• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

12 Things That You Can Get for Free in August

August 2, 2025

40 Jobs Most Threatened by AI — and the Safest Jobs — According to Microsoft

August 2, 2025

10 Unused Services That Are Draining Your Monthly Budget

August 2, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • 12 Things That You Can Get for Free in August
  • 40 Jobs Most Threatened by AI — and the Safest Jobs — According to Microsoft
  • 10 Unused Services That Are Draining Your Monthly Budget
  • 10 Silent Budget Killers Hiding in Your Monthly Subscriptions
  • What Top Founders Know About Domains That Most Entrepreneurs Miss
  • Here’s Why Anthropic Refuses to Offer 9-Figure Pay Like Meta
  • Proposed Changes To Phone Services For Social Security Beneficiaries Raise Concerns—Again
  • These 4 Medicare Mistakes Could Drain Your Retirement Savings
Saturday, August 2
Facebook Twitter Instagram
FintechoPro
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
FintechoPro
Home » 10 media stocks expected by Wall Street analysts to rise as much as 60% in 2024
Investing

10 media stocks expected by Wall Street analysts to rise as much as 60% in 2024

News RoomBy News RoomNovember 14, 20230 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

The Communications Services sector of the S&P 500 is a mixed bag of companies growing revenue quickly and others with business models that are mature or undergoing transformation. Some of the latter have been crushed this year, but that could underline opportunities for 2024.

For example, on Nov. 8, Warner Bros. Discovery Inc.
WBD
Chief Financial Officer Gunnar Wiedenfels warned during an earnings conference call that the company was unlikely to reach its debt-reduction goal by the end of 2024 “without a meaningful recovery of the TV ad market,” according to a transcript provided by FactSet. The stock fell 19% that day.

It didn’t help that WBD reported that its total number of direct-to-consumer subscribers was down 700,000 during the third quarter to 95.1 million. Gimme Credit analyst David Novosel called that decline “shocking,” but pointed out that WBD had cut its debt by $4.2 billion so far in 2023. He concluded his note about WBD to clients on Nov. 9 with this comment: “Leverage is high and consequently debt reduction is a priority with its steady free cash flow.”

Industry developments haven’t been all bad for WBD or its competing content creators and streamers: The Hollywood actors’ strike ended on Thursday.

Warner Bros. Discovery took its present form in April 2022, when AT&T Inc. 
T
divested WarnerMedia, which was merged with Discovery Inc. Since the renamed Discovery was the surviving company, FactSet has a long history for the performance of WBD’s stock. Even with the rough recent patch, WBD’s shares have risen 4% this year. Then again, the shares fell 60% in 2022.

Last week Mark Hulbert pointed out that one year’s set of dogs in the stock market can include the following year’s leaders.

Before looking at some screens of the Communications Services sector, take a look at how the 11 sectors of the S&P 500

have performed so far this year, with dividends reinvested. The table also shows current forward price-to-earnings ratios for the sectors and their relative levels to long-term average valuations:

Sector or index

2023 return

2022 return

Return since end of 2021

Forward P/E

Current P/E to 5-year average

Current P/E to 10-year average

Current P/E to 15-year average

Information Technology

47%

-28%

6%

26.2

117%

140%

157%

Communication Services

47%

-40%

-12%

16.7

88%

88%

96%

Consumer Discretionary

29%

-37%

-19%

24.1

79%

94%

108%

Industrials

6%

-5%

0%

17.6

89%

97%

106%

Materials

1%

-12%

-11%

17.2

101%

105%

112%

Financials

0%

-11%

-10%

13.1

89%

93%

99%

Energy

-2%

66%

63%

10.6

96%

56%

65%

Consumer Staples

-4%

-1%

-5%

18.7

94%

97%

106%

Real Estate

-5%

-26%

-30%

15.5

78%

82%

83%

Health Care

-5%

-2%

-7%

16.9

103%

103%

114%

Utilities

-13%

2%

-12%

15.2

83%

87%

96%

S&P 500

17%

-18%

-5%

18.4

96%

103%

114%

Source: FactSet

You might be surprised to see how well the Communications Sector has performed this year, but keep in mind that stocks in the S&P 500 are weighted by market capitalization — an effect that is magnified within the sectors. The best performers in the sector this year have been the three largest, by market cap: Alphabet Inc.
GOOGL,
which has returned 50%; Meta Platforms Inc.
META,
up 174%; and Netflix Inc.
NFLX,
which has gained 51%. Together, these companies make up 54% of the Communication Services Select Sector SPDR Fund
,
which is designed to mirror the performance of this S&P sector by holding all its stocks.

