Author Topic: Markets Plunge, Media Stocks Fall on Global Jitters Sparked by Brexit Vote  (Read 631 times)

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Markets Plunge, Media Stocks Fall on Global Jitters Sparked by Brexit Vote
Friday, June 24, 2016 04:39 PM

By: Cynthia Littleton

U.S. equities markets were not spared a wallop from the global economic fears spurred by Britain's surprise vote to withdraw from the European Union.

The Dow Jones average was down more than 500 points at the 9:30 a.m. ET start of trading on Friday and closed with a 611-point drop, or a loss of 3.4% -- its eighth-largest drop ever and worst since August 2015. U.S. investors were reacting to the plunge in U.K. and European markets overnight as the reality of the U.K.'s Brexit referendum sunk in. The Nasdaq gave up 202 points or 4.1%. The S&P 500 was down 3.6%, or more than 76 points.

Media stocks were taken down by the market's undertow. Discovery Communications, one of many U.S.-based media companies that is banking heavily on international growth, closed down 7.2% to $24.46 while 21st Century Fox was down more than 7.6% to $26.78. Lions gate dropped 5% to $20.65. Viacom was off 5.8% to 40.97.

Disney (down 3.3% to $95.77), Time Warner (down 3.2% to $70.69), Netflix (down 3.5% to $88.47) and CBS Corp. (down 3.7% to $51.69) weathered the storm better. AMC Networks, with the smallest international footprint of the largest media congloms, saw a 3% decline to $57.43.

The media biz like most business interests in the U.K. were counting on the vote to fall the other way. Executives are likely to be in a scramble to figure out how the disengagement with the EU will affect their U.K. and European operations.

Another big concern about the fallout from the U.K.-EU divorce is the impact on currency fluctuation rates. The strong dollar has already been putting a dent in Big Media earnings for the past few years at a time when all of the majors are looking to invest more in overseas growth markets. The promise of more volatility to come in currency rates is unwelcome news for Hollywood's majors.

Discovery acknowledged as much in a statement issued Friday morning. The company has already taken steps to shield its downside in the U.K. and Europe with financial instruments that hedge its exposure to big swings for the pound and euro by as much as 80% of its business activity in those currencies through the end of 2017.

"Discovery Communications respects the decision of the UK people in this historic vote to leave the European Union. Discovery Channel launched in the UK in 1989 and since then it has become one of our biggest markets and a critical creative and business hub," the company said. "As a global company with a significant presence in 220 markets, we are accustomed to operating in an industry and a world where change is constant. We will work closely with UK and EU leaders to successfully navigate this change and find new opportunities to shape our future. In the short-term and medium-term, our currency hedging program will significantly minimize the impact of the Brexit vote on our financial performance.

In a research note Friday, RBC Capital Markets suggested Discovery had the greatest direct exposure to international markets, followed by 21st Century Fox and Time Warner. CBS Corp. and Scripps Networks Interactive had the smallest direct connections to the European markets through their holdings.
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Offline Chieftain

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Large bubbles in small beer.  The markets have been betting up for weeks that Stay would prevail.  Yesterday the Dow was up 230 points based on the polls.

Britain voted to leave the EU, not the planet Earth.  They are still there, with their markets and money; in reality what is going to change is the political alignments in Europe.

The EU has been a collective fantasy for 20 some years.  Brussels has held things together with bubblegum and baling wire as long as they could, and now that the Brits are gone, look for most of the other countries that still have some money to go the same route and withdraw.  The ongoing muzzie invasion of Europe, led by the EU and their rules, plays an enormous part in all of this as well, even if the American press is too squeamish to say so.

 :smokin: