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DATE

Thursday, January 29, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chairman and Chief Executive Officer — Brian L. Roberts
  • President, Co-Chief Executive Officer, and Chief Financial Officer — Michael J. Cavanagh
  • Chief Financial Officer — Jason S. Armstrong
  • Chief Executive Officer, Connectivity and Platforms — Steve Crony
  • Senior Vice President, Investor Relations — Marci Ryvicker

TAKEAWAYS

  • Total Company Revenue -- Increased 1% in the fourth quarter, mainly from the six growth businesses that now compose 60% of overall revenue and delivered mid–single-digit growth.
  • EBITDA -- Adjusted EBITDA declined 10% in the quarter, reflecting an ongoing investment period and costs from absorbing the new NBA content rights.
  • Adjusted Earnings Per Share -- Decreased 12% during the fourth quarter, following similar drivers as EBITDA.
  • Free Cash Flow -- Generated $4.4 billion in the quarter, including a nonrecurring $2 billion cash tax benefit related to internal reorganization timing.
  • Shareholder Returns -- $2.7 billion returned in the quarter, with $1.5 billion from share repurchases.
  • Broadband Subscriber Losses -- Lost 181,000 subscribers, with new initiatives' traction outweighed by competitive pressures.
  • Broadband ARPU Growth -- ARPU grew 1.1%, decelerating in line with previews due to new pricing and widespread adoption of free wireless lines.
  • Wireless Performance -- Added 364,000 net lines; residential broadband base wireless penetration now exceeds 15% with total lines surpassing 9,000,000.
  • Convergence Revenue -- Increased 2% in the quarter, benefiting chiefly from 18% growth in the wireless business.
  • Connectivity and Platforms EBITDA -- Declined 4.5%, with headwinds from revenue dilution and higher operating costs amid customer experience investments.
  • Business Services -- Revenue grew 6% and EBITDA increased 3%, with growth driven by enterprise solutions while SMB segment remained pressured by competition.
  • Theme Parks Segment -- Revenue up 22% and EBITDA up 24%, surpassing $1 billion in EBITDA for the quarter, led by Epic Universe in Orlando.
  • Peacock Performance -- Revenue up more than 20% to $1.6 billion; paid subscribers reached 44,000,000 as of December 31, up 8 million year over year and 3 million sequentially; advertising revenue at Peacock increased nearly 20% and platform losses improved by over $700 million for the full year, but fourth quarter losses were $552 million.
  • Media Segment Revenue -- Up 6% in the quarter, with growth primarily from Peacock.
  • Total Capital Spending -- Declined 5% to $14.4 billion for the year; capital at Connectivity and Platforms was $10.5 billion, while content and experiences spending dropped 17% to $3.6 billion as Epic Universe completion reduced needs.
  • Net Leverage Ratio -- Ended at 2.3 times, though leverage will rise slightly due to the Versant spin-off.
  • Dividend -- Annual dividend maintained at $1.32 per share, with Versant share distribution leading to higher total dividends for shareholders.
  • Strategic Initiatives -- Simplified national broadband pricing, aggressive free mobile line campaigns, network modernization with 60% of footprint on mid-split spectrum, and upgraded MVNO terms with Verizon and future T-Mobile partnership for business customers.
  • Epic Universe Impact -- Park opening drove longer guest stays, higher per capita spending, and occupancy among Orlando hotels, with a 20% increase in average daily rates and a 3% lift in occupancy.
  • Versant Media Spin-off -- Completed in January, restructuring the media mix and reducing consolidated cash flow base going forward.

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RISKS

  • Jason S. Armstrong said, "adjusted EBITDA in the quarter declined 10%, and adjusted earnings per share declined 12%," explicitly tying these declines to investment period dilution and new NBA rights costs.
  • Steve Crony said, "The market is going to remain intensely competitive," and both fixed wireless and fiber competition were directly cited as persisting headwinds for broadband performance.
  • Jason S. Armstrong said, "we expect further ARPU pressure for the next couple of quarters," and explicitly warned of "incremental EBITDA pressure over the next couple of quarters until we begin to lap these initial investments."
  • Jason S. Armstrong said, "Versant spin-off removes a significant pool of cash flow from our operations," highlighting a material reduction in recurring free cash flow post-spin.

SUMMARY

Comcast Corporation (CMCSA +2.92%) closed the year with consolidated revenue growth of 1% in the fourth quarter, underpinned by double-digit expansion in theme parks, Peacock, and domestic wireless, even as reported adjusted EBITDA fell 10% and earnings per share dropped 12% amid heavy upfront investment and content rights amortization. Management emphasized a major structural reset: national broadband pricing simplification, stronger wireless positioning—including 364,000 net wireless line additions and penetration of 15% of the broadband base—and substantial network upgrades, with 60% of the residential footprint now on mid-split spectrum. Executives conveyed clear near-term ARPU and EBITDA headwinds from price initiatives and ongoing promotions, while mapping a transition to more resilient, converged customer relationships as free wireless lines are expected to convert to paid in the second half of 2026. The spin-off of Versant Media both sharpened media strategy and removed a meaningful source of operating cash flow from consolidated results, prompting guidance that capital returns will rely increasingly on organic free cash generation within the remaining portfolio.