Some of the sectors trade high when compared with their long-term forward P/E averages, but the Communications Services sector isn’t among them.

Screening the S&P 500 Communications Services sector

Before looking at which stocks in the sector are most favored by analysts, we need to address what was on investors’ minds last week: debt. High levels of debt frighten investors, especially when interest rates are high. One reason AT&T was so bent on shedding its WarnerMedia unit was all the dent it took on when these assets were acquired in 2018. Much of this debt is now on WBD’s books. The company provided this convenient schedule of its long-term bonds last week, as part of its earnings release. You can see all related documents here.

There are only 19 stocks in the S&P 500 communications services sector. Here they are, ranked by total debt to estimated earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) for the next 12 months:

Company

Ticker

Debt/ est. EBIT

Total debt

Estimated EBIT

Debt service ratio

2023 return

Market cap. ($mil)

Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. Series A

WBD 2,215%

$44,800

$2,022

23%

4%

$24,117

Paramount Global Class B

PARA 877%

$17,297

$1,973

103%

-28%

$7,328

Charter Communications Inc. Class A

CHTR 732%

$98,090

$13,404

88%

20%

$60,116

Live Nation Entertainment Inc.

LYV 678%

$8,421

$1,242

215%

26%

$20,186

T-Mobile US Inc.

TMUS 633%

$113,898

$17,998

41%

5%

$170,245

AT&T Inc.

T 621%

$159,271

$25,660

39%

-10%

$111,397

Verizon Communications Inc.

VZ 560%

$172,070

$30,728

41%

-2%

$150,591

News Corp Class A

NWSA 449%

$4,158

$926

110%

14%

$7,796

Comcast Corp. Class A

CMCSA 413%

$102,503

$24,795

70%

22%

$166,609

Fox Corp. Class A

FOXA 340%

$8,189

$2,411

55%

-1%

$7,404

Walt Disney Co.

DIS 309%

$46,431

$15,035

43%

3%

$163,655

Interpublic Group of Cos. Inc.

IPG 305%

$4,693

$1,538

64%

-11%

$11,004

Match Group Inc.

MTCH 303%

$3,841

$1,267

603%

-30%

$7,915

Omnicom Group Inc

OMC 277%

$6,415

$2,313

825%

-5%

$14,986

Take-Two Interactive Software Inc.

TTWO 264%

$3,515

$1,329

-80%

44%

$25,525

Netflix Inc.

NFLX 200%

$16,764

$8,396

201%

51%

$194,601

Electronic Arts Inc.

EA 78%

$1,951

$2,492

440%

9%

$35,686

Meta Platforms Inc. Class A

META 69%

$36,852

$53,439

853%

174%

$730,672

Alphabet Inc. Class A

GOOGL 30%

$29,446

$96,561

654%

50%

$781,709

Source: FactSet

Click on the tickers for more about each company, including news coverage, business profiles, financials and estimates.

Click here for Tomi Kilgore’s detailed guide to the wealth of information available for free on the MarketWatch quote page.

The debt figures are as of the end of the companies’ most recently reported fiscal quarters. The debt-service ratios are EBIT divided by total interest paid (excluding capitalized interest) for the most recently reported quarters, as calculated by FactSet. It is best to see this number above 100%. Also note that these service ratios cover only one quarter.

Now let’s see which of these stocks analysts working for brokerage firms like the most. The list is sorted percentage of buy ratings among analysts polled by FactSet:

Company

Ticker

Share “buy” ratings

Share neutral ratings

Share “sell” ratings

Nov. 13 price

Consensus price target

Implied 12-month upside potential

T-Mobile US Inc.

TMUS 90%

7%

3%

$147.21

$177.71

21%

Meta Platforms Inc. Class A

META 84%

13%

3%

$329.19

$376.43

14%

Alphabet Inc. Class A

GOOGL 82%

18%

0%

$132.09

$152.69

16%

Take-Two Interactive Software Inc.

