Comcast Chairman and CEO Brian Roberts on Tuesday called the company's latest financial results a "great quarter," with strength across its varying businesses as investments pay off. CNBC's parent company reported quarterly earnings that matched expectations and revenue that beat estimates, helped by NBCUniversal's box-office hit "Minions" and growth in its high-speed Internet and business services divisions. After the earnings announcement, the company's shares were up slightly in premarket trading. (Get the latest quote here.)

The media and cable giant posted quarterly earnings of 80 cents per share, down from 99 cents in the year-earlier period. Revenue increased to $18.7 billion from $16.79 billion a year ago. Wall Street expected Comcast to deliver earnings of 80 cents a share on $18.03 billion in revenue, according to a consensus estimate from Thomson Reuters.



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"In cable, we had the best third quarter in video in nine years," Roberts said. Subscriber departures narrowed to 48,000 — an improvement over losses of 81,000 a year ago as pay-TV operators battled streaming video services Netflix and Hulu. Comcast has been enhancing features of its X1 set-top box and improving customer service in a bid to retain pay-TV subscribers. Roberts called the X1 offering the best experience in the business: "Twenty-five percent of our customers have X1," he said. "That includes now the voice remote." Roberts said there's no greater way for advertisers to get their message out than on television. Comcast is augmenting that with recent investments in digital services like Vox Media and BuzzFeed, he added, adjusting to the new ways people are consuming content. To gauge the appetite for online video, it's also testing an ad-supported short-form video service called "Watchable," targeting millennials, and plans to introduce a comedy-centric $3.99-a-month streaming service "Seeso." Read More Comcast launches 'Watchable' video app

Revenue from Comcast's high-speed Internet business rose about 10 percent to $3.1 billion in the quarter, and Internet customer additions rose 1.5 percent to 320,000. Business services revenue jumped 19.5 percent to $1.21 billion. That's the "best quarter in six years," Roberts said.