  • Steve Crony described operational focus as "eliminating redundancy, and aligning the entire team around a single set of growth objectives, all of which are centered around improving our competitiveness in the marketplace."
  • Michael J. Cavanagh noted network modernization with AI-driven automation yielded "a 20% reduction in trouble calls and a 35% reduction in repair minutes where we have deployed FDX technology."
  • Theme parks' Epic Universe launch in Orlando catalyzed a "first time that the parks business has crossed $1 billion of EBITDA in a quarter," with management targeting further hotel occupancy and rate gains as ramp-up continues through year-end.
  • Following Versant's separation, management committed to sustaining the legacy dividend and outlined that "our investors should see higher total dividends in 2026, marking our eighteenth consecutive year of dividend growth."
  • Michael J. Cavanagh explained Peacock profitability levers include phased price rises, affiliate renewals, and advertising, specifically citing 170 new NBA advertisers, 20% of which are new to the platform.
  • Business services posted 6% revenue and 3% EBITDA gains, with growth led by enterprise solutions and gradual adoption of advanced services in SMB, but sustained fixed wireless competition continued to weigh on the segment.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • MVNO (Mobile Virtual Network Operator): Service provider that offers wireless communication services using another carrier’s network infrastructure under commercially negotiated wholesale terms.
  • Mid-Split Spectrum: Refers to a cable network upgrade increasing upstream bandwidth between approximately 5 MHz and 85 MHz, supporting higher upload speeds.
  • FDX Technology (Full Duplex DOCSIS): Network architecture enabling simultaneous bi-directional data transmission on the same spectrum, enhancing cable broadband speed and capacity.
  • ARPU (Average Revenue Per User): A metric representing the average monthly revenue generated per broadband customer or subscriber.
  • EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization): A key profitability measure commonly used to assess recurring operating performance, excluding the impact of non-operational items and capital structure.
  • Convergence Revenue: Revenue gained from customers who utilize integrated services—such as broadband and wireless—together, typically reflecting bundled value propositions.
  • CapEx (Capital Expenditure): Funds invested by a company to acquire or upgrade physical assets such as property, industrial buildings, or equipment.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Brian L. Roberts: Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us. Before I turn the call over to Michael J. Cavanagh and Jason S. Armstrong to walk you through our results, I wanted to take a moment to say a few words about the team and the year ahead. We are at an inflection point, both in our industry and at Comcast Corporation. The business is changing rapidly, and competition has never been more intense. The choices we are making right now matter. I feel very good about how we are positioned, and it really starts with our leadership. Steve Crony joins us for the first time on this call today.

From day one running this business, he challenged long-held assumptions and moved quickly to reset priorities around actions that will drive growth. We spent time last week at Steve's leadership meeting where he brought together the entire team following a major reorganization. Coming out of that, my confidence has only increased. There is a clear sense of focus and urgency. Everyone understands the priorities and is moving with speed and purpose. I think you will enjoy meeting Steve today for those that do not know him. As Michael J. Cavanagh starts this year as co-CEO, I could not be more excited about him stepping into his role.

We have worked side by side for a long time, and he brings an exceptional combination of strategic clarity and operating discipline. As we continue to pivot the company towards our six growth drivers, Michael J. Cavanagh is leading the strategy and execution of that shift. As we look ahead to the upcoming Winter Olympics, we are excited about the prospects for Team USA but more importantly, are reminded of the power of shared moments to bring people together across the globe. Like so many, I am heartbroken by the tragic events of recent weeks, and our thoughts are with the families and communities that have been deeply impacted.

In a time of profound division, we hope the Olympic Games can offer a moment of connection for our country and for people everywhere. Now I would like to turn it over to you, Michael J. Cavanagh. Thanks, Brian.

Michael J. Cavanagh: 2025 was a year of meaningful progress for us. We moved with urgency to make decisive management, operational, and structural changes, resetting how we run our businesses and how we compete, all with a clear focus on positioning the company for sustained growth. A key step in that effort was appointing Steve Crony as CEO of Connectivity and Platforms, and I could not be more pleased to have him leading that business. Under Steve's leadership, we have made the most significant go-to-market shift in our company's history. We have simplified our broadband offering by moving away from short-term promotions toward a clear, transparent value proposition.

Customers now choose from four nationwide speed tiers with straightforward, all-in pricing that includes our best-in-class gateway and unlimited data, along with a five-year price guarantee that brings predictability and removes long-standing complexity from the category. We also strengthened our wireless approach with new offers tailored to different customer segments, from premium unlimited plans for higher-value households to a twelve-month free line promotion designed to increase mobile awareness and attachment. At the same time, we began to simplify the overall customer experience with faster access to live agents, easier digital buy flows and activation, and same-day delivery. Those changes are beginning to show up in customer behavior.

Voluntary churn continues to trend lower, NPS is moving in the right direction, adoption of the five-year price guarantee remains strong, and gig speed sell-in has improved meaningfully with approximately 40% of the base on gig plus tiers. We have also expanded the use of simplified market-based pricing and retention, including broader deployment of new everyday pricing. Refreshed packaging is driving higher Xfinity gateway attachment, enabling a more differentiated in-home experience, better streaming performance, and lower latency. Turning to wireless, I am pleased to share that we have modernized our MVNO partnership with Verizon, supporting continued profitable growth for Comcast Corporation, Charter, and Verizon.

With these enhancements, we have an even stronger relationship with Verizon to enable our customers to have a world-class experience. With the addition of T-Mobile as a network partner for our business customers later in the year, we continue to have a capital-efficient mobile platform with a cost structure that supports a durable and growing convergence value proposition for our customers. Wireless continues to be a powerful driver of that convergence strategy, and 2025 was our strongest year yet. We added approximately 1,500,000 net lines, ending the year with over 9,000,000 total lines and roughly 15% penetration of our residential broadband base.

That performance reinforces wireless as a key growth engine for the company while also strengthening customer relationships and lifetime value across our connectivity portfolio. Even as wireless competition intensifies, our broadband scale, industry-leading Wi-Fi, and improving offers position us well to grow wireless profitably while maintaining a disciplined long-term approach. Finally, we continue to make substantial progress on our network upgrade with roughly 60% of the foot now transitioned to mid-split spectrum and a virtualized architecture. We are already seeing benefits from greater automation and the deployment of AI across the network to optimize the end-to-end customer experience.

