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Angry Birds maker Rovio\'s profit hit by Hatch expansion

The Finnish company, which listed its shares last year, said second-quarter operating profit fell 11.3 per cent to 5.3 million euros.

Rovio Entertainment, the maker of the 10-year-old Angry Birds mobile game series, reported a drop in quarterly profit on Thursday, citing expansion costs related to its 5G gaming platform Hatch.

The Finnish company, which listed its shares last year, said second-quarter operating profit fell 11.3 per cent to 5.3 million euros (USD 5.94 million) on sales that were flat at 71.8 million euros.

Rovio said profit was squeezed by Hatch Entertainment, a spin-off business that is developing 5G streaming access to mobile games the way Netflix does for movies and Spotify does for music.

Hatch, which is 80per cent owned by Rovio, signed a partnership agreement with Samsung in April and has announced partnerships with Vodafone in the UK, Spain and Italy.

“The decline in operating profit was attributed to Hatch Entertainment’s expansion to new markets,” Rovio CEO Kati Levoranta said in a statement.

Rovio’s gross bookings from its games grew slightly, rising 0.6per cent year on year to 65.2 million euros (USD 73 million), including 14 million euros from newest game Angry Birds Dream Blast, launched in January.

This week, to mark the Angry Birds brand’s 10th anniversary, Rovio is releasing a sequel to “The Angry Birds Movie”, its successful 2016 venture into the film industry.

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