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https://www.cnbc.com/2023/07/13/disney-cuts-back-on-marvel-star-wars-content.html
Disney pulling back on making Marvel, Star Wars content, Iger says
Published Thu, Jul 13 2023 - 9:17 AM EDT
Lillian Rizzo@Lilliannnn

Key Points
  • Disney CEO Bob Iger said there will be a pullback in content spending and creation for the Star Wars and Marvel franchises.
  • Earlier this year Disney said it would slash $5.5 billion in costs, including $3 billion in non-sports content costs.
  • Iger said the explosion in Marvel TV shows in recent years “diluted focus and attention” for the brand.
Disney is slowing down when it comes to making movies and TV series for its Marvel Studios and Lucasfilm franchises, CEO Bob Iger said on CNBC Thursday.

The move comes as the company is looking to cut costs during a time when its recent films, from Marvel to animation, have underwhelmed at the box office.

“You pull back not just to focus, but also as part of our cost containment initiative. Spending less on what we make, and making less,” Iger said Thursday.

Earlier this year, Disney rolled out a broad reorganization of the business that included $5.5 billion in cutting close, of which $3 billion would be slashed from content excluding sports.

Iger said Thursday that a lot of decisions were made to prop up the company’s flagship streaming service, Disney+, and beckon more customers.

While also noting that Disney had some Pixar animation misses in recent months, he called out Marvel as being a particular example of the company’s “zeal” to pump up its original content on streaming.

“Marvel is a great example of that. It had not been in the television business at any significant level, and not only did they increase their movie output, but they ended up making a number of TV series,” said Iger. “Frankly, it diluted focus and attention.”
Earlier this year, “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania” debuted as the 31st film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, kicking off the fifth phase of the 15-year old franchise. The film had seen the sharpest decline in ticket sales from its opening weekend to second weekend in franchise history. The Marvel installment also raked in mixed to negative reviews.

Meanwhile, Marvel’s “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3” has done much better, grossing over $800 million globally.

On the Lucasfilm front, there hasn’t been a Star Wars film in theaters since 2019, and the company has focused primarily on series, such as Emmy nominees “Andor” and “Obi-Wan Kenobi” for Disney+. Lucasfilm’s “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” the fifth film in that franchise, has underwhelmed at the box office despite a plum release date around the Fourth of July.

For Disney, and most of its streaming competitors, original content has lived solely on its flagship streaming services rather than being licensed to other platforms – a revenue driver that has stood up the traditional TV and movie business for sometime.

On Thursday, Iger said it was “a possibility” that could happen for Disney’s streaming content.

“It’s a possibility. I won’t rule it out,” Iger said. He added that licensing had been part of a collection of models that formed the traditional TV business, and holding back content for their own platform in the early days of streaming was the right move.

Recently, Warner Bros. Discovery has reportedly been in talks about licensing HBO content to other platforms, including Netflix. The company also has removed content from its Max service and licensed it to free, ad-supported streaming platforms such as Fox Corp.’s Tubi.

Disney has also followed suit in taking down content from its streaming platform.
 
Old Bob really does seem to love WDW, he had this uncontrollable smile appear on his face as soon as he started talking about how the the Disney brand lives there. Maybe he was just thinking about margins, but I would like to think it was much more than that.
 


https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/b...valley-disney-dealmaking-business-1235535343/

With an ABC Sale on the Table, Bob Iger Brings Disney Back to Dealmaking Business
If his first run as CEO was about addition, his second tenure is about subtraction.
July 13, 2023 2:34pm PDT
by Alex Weprin

If Bob Iger’s tenure as the CEO of Disney between 2005-2020 was defined by one thing, it would be the deals.

In 2006, he acquired a computer animation company founded by Steve Jobs called Pixar for $7.4 billion; in 2009 he acquired the down-on-its-luck comic book publisher Marvel for $4 billion; in 2012 he spearheaded the acquisition of George Lucas’ Lucasfilm for $4 billion; in 2017 he acquired a majority stake in BamTech for $1.6 billion, a streaming video provider that built the backbone of what became Disney+ and Hulu; and in 2019 he acquired the entertainment assets of Fox in a staggering $71 billion deal.