Our investments are delivering tangible operating benefits, including a 20% reduction in trouble calls and a 35% reduction in repair minutes where we have deployed FDX technology. 2025 also marks great progress across content and experiences. At parks, the opening of Epic Universe is already acting as a catalyst across Orlando, driving longer stays, higher per cap spending, and increased demand across our parks and hotels, reinforcing the attractive returns we see from continued investment in this business.

In media, we have made meaningful progress at Peacock, improving EBITDA losses by approximately $700,000,000 for the year, and we are pleased with the successful launch of the NBA on NBC and Peacock late in the year, which is delivering strong viewership while expanding reach and engagement across our platforms. We strengthened our content pipeline with a long-term creative partnership with Taylor Sheridan, adding premium franchise-scale film and television IP. Finally, we have completed the spin of Versant Media, creating a focused, well-capitalized public company while enabling NBCUniversal to concentrate on driving profitability in our media business powered by best-in-class live sports, entertainment, and news across NBC, Peacock, and Bravo.

Looking ahead, 2026 is about building on the changes we made in 2025 and advancing the next phase of our plan centered on levers that matter most. Our priorities in connectivity and platforms are clear: position the business for a return to growth, deepen convergence through wireless, and fully leverage our network leadership across residential and business services. This will be the largest broadband investment year in our history, focused squarely on customer experience and simplification, with the goal of migrating the majority of residential broadband customers to our new simplified pricing and packaging by year-end.

In wireless, we expect a meaningful portion of customers currently taking a free line to transition to paid relationships in the second half of the year as engagement deepens and customers experience the value of the product, consistent with the progression we have seen over time. We will further simplify activation and service interaction with a focus on reducing call-ins, improving first contact resolution, and shortening speed to service. We will also lean into our network leadership as we complete upgrades across most of the footprint and start marketing multi-gigabit symmetric speeds and their differentiated capabilities, creating opportunities to move customers into higher-value tiers over time.

In Comcast Business, we will remain focused on stabilizing small business while accelerating growth in mid-market and enterprise, where demand for advanced, secure, and scalable connectivity continues to increase. 2026 will also be a defining year for content and experiences. It marks NBC's one-hundredth anniversary, a century of leadership in broadcast and live storytelling, and a year in which NBCUniversal will deliver roughly 40% of the industry's major live events, bringing the biggest moments in media to audiences at scale. Sports remains one of our most durable strengths, with the full breadth of that portfolio on display.

Beginning with legendary February featuring the Super Bowl on NBC and Peacock, followed by the Winter Olympics in Milan, and the NBA All-Star Game, all sold out. Later in the year, Major League Baseball returns to NBC and Peacock under a new agreement, followed by the World Cup on Telemundo. At Peacock, we expect another year of meaningful EBITDA improvement as we continue progressing toward breakeven even as we absorb the NBA rights. Our studio slate remains exceptional, led by the Odyssey from Christopher Nolan, the Super Mario Galaxy movie, and Minions 3 from Chris Melandandre, and Disclosure Day from Steven Spielberg.

At Parks, 2026 marks the first full year of Epic Universe alongside the opening of Universal Kids Resort in Frisco, Texas, the debut of our first outdoor roller coaster at Universal Studios Hollywood, and groundbreaking on our new Universal Resort in the UK. So to wrap up, my focus remains squarely on growth. We have been consistent in investing behind the six growth engines that define our future while protecting one of the strongest balance sheets in the industry and returning substantial capital to shareholders. We like the position of both of our major businesses.

Our broadband network and products are best in class, our customer experience keeps improving, and as the market shifts to multi-gigabit symmetrical speeds, we are well-positioned to grow. We have the best hand in convergence, combining broadband leadership with a differentiated capital-light mobile business, and we are the market leader with small businesses and the fastest-growing provider in mid-market and enterprise. On the media side, we operate world-class theme parks and studios, and we are scaling a streaming platform that runs in concert with our television business, delivering unmatched sport, news, and entertainment.

Taken together, we feel very good about where we are positioned with the right assets, the right strategy, and the financial strength to perform through cycles and create long-term value. With that, I will turn it over to Jason S. Armstrong.

Jason S. Armstrong: Thanks, Michael J. Cavanagh, and good morning, everyone. I will start with a high-level overview of our consolidated results and then get into more detail on our businesses. Total company revenue grew 1% in the fourth quarter, benefiting from strength across our six growth businesses, which collectively represent 60% of our revenue and grew at a mid-single-digit rate. Notably, theme parks, Peacock, and domestic wireless, three of our six key growth drivers, each grew revenue right around 20%. As we previewed, we are in an investment period.

We are pivoting in the broadband business through changes to packaging and pricing and significant investments in the customer experience, all designed to stabilize our base and subsequently grow revenue in the category again. We are also absorbing the full cost of the first year of the new NBA contract in our content and experiences segment and expect that to scale over time. As a result, adjusted EBITDA in the quarter declined 10%, and adjusted earnings per share declined 12%. We generated $4.4 billion of free cash flow in the quarter, which includes about $2 billion of a cash tax benefit related to an internal corporate reorganization.

Recall, we received the P&L benefit associated with this in last year's fourth quarter, and at the time mentioned that the cash benefit from this would occur in 2025. So this quarter's free cash flow includes the benefit of that. Finally, during the quarter, we returned $2.7 billion to shareholders, including $1.5 billion in share repurchases. Now turning to our businesses, starting with Connectivity and Platforms. The competitive environment for broadband remains intense, similar to prior quarters, while we saw wireless competition step up towards the end of the fourth quarter. Against that backdrop, we continued to advance our new go-to-market strategy we launched earlier this year.

