Walt Disney Co’s quarterly profit beat analysts’ estimates as the company benefited from the success of its latest fairy tale adaptation “Beauty and the Beast” and strength in its theme park business. However, the company’s shares fell 1.7 percent after the bell on Tuesday as revenue came in slightly below expectations. Revenue from its cable business, which includes company’s cash cow ESPN and the youth-focused Disney Channels, rose 2.7 percent to $4.06 billion. Analysts on average were expecting the business to report revenue of $4.09 billion, according to financial data and analytics firm Fact Set Street Account. However, operating income for the cable division fell nearly 3 percent to $1.79 billion. The company blamed the decline to higher programming costs at ESPN due to the shift in timing of College Football Playoff bowl games and contractual rate increases for NBA programming. Disney has been stepping up efforts to stem subscriber losses at ESPN as younger viewers move away from traditional pay television packages, a trend known as “cord-cutting”. Recent earnings reports have raised concern that the pace of cord-cutting is picking up. MoffettNathanson analysts calculated that pay TV distributors lost 762,000 subscribers from January through March, the worst first-quarter result in history. Disney is working to launch an ESPN subscription streaming service and bought a 33 percent stake in video-streaming firm BAMTech for $1 billion last year. The future of ESPN has been in focus since August 2015 when Chief Executive Officer Bob Iger acknowledged “modest” subscriber losses at the sports network. ESPN’s television unit is laying off 10 percent of its 1,000 on-air staff, Reuters reported last month, citing a source. Disney’s revenue rose 2.8 percent to $13.34 billion, but missed analysts’ estimate of $13.45 billion, according to Thomson Reuters.