Thanks to a blockbuster interview on Thursday, it seems clear that Iger’s second run as CEO will be defined by his dealmaking as well. This time, however, he’s mostly a seller, not a buyer.

Speaking to CNBC’s David Faber on a makeshift TV set on the side of the road in Sun Valley, Idaho, Iger opined about Disney’s future in streaming, and what it means for many of its legacy businesses.

In the case of ESPN, that likely means a “strategic partnership,” one that will help it make the jump to direct-to-consumer.

In the case of its linear TV networks, well, Iger’s comment that “they may not be core to Disney” are the Sun Valley equivalent of a “for sale” sign.

“Transformative work is dealing with businesses that are no-growth businesses and what to do about them, and particularly the linear business, which we are expansive in our thinking about,” Iger told Faber.

The CNBC anchor then cited the ABC broadcast network and its local TV stations, as well as the FX cable channel, and asked Iger directly if they were for sale, and if they were not core to Disney, sparking Iger’s reply.

“The distribution model, the business model that forms the underpinning of that business and that is delivered great profits over the years is definitely broken. And we have to call it like it is,” Iger added.

Wells Fargo analyst Steven Cahall wrote Thursday that selling the linear assets would improve Disney’s CAGR (which looks at the growth rate of a company) to more than 20 percent. The ABC Network, its local stations, FX, Freeform and Disney’s 50 percent stake in A+E Networks are all seen by Cahall as up for grabs.

“Divesting such assets would bring in cash and improve EPS growth,” Cahall wrote, adding that “the rationale would be getting rid of an asset that worries investors while stepping into a better growth, more streamlined DIS.”

As for who would buy a declining asset like linear TV networks?

“DirecTV was sold, and private equity is involved in linear TV broadcast,” Cahall wrote. In other words, the future of ABC or Freeform could be similar to that of newspapers, where private equity and hedge funds scoop up declining but cashflow-rich businesses, and figure out a way to maintain margins.

In the case of ESPN, Iger was clear that Disney intends to remain an owner … but that a “strategic partner” that could bring something to the table would be welcome.

“Whether it’s content value, whether it’s distribution value, whether it’s capital … if they come to the table with value that enables ESPN to make a transition to its direct-to-consumer offering, then we’re gonna be very open minded about that,” he said.

In other words, he wants to find a company with deep pockets, an interest in becoming a major player in sports, and the ability to scale a premium service fast, and that is willing to share ownership of ESPN with Disney (and possibly Hearst, which still owns a minority stake in ESPN).

Such a description immediately brings to mind the major tech giants Apple, Amazon and Google (via its YouTube video platform). They have more than enough cash to help finance ESPN, global reach, and a desire to build major streaming video businesses.

They also have a strong interest in sports, with Amazon inking a multi-billion deal for NFL Thursday Night Football games, YouTube ponying up $2 billion per year for NFL Sunday Ticket rights, and Apple inking a 10-year $2.5 billion agreement with MLS.

As it happens some of those potential partners are already in Sun Valley, presumably joining Iger for the annual barbecue dinner next to the Sun Valley duck pond. Among those spotted at the Idaho resort this week are YouTube CEO Neal Mohan, and Apple CEO Tim Cook. Iger, it should be noted, appeared at Apple’s last product event, where he touted the potential ESPN and other Disney properties on Apple’s Vision Pro headset.

A possible dark horse would be Netflix, which has longed been intrigued by sports, but has balked at the cost. While Netflix is more of a direct competitor to Disney than Apple or Amazon or YouTube, the combination of the two companies could be what it takes to drive ESPN to a successful post-linear world.