While it is still early, we remain encouraged by what we are seeing, including lower voluntary churn, strong adoption of our five-year price guarantee, a significant improvement in take rates of gig plus speeds, and continued uptake of free wireless lines. We remain focused on transitioning the majority of our customer base to simplified, market-based pricing plans, and importantly, prioritizing getting to the other side of this transition as quickly as possible. As we have highlighted, this pivot comes with an investment. That includes rate reinvestment through simplified broadband pricing and offering free wireless lines, which impact near-term revenue, as well as higher operating costs tied to customer experience initiatives.

These dynamics were reflected in the quarter through dilution to broadband ARPU growth and elevated marketing, product, and customer service expenses, contributing to the 4.5% decline in connectivity and platforms EBITDA. As we have said before, as we continue to invest through this transition, we expect incremental EBITDA pressure over the next couple of quarters until we begin to lap these initial investments in 2026.

As we move past this investment period, we will have the vast majority of our base on new pricing and packaging for broadband, we will have a much higher percentage of our customers on gig plus speed plans, which are substantially differentiated from fixed wireless and satellite offerings, and we will have a large base of free wireless customers moving into paying relationships with us. All tailwinds to our business at that point, which will better position us for long-term growth. Now let me get into some more details of the quarter, starting with broadband. Subscriber losses were 181,000, as the early traction we are seeing from our new initiatives was more than offset by continued competitive intensity.

Broadband ARPU grew 1.1%, slight growth, but consistent with the deceleration that we had previewed reflecting our new go-to-market pricing, including lower everyday pricing and strong adoption of free wireless lines. Looking ahead, we expect further ARPU pressure for the next couple of quarters, driven by the absence of a rate increase, the impact from free wireless lines, and the ongoing migration of our base to simplified pricing. At the same time, convergence revenue grew 2% in the quarter, driven by 18% growth in wireless. We added 364,000 wireless lines, and similar to last quarter, nearly half of our residential postpaid connects came from customers taking a free line.

Our free line strategy is a logical and, importantly, a rational competitive approach for us. It adds value to our core broadband product, builds familiarity in a tough-to-penetrate wireless market, and will convert to a paying relationship after one year in a product category where we are firmly profitable and one which delivers strong bundling benefits to our core broadband business. We also continue to see a strong uptake of our premium unlimited plans, further strengthening our position in the higher-value postpaid market. In total, we now have over 9,000,000 wireless lines, with penetration of our residential broadband base above 15%. While the wireless environment has become more competitive, we remain confident in our strategy.

Our converged offerings continue to deliver meaningful savings versus comparable plans from our competitors, reinforcing the value proposition we deliver to our customers. Looking ahead to 2026, we expect to convert the vast majority of free lines into paying relationships, which in turn should provide a meaningful tailwind to convergence revenue growth. Turning to business services, revenue increased 6%, and EBITDA grew 3% in the quarter. Results continue to reflect the dynamic we have been seeing for several quarters, with modest revenue growth in our small and medium business segment and strong momentum at our enterprise solutions business.

In SMB, competitive intensity remains elevated, particularly from fixed wireless, but we are driving higher ARPU through increased adoption of advanced services, including cybersecurity and Comcast Business Mobile. Enterprise solutions continue to gain traction as we expand our customer base and deepen our relationships. This remains an area of investment and an important growth driver going forward. In addition, in 2026, we look forward to expanding our business mobile relationships through our T-Mobile MVNO. In content and experiences, there are a few items I would like to highlight. At theme parks, we delivered another strong set of results, with growth accelerating in the fourth quarter.

Revenue increased 22%, and EBITDA grew 24%, with EBITDA crossing the $1 billion level for the first time. This performance was driven by strong results at Universal Orlando. We are really pleased with what we are seeing from Epic, which continues to drive higher per cap spending and attendance across the entirety of the resort. While we are not yet operating at full run rate capacity, we have made meaningful progress expanding ride throughput, and we remain focused on scaling further over the next several quarters, with higher attendance, stronger per caps, and additional operating leverage over time. At studios, we have had great success with the Wicked franchise, which has now grossed well over a billion dollars worldwide.

Our overall results reflect tough comparisons to last year's film slate, the timing of content licensing deals, and higher marketing spend associated with the higher volume of films this year. Turning to media, we successfully completed our spin of Versant on January 2, after the quarter closed, so our fourth quarter results still reflect a full quarter of ownership. We will provide pro forma trending schedules excluding Versant ahead of our first quarter earnings to help with comparability in forecasting as we go forward. Media revenue increased 6% in the fourth quarter, primarily driven by Peacock.

Peacock revenue grew more than 20% to a record $1.6 billion, supported by strong distribution revenue growth of over 30% as paid subscribers increased 8,000,000 year over year and 3,000,000 sequentially, reaching 44,000,000 as of December 31. Advertising revenue at Peacock grew nearly 20%, benefiting from our strong sports lineup, including the premiere of the NBA and the timing of the exclusive NFL game this quarter. Total advertising increased 1.5%, with strong underlying demand driven by our record upfront, continued strength from Sunday Night Football, which delivered the most-watched season in its history, and the launch of the NBA this quarter, partially offset by lower political advertising compared to last year.

Media EBITDA declined in the quarter, primarily reflecting the addition of NBA rights. As we have discussed, we are straight-lining the amortization of these sports rights, which creates upfront EBITDA dilution, particularly in the first season, with game counts driving the quarterly realization of this expense. While the fourth quarter represented about 25% of our total games for the season, the first quarter will be the peak volume period with roughly 50% of our games played, which will also result in peak EBITDA dilution. Over time, we expect to offset this impact through advertising growth and subscriber acquisition and monetization across both linear and Peacock.

At Peacock, while losses came in at $552,000,000 for the quarter, reflecting the addition of NBA rights and our exclusive NFL game, full-year Peacock losses improved over $700,000,000 year over year. Peacock has reached meaningful scale and continues to demonstrate improvement, giving us confidence in our ability to absorb near-term investments, including the first full year of the NBA. In 2026, we expect Peacock losses to meaningfully improve again. I will wrap up with free cash flow and capital allocation. For the full year, we generated $19.2 billion of free cash flow, up significantly year over year and the highest year on record.

