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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Sky returned to profit ahead of cutting hundreds of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ jobs

The media and telecoms giant, which was bought by the US media company Comcast for £30bn in 2018, has posted a pre-tax profit of £253m for its latest financial year

SKY TV offices in Osterley, London(Image: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images)

Media and telecoms group Sky bounced back from a near £800m loss to post a pre-tax profit of £253m in 2024, ahead of plans to shed hundreds of jobs.

Sky, which was acquired by American media corporation Comcast for £30bn in 2018, reported the turnaround after suffering a pre-tax loss of £773m in 2023.

Newly filed accounts at Companies House reveal that its revenue rose from £10.2bn to £10.3bn. Direct-to-consumer revenue for Sky increased from £8.5bn to £8.7bn, while content sales saw a slight rise from £527m to £529m.

However, advertising revenue dipped from £1.2bn to £1.1bn, as reported by . Sky attributed the increase in direct-to-consumer revenue to price hikes.

These results were released following recent reports that Sky plans to cut hundreds of jobs in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

The company is shifting its focus from introducing new products to improving existing services and competing with American streaming giants.

In March the group announced plans to overhaul its customer service operations, which meant some 2,000 jobs were put at risk as the company planned to close three of its ten call centre locations in Stockport, Sheffield, and central Leeds, with other roles likely affected at its Dunfermline and Newcastle call centres.

Sky, which employs around 23,000 people in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, has already seen its workforce fall by about 3,000 roles since 2023, primarily traditional roles such as satellite dish installers, as the company transitions from satellite TV to broadband-based services.