And then there’s Disney’s Star India business. The company is exploring its strategic options, either an outright sale or a new joint venture, looking to unwind one of the critical international pieces of the 21st Century Fox acquisition.

ABC and Disney’s linear cable channels, ESPN, Star India: They may not be intellectual property, but they are historic media brands. And now interested parties might be able to buy a piece of them, or buy them outright, as Iger refocuses ESPN on a profitable streaming future.

That streaming future is the one piece of the puzzle where Iger still appears acquisitive. Comcast has an option to force Disney to buy out its remaining 25 percent stake early next year.

“There’s a mechanism to ultimately determine its fair market value and we’ll go through the process with them,” Iger told Faber. “The goal is to do it as quickly as possible.”

With Disney already committing to move Hulu content into Disney+ by the end of this year, the buyout of Comcast’s stake is all but certain.

In his initial 15 year run as CEO, Iger spent some $90 billion on acquisitions, but also grew Disney’s market cap from $48 billion to $257 billion. But that growth coincided with the money-printing machine that is the pay-TV business.

Iger’s vision for Disney this time around seems smaller and more targeted, a business that can leave the legacy of cable and satellite television behind it, and place it more squarely in competition (and possibly in partnership with) with streaming-only companies like Netflix, Apple, and YouTube.

“Rome wasn’t built in a day and DIS’s problems won’t be solved in Iger’s first year,” Cahall wrote. “But today’s interview does suggest action is underway.”
 
He's not learning. ABC and ESPN are Disney's prime assets. Screw him for calling them "not core brands"!
I must respectfully and strongly disagree.

Michael Eisner bought ABC back when the company was flush with cash and he thought DIS needed a way to distribute content over cable and TV. Recall that was the beginning of the DotCom boom in the mid-90s when most everyone got swept up in the madness.

ABC, in my opinion, has been nothing but heartaches ever since. It has diverted huge amounts of management time and resources away from the creative process and the money machine - parks and experiences.

Back in the 60s, "conglomerates" were all the rage in business. Instead of doing what they knew best, the companies lost focus trying to keep up with all the disparate and unrelated entities. It didn't last very long.

An old Uncle Scrooge comic (US 151, 1953) told the tale succinctly when he counseled his nephews Donald, Huey, Dewey and Louie that, "A cobbler should stick to his last."

You can read the story here:

https://readcomiconline.li/Comic/Uncle-Scrooge-1953/Issue-151?id=58100#28
 


Old Bob really does seem to love WDW, he had this uncontrollable smile appear on his face as soon as he started talking about how the the Disney brand lives there. Maybe he was just thinking about margins, but I would like to think it was much more than that.
Reckon it's nostalgia, or the fact that 40% of parks revenue combined worldwide comes from WDW?
 
https://variety.com/2023/biz/news/sag-aftra-double-strike-wga-amptp-1235669492/
Jul 13, 2023 12:17pm PDT

SAG-AFTRA Declares Double Strike as Actors Join Writers on Picket Lines
By Gene Maddaus, Rebecca Rubin

SAG-AFTRA announced Thursday that it is on strike against the film and TV companies, marking only the second time in Hollywood history that actors have joined writers on the picket lines.

The SAG-AFTRA national board held its meeting on Thursday morning and voted unanimously to approve a strike recommendation forwarded by the negotiating committee, Duncan Crabtree-Ireland, chief negotiator of SAG-AFTRA, said during a press conference.

“Union members should withhold their labor until a fair contract can be achieved,” he told the room of SAG actors and journalists. “They have left us with no alternative.”

The strike begins at midnight on Friday and picketing will start on Friday morning. According to the guidelines, SAG-AFTRA members will not be able to attend premieres, do interviews for completed work, go to awards shows, attend film festivals or even promote projects on social media while the strike is in effect.

“We are being victimized by a very greedy enterprise,” SAG-AFTRA president Fran Drescher said during Thursday’s press conference. “At some point you have to say ‘No, we’re not going to take this anymore. You people are crazy. What are you doing? Why are you doing this?’”

