening for a U.S. horror movie so far, and has pulled in $95 million in three weeks.

"The studio's success has affirmed our strategy of a reduced release slate, a focus on franchises and the leveraging of Viacom brands," said Viacom CEO Philippe Dauman.

On the TV side, Dauman said the company is trying to deal with an "inexplicable" drop in Nickelodeon's viewer ratings, as measured by Nielsen Co. It started in mid-September. Viacom is talking to Nielsen to try to figure out what's behind the reported decline, and Dauman said independent data from cable set-top boxes don't show the same trend.

For the full fiscal year, net income was $2.14 billion, or $3.59 per share. That was up 38 percent from $1.55 billion, or $2.54 per share, in the previous year. Revenue rose 12 percent to $14.9 billion.

Upcoming Events