We benefited in 2025 from lower cash taxes, favorable working capital comparisons, particularly related to studio production spend, and lower capital spending. As we look towards 2026, it is important to note that one-time cash tax benefits in 2025, including the $2 billion mentioned upfront, will not recur. In addition, recall, we said the benefits from new tax would average about a billion dollars per year for the next five years. The timing of those benefits is lumpy. We saw an outsized benefit in 2025 and expect the benefit to be significantly lower in 2026. Finally, as you can see from their filings, the Versant spin-off removes a significant pool of cash flow from our operations.

Total capital spending in 2025, inclusive of CapEx and capitalized software and intangibles, declined 5% to $14.4 billion. This includes a 17% decline to $3.6 billion at content experiences, driven by lower investment at theme parks following the completion of Epic Universe earlier this year, alongside relatively consistent capital spending of $10.5 billion at connectivity and platforms. Looking ahead to 2026, we expect total capital spending to be relatively similar to 2025, with spending at both CMP and C&E remaining relatively consistent year over year. Turning to leverage, our balance sheet remains incredibly strong, ending the year with net leverage at 2.3 times.

As you know, the Versant spin was capitalized in a way that positioned them for success, with low leverage and ample liquidity. As a result, our leverage ratios will increase slightly on the back of the spin-off. Our intention will be to migrate back to the 2025 ending leverage of 2.3 times. On capital returns in 2025, we returned nearly $12 billion to shareholders, including nearly $7 billion in share repurchases, resulting in a mid-single-digit year-over-year reduction in our share count. Consistent with what we articulated at a conference last month, we are maintaining our annual dividend at its current level of $1.32 per share.

In addition, our shareholders received a dividend in kind through the distribution of Versant shares and now will be able to participate directly in Versant's capital allocation priorities, including dividends. As a result, our investors should see higher total dividends in 2026, marking our eighteenth consecutive year of dividend growth. As we look ahead to next year, our capital allocation strategy remains unchanged. Our priorities are to invest organically in our growth businesses, maintain a strong balance sheet, and return capital to shareholders. This formula has served us well and will continue to guide our approach.

With that, before turning back to Marci Ryvicker for Q&A, let me welcome Steve Crony as this is his first earnings call, and turn it over to him for a few opening remarks. Steve?

Steve Crony: Thanks, Jason S. Armstrong. I appreciate it, and it is great to be on the call. I look forward to getting to know those of you I have yet to meet. As Brian Roberts and Michael J. Cavanagh have outlined, we have been moving with urgency on a number of important changes across the business, and the team is focused and aligned on executing against the plan. When I think about what success looks like, it starts with being honest with ourselves and clearly defining our reality. The market is going to remain intensely competitive. Success is not about waiting for the environment to change; it is about how we perform inside of that environment.

We are executing against a clear, actionable plan to change the trajectory of the business. We are focused on simplifying how we operate, eliminating redundancy, and aligning the entire team around a single set of growth objectives, all of which are centered around improving our competitiveness in the marketplace. A lot of the progress Michael J. Cavanagh outlined on pricing, mobile penetration, network modernization, and the customer experience is exactly what this plan is designed to deliver: fewer distractions, clear ownership, accountability, and much better execution. From there, we stay focused on our core pillars. First is the network, which remains our foundation. We offer gig Internet and wireless to 65,000,000 homes, the largest converged network in the country.

Our job is to stay well ahead of demand on speed, performance, and capacity. Usage continues to grow at double-digit rates, and as competition intensifies, a scalable, reliable, and increasingly intelligent network will become an even more important competitive advantage. Second is the product. This is where we have our clearest differentiation. Customers make decisions based on the quality and reliability of their Wi-Fi, and our Wi-Fi reliability ranks number one in our footprint based on independent open signal testing. We have a Wi-Fi-centered strategy designed to reliably support hundreds of connected devices and deliver a seamless experience in and out of the home. Mobile then builds naturally on this foundation.

When customers take mobile with broadband, lifetime value increases substantially, and those customers are more meaningfully loyal. Third is the customer experience, which is our biggest opportunity by far. We must make it easier to do business with us and build a more loyal customer base through greater price transparency, more simplicity, fewer friction points, and consistently getting it right the first interaction. Importantly, the same operating model applies to Comcast Business, where we are accelerating growth in enterprise while continuing to lead in SMB, with a clear shift towards advanced, multiproduct solutions.

When we get these three critical pieces right, I am determined to improve our broadband performance year over year in the near term, return to revenue and EBITDA growth, drive higher mobile penetration, and create much better customer outcomes, which include higher relationship and transactional Net Promoter Scores, lower effort, and stronger loyalty. All of this is within our control. It does not assume relief in the competitive environment, and it does not rely on any one lever. It is about executing better with the industry's best products, a differentiated Wi-Fi-first experience, and a unified team focused on growth. With that, back to you, Marci Ryvicker, for Q&A.

Marci Ryvicker: Thanks, Steve Crony. Operator, let's open the call for Q&A, please.

Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Please press star then the number one on your touch-tone phone. If you wish to be removed from the queue, please press star then the number two. If you are using a speakerphone, you may need to pick up a handset first before pressing the numbers. Once again, if there are any questions, please press star, then the number one on your touch-tone phone. The first question is coming from Michael Ian Rollins from Citi. Your line is now live.

Michael Ian Rollins: Thanks. Good morning. If I could dig into the broadband side of the business for a moment. First, in terms of moving from more localized rate plan management to national, can you give us an update in terms of what you are seeing on both the intake and retention of customers? And then secondly, can you discuss more of the wireless opportunity? In terms of the converged bundle, with the free line promotion, is there an opportunity to further accelerate quarterly wireless net adds?