In her impassioned plea, she argued that streaming and artificial intelligence have upended the entertainment industry’s business model. But, she continued, the SAG-AFTRA contracts haven’t been updated to reflect those advancements.

“If we don’t stand tall right now, we are all going to be in jeopardy. You cannot change the business model as much as it has been changed and not expect the contract to change too,” she said. “I cannot believe … how [the studios] plead poverty, that they are losing money left and right, when they give hundreds of millions to their CEOs. It is disgusting. Shame on them.”

The union’s contract expired at midnight Wednesday, after having been exended through July 12, and a month of negotiations resulted in little progress on a host of issues. SAG-AFTRA has emphasized the role of artificial intelligence and the transition to streaming in explaining the need for a work stoppage.

The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which represents the studios, argues it presented a deal that offered “historic pay and residual increases, substantially higher caps on pension and health contributions, audition protections, shortened series option periods, and a groundbreaking AI proposal that protects actors’ digital likenesses for SAG-AFTRA members.”

“A strike is certainly not the outcome we hoped for as studios cannot operate without the performers that bring our TV shows and films to life,” the AMPTP said in a statement after the strike was confirmed. “The Union has regrettably chosen a path that will lead to financial hardship for countless thousands of people who depend on the industry.”

In response to the AMPTP’s statement, Crabtree-Ireland said at the press conference, “If you think this is a historic proposal, think again.”

All production under the SAG-AFTRA TV and film contract will immediately halt, bringing projects to a standstill both in the U.S. and around the globe. The strike is the first under the performers’ film and TV contract since 1980.

The only previous “double strike” — involving both actors and writers — came in 1960, when the Screen Actors Guild was led by Ronald Reagan. In that strike, both the writers and actors were wrestling with compensation issues arising from the dawn of television. Together, they won residuals for TV reruns and for broadcast of films on TV, and established the first pension and welfare plan.

This time around, both unions are battling the rise of streaming TV, which they say has suppressed wages and made it difficult for middle-class creators to sustain a career. Both unions have also taken aim at AI, which they fear studios will use to further devalue their work and perhaps replace them altogether.

In a statement, WGA says it stands “solidly behind our union siblings in SAG-AFTRA as they begin their work stoppage.”

“The last time both of our unions struck at the same time, actors and writers won landmark provisions that we all continue to benefit from today – residuals and pension and health funds,” the WGA negotiating committee said in a statement.

The AMPTP said it was “disappointed” that SAG-AFTRA had walked away from the table, and rejected an agreement that provided significant wage increases and protections against AI.

The streamers have refused a key demand of both unions, however: to share streaming viewership data and pay creators more for high-performing shows.
 
I must respectfully and strongly disagree.

Michael Eisner bought ABC back when the company was flush with cash and he thought DIS needed a way to distribute content over cable and TV. Recall that was the beginning of the DotCom boom in the mid-90s when most everyone got swept up in the madness.

ABC, in my opinion, has been nothing but heartaches ever since. It has diverted huge amounts of management time and resources away from the creative process and the money machine - parks and experiences.

Back in the 60s, "conglomerates" were all the rage in business. Instead of doing what they knew best, the companies lost focus trying to keep up with all the disparate and unrelated entities. It didn't last very long.

An old Uncle Scrooge comic (US 151, 1953) told the tale succinctly when he counseled his nephews Donald, Huey, Dewey and Louie that, "A cobbler should stick to his last."

You can read the story here:

https://readcomiconline.li/Comic/Uncle-Scrooge-1953/Issue-151?id=58100#28
ABC is about to get 9-1-1 from Fox, which might help it.

Also, I think maybe they need to sell 20th Century Studios and all of its IP and catalog, including the pre-Disney stuff.
 
the money machine - parks and experiences.
IMG_3192.jpeg
Networks have out performed DPEP forever. Both are money machines but you can see why Disney hasn’t sold off the networks.

