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February 11, 2009 3:02 PM

CBS Profits Rise 14 Percent

(AP)  CBS Corp. reported a 14 percent increase in first-quarter earnings Tuesday as higher syndication sales from "CSI" made up for not having the Super Bowl broadcast this year. Its shares rose nearly 4 percent.

The company, which also owns the Showtime cable channel, Simon & Schuster and a major radio business, earned $244.3 million in the first three months of the year, up from $213.5 million a year ago.

Profits per share rose to 36 cents, beating the 33 cents predicted by analyts polled by Thomson Financial, and also above the 28 cents a year ago. The latest figures got a lift from a lower share count due to a stock repurchase program.

Revenue was essentially flat at $3.65 billion versus $3.66 billion a year ago, but still came in ahead of estimates of $3.55 billion.

Separately, the company also announced it was raising its dividend from 25 cents to 27 cents per share.

CBS's shares rose 84 cents, or 3.7 percent, to $23.38 in midday trading. They have traded in a 52-week range of $20.68 to $35.75.

TV revenues edged up 1 percent, despite the fact that two events boosted last year's first quarter performance, the Super Bowl and the semifinals of the NCAA men's basketball tournament. The NCAA semifinals aired in the second quarter of this year but the first quarter of last year.

Those factors, combined with station sales and the effects of the Hollywood writers' strike, which was settled in February, led to a 15 percent decline in TV advertising revenues, CBS said.

At the same time, CBS made up ground in TV with higher syndication sales of "CSI" and "Everybody Loves Raymond" and higher fees from its cable channels Showtime and the CBS College Sports Network. TV profits rose 13 percent, partly held back by $34.9 million in restructuring expenses.

CEO Leslie Moonves told analysts on a conference call that he didn't expect current negotiations with an actors' union to result in a strike, saying the tone of the talks was "much more cordial" than those with the writers' union.

Moonves also said the accelerated development season for TV shows this year forced by the writers' strike allowed CBS to save money by taking less time to shoot test versions of new programs.

The company's radio business continued to struggle, with reported revenues falling 9 percent and profits falling 26 percent. The declines partly reflected the sale of some radio stations.

CBS said it expects to see growth in operating income before depreciation and amortization in the range of 3 percent to 5 percent in 2008.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by payasyougo April 29, 2008 11:04 PM EDT
From the NY Times, Published: April 2, 2008

"News operations at CBS stations in several cities started a series of job cuts this week even as the CBS News network moved ahead with plans to lay off about 1 percent of its nearly 1,200 employees.

Over the last several days, layoffs were ordered at local stations that CBS owns, including ones in New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco. Dana McClintock, a spokesman for CBS, said the actions at the network and the local stations were not related.

%u201CThis is not the result of any corporate mandate,%u201D Mr. McClintock said. The moves are the latest in a wave of cuts at news operations in both television and print organizations.

The cuts at the local stations owned by CBS were related to the financial performance of the station group in the first quarter of 2008, a CBS station executive said."
------------------------

So CBS, one of the more liberal news reads, laid off the common worker to get their profits up.

Isn''t this what CBS reporters normally slam republicans for?
Reply to this comment
by inventagod2 April 29, 2008 9:06 PM EDT

Were a surprising amount of these profits traced to the Pentagon for CBS services in ''Selling the Iraq War''?
Reply to this comment
by tburzio April 29, 2008 7:59 PM EDT
In a surprise move, CBS will donate all of it''s excess profits to the struggle to create an alternative energy industry. Hillary Clinton said, "People with too much profits should give them to the government". Obama confidant Rev Wright repeated, "God d..n America!"
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