Michael J. Cavanagh: Thanks, Michael Ian Rollins, for the question. I appreciate that. Let me start with broadband. As was highlighted in the opening, it is our largest go-to-market shift in the company's history. On top of the go-to-market shift, we are investing across marketing, product differentiation, and the customer experience. We are encouraged by what we are seeing early. We have seen year-over-year improvement in voluntary churn, an active migration of the base to more simplified transparent pricing, which has long-term benefits. We have strong adoption of the five-year price guarantee, further stabilizing the base, and we are seeing continued mix shift toward our gig plus tiers, which is a clear differentiator from fixed wireless and satellite.

On top of that, even though we have the national price points, we still maintain flexibility market by market. We have a data-led approach, and we look at competitive intensity and adapt our pricing accordingly. In reference to mobile, there is a huge opportunity in mobile. With 65,000,000 passings, we are really excited about the opportunity there. It is one of the largest and fastest-growing markets, with a $200 billion TAM. We strongly believe we have the right to compete and win in that marketplace. Customers are responding to the value. We did see competition intensify a bit in the fourth quarter, but we still had our best year ever in 2025 with wireless net additions.

Another positive is that in the back half of the year, about 50% of our residential postpaid phone connects were free lines, creating a meaningful monetization opportunity as we move forward. Additionally, we have strong early results in our premium unlimited tier that we launched this year, expanding our reach into the higher end of the market, enabling gig download speeds, 4K streaming, and guaranteed device upgrades, all at a price that is well below the market. Additionally, we have a structural advantage when it comes to mobile. 90% of Xfinity mobile traffic is offloaded on our own network, and we have lower acquisition costs by selling into our existing broadband base.

If you take all that together, we are 15% penetrated today, and we have a long runway ahead of us.

Marci Ryvicker: Thanks, Michael Ian Rollins. Operator, next question, please.

Operator: Thank you. The next question is coming from Craig Moffett from MoffettNathanson. Your line is now live.

Craig Moffett: Hi. Two questions, if I could. First, Brian Roberts, I wonder if you could just reflect a bit on the process that we have seen play out with Paramount, Netflix, and Warner Brothers Discovery, and how you think that sort of shapes your thinking about Peacock with respect to scale or partnerships and what have you? And then second, Michael J. Cavanagh, if you could just quickly return to what you said in your prepared remarks about the modernization of the contract with Verizon. I wonder if you could just put some meat on the bones for us with respect to the MVNO agreement as to what might have changed.

Brian L. Roberts: Okay. Thanks, Craig Moffett. Let me start and kick it over to Michael J. Cavanagh, and feel free to talk on either subject. I do not think we have too much data on the Verizon piece that we just covered. But in terms of Warner Brothers, I mean, what can you say? It is still underway, obviously. But I think we saw an opportunity to see if we could build value for the Comcast Corporation shareholders looking at their international reach, which would have been additive. But once it looked like all cash, we were just not interested in, at these values, stretching our balance sheet to do something like that.

So I do not know how much more we can say except that it forced us in the journey to really take a good look at what we have and what we are building. I will let Michael J. Cavanagh expand a little bit on this, but I think we have done a super job. The businesses that we would have contributed in a very creative structure, putting the two companies together, is post-Versant spin. They are trying to do the same thing with their cable nets that we have already done. We have a wonderful studios business, as you just heard in the opening, creating franchises. 2026 should be a great year for the film business.

We are excited with the number of the films coming out. Off of that business, we have two studios in the television business, which is feeding Peacock. Your question on Peacock, I think we made a lot of progress in 2025, and we are getting there. There is an integrated media business that is profitable, that has got a lot of sports, it has got someday Taylor Sheridan, today it has got great pay-one movies and wonderful shows. All Her Fault, Love Island, really some breakthrough content in 2025 with more coming with now the Olympics, the Super Bowl, the World Cup, and on and on, and the NBA.

So I just think we came to this late because of our Hulu one-third ownership, which we have been able to monetize. Finally, there is the theme park business. All three of those businesses put us in a very different kind of business than perhaps what you are witnessing with Paramount, Netflix, and Warner Brothers, what their ambitions may be. So I think we are very confident and comfortable that we are in the right part of the industry. We have separated the businesses that have more strategic issues that have to get resolved with the cable nets, and Mark Lazarus is off to a great start trying to do that with Versant. So I think we take a wait-and-see.

It has stirred the pot. I would end with this one thought. A lot of companies are asking, what does this mean to me? There are a lot of conversations on whether there are opportunities to build value, and we are always open to that. So we are looking at ways to creatively compete, succeed, and go into a part of the business that perhaps is not the same as, quote, everybody else. I think we are doing a great job of that. Michael J. Cavanagh, do you want to expand on that at all?

Michael J. Cavanagh: I think you said it well, Brian L. Roberts, but I will just add that the Versant spin did, you know, leave us by design with the three growth businesses that Brian L. Roberts described within NBC. I think it is a microcosm of really across the whole company.

My focus over the last eighteen months has really been to make sure the management teams and leaders in all of our businesses are properly focused on dealing with the challenges that some of the legacy businesses within our mix have and not let that take away from the focus of putting resources and energy and ambition behind those parts of the business that have growth opportunities, and that has been the focus. I think you see with Versant set off on their course, I think the remaining businesses of NBC are focused on driving top-line growth and then converting that into the bottom line as time passes, and you see that happening.

I think one other thing I would add on that score is it is competitive. As Steve Crony said, we are operating in very competitive markets across all the businesses. One other area of focus for me, Steve Crony, and others across the business is to make sure that in these competitive times, we make sure to take advantage of all the opportunities we have across the businesses. Not that we were not on that previously, but I would say the energy of making sure that we are using all parts of the company to help the business.

