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FOX Corp Q2 2026: Revenue Beats Estimates Amid Sports Rights Surge and Tubi Momentum

Fox Corporation (NASDAQ: FOXA) reported its second-quarter fiscal 2026 results Wednesday morning, delivering a top-line beat that suggests the “Live and Local” strategy remains a formidable anchor in an increasingly fragmented media landscape. Despite the absence of the heavy political spending that bolstered the prior year’s comparables, FOX managed to grow its revenue by 2%, driven by strong pricing in sports and news, and the continued scaling of its ad-supported streaming giant, Tubi.

Key Metrics

MetricQ2 2026 ActualQ2 2025 (YoY)Change
Total Revenue$5.18 Billion$5.08 Billion+2%
Adjusted EPS$0.82$0.96 (Expected: $0.49)-15% (Beat expectations)
Net Income$247 Million$388 Million-36%
Adjusted EBITDA$692 Million$781 Million-11%

Segment Performance: Sports and News Carry the Load

Cable Network Programming

The Cable segment remains the engine of the company, posting $2.28 billion in revenue, a 5% increase year-over-year. This was primarily fueled by a 5% rise in distribution revenues, proving that Fox News and Fox Sports 1 (FS1) still hold significant leverage in affiliate negotiations.

Television and Broadcasting

The Television segment reported $2.94 billion in revenue. While linear ratings face industry-wide headwinds, Fox offset these with a 1% increase in advertising revenue.

The “Tubi” Effect: The ad-supported streaming service continues to be the “golden child” of the portfolio. Tubi saw double-digit growth in viewing time, particularly following its high-profile Thanksgiving Day NFL simulcast.

Sports Costs: The decline in EBITDA was largely attributed to the “cost of doing business” in big-league sports. Higher rights amortization for the NFL and MLB (which included additional postseason games this year) increased expenses, though management views these as essential “top-of-funnel” drivers.

Key Takeaways from the Earnings Call

Executive Chair and CEO Lachlan Murdoch sounded a confident, if pragmatic, tone during the call. Here are the highlights:

Advertising Resilience: Murdoch noted that the “scatter market” remains healthy. Despite moving past the 2024/2025 election cycle, core brand advertising in news and sports has filled the gap. “We are seeing broad-based contributions across our portfolio,” Murdoch stated, highlighting that pricing power remains strong for “must-watch” live events.

The “FOX One” Strategy: Much of the Q&A centered on FOX One, the company’s new integrated streaming offering. Management indicated that the service is helping to capture the “cord-shifter” demographic by bundling FOX brands into more flexible digital packages, including the recent partnership with Verizon.

World Cup 2026: Looking ahead, FOX is already beginning to monetize the FIFA Men’s World Cup 2026. Murdoch described it as a “generational opportunity” that is expected to drive record-breaking ad spend in the back half of the 2026 calendar year.

Capital Allocation: The company continues to be aggressive with share buybacks, emphasizing its $1.5 billion accelerated program. “Our balance sheet has never been stronger,” noted CFO Steve Tomsic, suggesting that FOX will remain disciplined but opportunistic in M&A.

Forward-Looking Catalysts: 2026 World Cup & Midterms

The second half of the 2026 calendar year is set to be a “Super Cycle” for FOX.

The 2026 FIFA World Cup: With the tournament being hosted in North America, FOX is sitting on what it calls a “generational” ad opportunity. Early monetization trends suggest record-breaking interest from sponsors.

Political Spending: The upcoming U.S. Midterm Elections in late 2026 will provide the next massive infusion of local ad revenue for FOX’s owned-and-operated (O&O) stations.

Conclusion

The Q2 2026 results confirm that Fox Corporation is successfully navigating the most difficult transition in media history by doubling down on live-event supremacy while building a viable digital life raft.

Tags: Media
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