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Astro’s 2Q Net Profit Collapses by 70% Amid Weak Subscription and Ad Revenue

Kuala Lumpur, 26 September 2025 – Media and broadcasting company Astro Malaysia Holdings Berhad saw its second-quarter net profit shrink by approximately 70% year-on-year, hit hard by declines in subscription revenue and advertising sales. The steep drop reflects mounting challenges in the media industry, where digital disruption and changing consumer preferences intensify pressure.

Astro’s subscription business, long a stable source of recurring income, reportedly experienced weakening demand—particularly in premium channels and pay-TV packages—as consumers shift toward streaming platforms. Concurrently, advertising inflows, which often mirror broader corporate budgets and economic sentiment, were dampened, further squeezing revenue. Together, these headwinds contributed significantly to margin compression and weaker overall earnings.

Analysts suggest that the results point to two key challenges: first, the ability of traditional media operators to pivot and monetize digital platforms; second, the sensitivity of legacy broadcasting models to macroeconomic cycles affecting ad spending. For Astro, reconciling legacy infrastructure costs with shrinking core revenue is a delicate balancing act.

Despite the disappointing performance, some observers note opportunities in Astro’s asset base, including content ownership, potential bundling with telco offerings, and digital expansion. The severity of the earnings decline may also prompt strategic adjustments—cost cuts, portfolio realignment, or deeper integration with digital streaming and adjacent services.

Implications & Investor Takeaways

Astro’s earnings plunge is a red flag for media and broadcasting stocks in Malaysia. For investors, it underscores the importance of evaluating growth prospects, digital strategy execution, and cost discipline. Legacy media counters without strong digital transition plans may face sustained investor scrutiny.

Diversification across media, technology, and service offerings will matter even more going forward. Investors may prefer players that successfully monetize digital audiences, maintain lean cost structures, and adapt quickly to content and platform shifts.

Author

  • I am Abigail, a journalist at The Ledger Asia, covering business and finance with a focus on the Malaysian Stock Market and key economic developments across Asia. Known for clear, accessible reporting, I deliver insights that help readers understand market trends, corporate movements, and regional news shaping the Asian economy.

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