We have been very strong at this broader notion called symphony over time, but I think we have gotten a lot more tactical in the last six to nine months on a week-in, week-out basis with a real cadence around what can NBC be doing to help the connectivity business and, likewise, what the connectivity business, for example, can be doing to help Peacock. So I think there are opportunities ahead of us to make sure we execute that at a high level. So I think that is what I would add on the NBC side of it all. Going to Verizon, great. Not much to add there. I think we amended the long-standing agreement, the partnership we have.

It is a good arrangement for all parties involved. It is modernized, and it is a foundation for mutual profitable growth as we continue to build the business together. So as you zoom out, I think what was important to us, what is important to us, going back to my comments just now, is that we take advantage of the opportunity that you and others have pointed out that we have in connectivity. I think we have a right to win. We are across 65,000,000 homes with gig plus speeds, broadband on a path to multi-gig symmetrical.

We can today sell gig speed plus mobile plans with the best devices across a leading network, and that is a real opportunity for us to execute against. Our agreements allow us to feel confident that we are well-positioned with the extension of the agreements to continue to do that.

Marci Ryvicker: Thanks, Craig Moffett. Operator, next question, please.

Operator: Thank you. The next question is coming from Jessica Reif Cohen from BofA Securities. Your line is now live.

Jessica Reif Cohen: Thank you. Maybe continuing with the theme of potential consolidation, can you step back and talk about how you are thinking about your asset portfolio over the next twelve to twenty-four months or longer? What would need to change for you to consider a different structural approach to the media assets to recognize the value and potentially strategic flexibility? Because for the first time in a really long time, there are clear values for different parts of the media business versus the current conglomerate multiple that you are unfortunately getting. Other areas of the business are scaling up. How do you think about the next couple of years?

Then just drilling down to Peacock for a second, your 44,000,000 subs now, and I am just wondering what the levers are to narrow the losses. Is it pricing? Is it ad loads? CPMs? Do you manage turnarounds? Sports, seasonality? What are the milestones that we can look for to, you know, for Peacock to actually get to breakeven and sustain profitability?

Michael J. Cavanagh: Sure. So it is Michael J. Cavanagh. I will jump in there. Piling on to what Brian L. Roberts and I had just said, I think I would add to it that we do not really see that there is a strategic advantage or making NBCUniversal stronger by separating it from the cable side of the house or putting it outside of Comcast Corporation. So start there. The advantages we have with it sitting inside the company do not get stronger by being smaller as a standalone entity, in our view. Our view is, as I just said, to create value by executing against the plans we have.

The second part of your question, I think one of the big ones, I do not think there is any doubt about the strength and value creation opportunity that we have in parks. Leaning in heavily to that. I do not think we need anything more than just the team we have and the resources that we can put behind it. Very much the same in the studio business.

So the real work to do is on the media side, execute now post-Versant on the integrated domestic strategy to have a broadcast business aligned with a streaming business in Peacock, that adds to it the pay-one movie windows from our studios, as well as the strong sports news and entertainment that goes along with it. To drive Peacock towards profitability, as Jason S. Armstrong said earlier, we made great strides in 2025, and we will do the same in 2026. When it comes to the path to doing that and particularly the NBA side of it all, I think what you are seeing is the strength of the content, especially new content, is price increases.

So we successfully took a $3 price increase last summer, late summer, and held the full-year growth that we have seen in subscribers. You see it in advertising, with growth there, and for the note on the NBA, we have seen really nice success in the NBA thus far with adding something like 170 advertisers in the NBA. Great demand. 20% of those advertisers are new and basically sold out on our NBA season, so we feel very good on that score. Then as time passes over several years, 2025 to 2028, as our affiliate deals renew as opposed to they do not accelerate simply because we took on new content.

So we will see that revenue stream build as those multiple levers are the levers that over the period of time ahead bring Peacock to profitability in the overall media segment. To sustainable profitability alongside parks and studios. Thanks, Jessica Reif Cohen. Operator, next question, please.

Operator: Certainly. The next question is coming from John Hodulik from UBS. Your line is now live.

John Hodulik: Great. Thanks. Maybe a quick one for Steve Crony. Talk about the competitive environment in high-speed data and just sort of how that has evolved over the last several months? Michael J. Cavanagh mentioned at our conference that you guys are seeing more competition on the fiber side. Just want to get a sense of whether that has continued into January. Then maybe for Jason S. Armstrong, you referred to the biggest year of investment in the broadband business. It sounds like you are pointing to sort of incrementally accelerating declines in the first half with C&P EBITDA.

Are you suggesting or do you guys model out that those declines will improve in the second half of this year or that we can actually get to EBITDA growth? When do you guys expect that to happen?

Steve Crony: John Hodulik, great to hear from you. In reference to the competitive environment, in the fourth quarter, we did see a more competitive environment from fiber, and that remains. I think we assume that is going to happen continually as we go forward, as I already mentioned. From a fixed wireless perspective, it stayed pretty consistent, and we are seeing stability there. I think, as we are all aware, the mobile environment got significantly more competitive within the quarter. As discussed, we built the plan assuming the environment stays the same, and we will continue to operate accordingly.

Jason S. Armstrong: Yes, John Hodulik, I will take your question on EBITDA and just sort of pacing through the year. I think you are right. In the upfront remarks, we talked about sort of the fourth quarter and into the first half of next year. That is going to be a period characterized by incremental investment, which obviously we have talked about to feed several of the initiatives Steve Crony has walked you through. We did not take a rate hike, at least in the first part of this year, in broadband. So that is going to impact ARPU, as we said, over the first couple of quarters.

As we look to the back half of the year and really sort of zooming out, we will have a far greater percentage of our base, well over 50%, and creeping into sort of the vast majority, on new pricing and packaging, which is really sort of the intention here, really stabilize the base, create durable pricing and packaging, and really sort of lock it down from a churn perspective, and create monetization mechanisms on top of that. Wireless being the biggest one. We sort of came into this year saying, much like we did at the end of last year, Steve Crony and team focused on how do you go accelerate wireless.