TTWO 81%

15%

4%

$150.09

$162.99

9%

Live Nation Entertainment Inc.

LYV 79%

16%

5%

$87.64

$111.24

27%

Walt Disney Co.

DIS 76%

18%

6%

$89.44

$104.21

17%

Match Group Inc.

MTCH 68%

32%

0%

$29.12

$43.41

49%

Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. Series A

WBD 65%

32%

3%

$9.89

$15.82

60%

Electronic Arts Inc.

EA 63%

37%

0%

$132.68

$145.70

10%

News Corp Class A

NWSA 63%

37%

0%

$20.45

$27.08

32%

Netflix Inc.

NFLX 60%

36%

4%

$444.62

$460.22

4%

Comcast Corp. Class A

CMCSA 59%

41%

0%

$41.49

$49.29

19%

Interpublic Group of Cos. Inc.

IPG 47%

53%

0%

$28.73

$34.00

18%

Charter Communications Inc. Class A

CHTR 41%

52%

7%

$406.41

$461.05

13%

AT&T Inc.

T 41%

52%

7%

$15.58

$17.86

15%

Verizon Communications Inc.

VZ 38%

54%

8%

$35.82

$39.42

10%

Fox Corp. Class A

FOXA 25%

61%

14%

$29.59

$34.58

17%

Omnicom Group Inc

OMC 25%

67%

8%

$75.71

$90.40

19%

Paramount Global Class B

PARA 24%

38%

38%

$12.00

$13.84

15%

Source: FactSet

Among the companies with majority buy or equivalent ratings, Warner Bros. Discovery has the highest upside potential over the next 12 months, based on the consensus price target.

Among the believers in WBD is TD Cowen analyst Dough Creutz, who gave the stock an outperform rating with a $15 price target. He lowered that target from $19 on Nov. 10, while also cutting his estimates for the company’s revenue and earnings. That new price target is 52% higher than WBD’s closing price of $9.89 on Monday.

In a note to clients on Nov. 10, Cruetz called WBD’s turnaround opportunity “a more compelling investment case than any considerations with OTT.” The analyst went on to call WBD’s OTT strategy — which stands for over-the-top streaming of content to users — “more prudent and sustainable” than those of its competitors, and added that the shares “should trade at parity or even a premium relative to peers rather than the current discount.”

Wells Fargo analyst Steven Cahall also said he liked WBD, giving it an overweight rating and a $16 price target. That was lowered from $20 on Nov. 9. In a note to clients that day, Cahall called the stock “too cheap for the content quality.” He also wrote: “We don’t think WBD will stay idle. We expect licensing to increasingly factor into the mix. WBD has shown a willingness to transact, and facing potential challenges we think there are no sacred cows — a key reason we like this [management] team.”

Don’t miss: Why Warren Buffett has done more to educate investors than any other corporate executive

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Intel Laying Off Tens of Thousands of Employees: CEO Memo

Investing July 25, 2025

Microsoft CEO Explains Recent Layoffs in Internal Memo

Investing July 24, 2025

Billionaire Mark Cuban Spends a Lot of Time on His Emails

Investing July 23, 2025

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Is Terrified About AI Bank Fraud

Investing July 22, 2025

Her High School Side Hustle Is On Track for 7-Figure Revenue

Investing July 21, 2025

Nvidia CEO Says He Would Major in the Physical Sciences

Investing July 20, 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

40 Jobs Most Threatened by AI — and the Safest Jobs — According to Microsoft

August 2, 20250 Views

10 Unused Services That Are Draining Your Monthly Budget

August 2, 20250 Views

10 Silent Budget Killers Hiding in Your Monthly Subscriptions

August 2, 20250 Views

What Top Founders Know About Domains That Most Entrepreneurs Miss

August 1, 20250 Views
Don't Miss

Here’s Why Anthropic Refuses to Offer 9-Figure Pay Like Meta

By News RoomAugust 1, 2025

While Meta poaches talent from Apple, OpenAI and Google, AI startup Anthropic is refusing to…

Proposed Changes To Phone Services For Social Security Beneficiaries Raise Concerns—Again

August 1, 2025

These 4 Medicare Mistakes Could Drain Your Retirement Savings

August 1, 2025

The 5 Best Mystery Shopper Companies to Work For

August 1, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 FintechoPro. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.