Part of this was the low to mid-tiers of the market. We had a little bit of an awareness issue. We went after that with free lines. Come try us for a year, and we can monetize it after that and move you into a paying relationship. I think we have great confidence that the vast majority of our lines will move into a paying relationship. Then we took on the high end with the premium unlimited plans that Steve Crony has mentioned. We are off to a great start with those and having a lot of success.

As you look at the back half of the year, one of the things that gives us confidence is, a, we start to lap some of the incremental investments we made starting in 2025, and b, we will get into monetization of what is probably the biggest vehicle we have out there, which is free wireless lines moving into paying relationships. I will stop short of giving a full EBITDA guide. I would tell you in the back half of the year, we would expect improvement.

Marci Ryvicker: Thanks, John Hodulik. Operator, we are ready for the next question.

Operator: Our next question today is coming from Kutgun Maral from Evercore ISI. Your line is now live.

Kutgun Maral: Great. Thanks for taking the question. I was hoping to dig in on the theme parks. Can you expand on the trends that you are seeing there and the outlook for the business? Epic seems to be delivering on what you had hoped for in terms of driving higher per caps and attendance across Orlando. You touched on this a bit earlier, but perhaps you can discuss the operational or financial priorities for its second year. Are you seeing any shifts in competitive posture in that market? Any more color on your broader parks portfolio would be appreciated as well. Thank you.

Michael J. Cavanagh: Okay. Good. It is Michael J. Cavanagh. I think we could not be more pleased with Epic. It was a big swing, as everybody knows. The biggest park opened in the country and maybe beyond the world in twenty-five years. Lots of excellent technology. The theming is incredible. To sit here and look back on the achievement that the team made of getting it successfully opened and ramping it with more ramp still to go as we head into 2026. By the end of this coming year, I think we will be fully ramped up in that park. I think you said it well, and it was in my earlier remarks.

The point of it was to lift all of Orlando, and that is, in fact, what it has done. When you level the whole thing up, having taken this fourth quarter that we just ended, and the first time that the parks business has crossed $1 billion of EBITDA in a quarter is a great achievement. We have had a phenomenal year with Epic, and I think the plans continue to invest behind that park in the fullness of time, but I think this year is a year where we continue to drive the original agenda, which is to fill up our hotels, which is the case. We added 2,000 rooms.

Our average daily rate in the hotels in Orlando is up 20%, and occupancy is up 3%. We feel great. It is a continuation in the near term. More broadly in parks, as you know, last year, we secured and have recently got the national level approvals for our park in the UK. We will be opening the kids' park in Frisco, Texas, later this year. Japan delivered its second-best EBITDA year in the history of our business. There is a lot I feel good about. Great team under Mark Woodbury. Plenty of enthusiasm to keep building behind the successes that we have seen.

Going back to the top, when you have a moment like the ambition of opening Epic and succeed, I think it makes us all feel good about the future of the business ahead of us.

Kutgun Maral: Thanks, Kutgun Maral. Operator, we will take our last question, please.

Operator: Thank you. Our final question today is coming from Michael Ng from Goldman Sachs. Your line is now live.

Michael Ng: Hi. Good morning. Thank you for squeezing me in. First, just on the comments around the broadband investments this year, I was just wondering if you could expand on that a little bit more. Is that more in kind of customer relationships and pricing? Is that more on the CapEx side? Then relatedly, I wanted to ask if there was a shift in posture in terms of pursuing some of these premium unlimited plans. It just feels like a good opportunity to lean into some of the potential jump walls over the next year or two, just given the Apple iPhone cycle. I would love your thoughts there. Thank you.

Steve Crony: So, yes, in reference to broadband, I would say it leans much heavier into our go-to-market pricing strategy. As we look at it, we did a few things. We simplified it considerably, as we discussed, down to four tiers. We are all-inclusive now with those tiers. One positive in being all-inclusive is we have more customers taking our gateways, which we believe are best in class, and they will get the feature benefits of that over time. But a big part of the investment is around migrating our base into the new pricing and packaging in a simplified way. We are managing through that now. As Jason S.

Armstrong highlighted a little bit earlier, we will see the heavy majority of our customers in the new pricing and packaging. Additionally, we did lower our everyday prices, which makes us much more competitive in the marketplace. For those customers who may have a promo role, it is much more manageable now. The biggest driver is the free wireless line. Importantly, we lean into that space, a big market ahead of us, as I mentioned. Substantial improvement in CLV there and greater loyalty from those customers that have both products that have or converge households. We will continue to lean into that and push forward. That is the bulk of the investment that we are making around the broadband.

Michael J. Cavanagh: I do think that is the case. Investment, it is less the capital side where our network has been steadily doing what we need to do. The investment language is about putting more value to the customer, getting them on new pricing and packaging in a variety of ways that is just seen through EBITDA. On the premium side, I do think that is, as Jason S. Armstrong said in his remarks earlier, getting more exposure to our broader base through exposure to the free line for one year is a strategy to get breadth of exposure, but our ambition is to be a leading provider competing against all segments.

The launch of Premium Unlimited has been directly targeted at being relevant in that space versus our earliest offers of by the gig, which targeted or succeeded in a different segment. We are pleased with what we are seeing, and it gives us the opportunity, as you suggest, to think about where and when to lean in further. I just would end by saying that I hope you feel like I do that there is a bounce and an energy with the new team. Steve Crony, good luck. We are all counting on you, and I think you are off to a great start.

Marci Ryvicker: That concludes our fourth-quarter earnings call. Thank you all for joining us.

Operator: Thank you. That does conclude today's conference call. A replay of the call will be available starting today at 11:30 AM Eastern Time on Comcast Corporation Investor Relations website. Thank you for participating. You may all disconnect.