DPEP also includes Consumer products which made up $2.810b of the $7.905b in Operating Income for DPEP in FY22. Remove Consumer Products and you see that Networks clearly have been the main profit centre for years.

IMG_0589.jpeg

FY23 looks like entire DPEP divison will overtake Networks. But if we remove the Consumer Products and just compare Parks & Experiences it will be close this FY23. Depends how strong Parks & Experiences close out the fiscal year.
 
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https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/bob-iger-isnt-having-much-fun/ar-AA1dQZOi

Bob Iger Isn’t Having Much Fun
Eight months after returning as Disney’s CEO, he is straining to put out fire after fire, including streaming losses, an activist investor and TV woes
by Robbie Whelan, Joe Flint and Jessica Toonkel
July 14, 2023 5:30 am EDT

Bob Iger is under pressure.

Eight months after his return to Disney, which was sold as a triumphant second act by a savior CEO, reality is proving a lot more troublesome.

Iger has described himself to associates at recent private gatherings as stressed from cleaning up a mess that is more extensive than he realized. At the office, he joked in one meeting that it was the wrong time to come back, according to people familiar with the matter.

Since returning, Iger, 72 years old, has strained to put out fire after fire, from accumulating losses in the streaming segment to a steep decline in Disney’s traditional television business. He has clashed with the company’s CFO and an activist shareholder.

The company is in the midst of painful layoffs and budget cuts. Crowds at Disney’s Florida theme parks thinned during summer holidays. Its Pixar animation studio continued a yearslong box office slump. And a legal and political battle with Florida has deepened as its governor, Republican Ron DeSantis, campaigns for president.

On Wednesday, Disney’s board said it was extending Iger’s contract two more years, through 2026, partly to “allow more time to execute a transition plan for CEO succession.” Iger is staying put at the board’s request, he said, and in a memo to staffers, he added that he would use the extra time to navigate a difficult economic environment and dramatic industry shifts. “I am committed to seeing this through,” he wrote.

Iger declined to comment for this article.

When Iger returned to the company, he said he had a “clear mission focused on creative excellence.” In private conversations with associates, he has blamed many of the company’s troubles on his predecessor, Bob Chapek, whom he picked as his successor and then played a role in ousting. But some of Disney’s biggest challenges are rooted in decisions Iger made during his first stint in the top job, from 2005 to early 2020, including the 2019 acquisition of Fox entertainment assets and his decision to enter an arms race over streaming.

Some Disney employees say Iger was dealt a tough hand, and is taking the right steps to address structural problems that plague not just Disney, but the entire entertainment business. He has also followed through on a pledge to empower creative executives at the company, they say.

“Bob’s been a strong strategic leader for decades and having him stay on is a huge plus not just for Disney but for our industry as a whole,” said Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav.

Others have criticized the boss for overestimating how quickly he could transform Disney. And some said he has been tone deaf in how he has embraced the spotlight as CEO while presiding over thousands of staff cuts.

As layoffs kicked off this spring, he was photographed sitting courtside at NBA games. In May, Iger appeared at the Met Gala in New York wearing Donald Duck sneakers designed by the late couturier Karl Lagerfeld, which Disney’s consumer-products division had asked him to wear. He described the occasion to a red-carpet reporter as “a great excuse to get dressed up.”

A Disney spokesperson said Iger is a longtime season-ticket holder to both the Los Angeles Clippers and the New York Knicks and enjoyed attending NBA games even when he wasn’t CEO, and that he was invited to the Met Gala before coming back to Disney.

Since returning to the CEO’s office in Burbank, Iger has shown visitors a model of one of his yachts and enthused about the new superyacht he is building. The boat is expected to be 30 feet longer than Iger’s first superyacht, the 180-foot Aquarius, and built by the same Dutch custom shipbuilder Royal Huisman. Superyachts of that size and level of luxury can cost tens of millions of dollars, according to yachting experts and published sales listings.

Among the most pressing problems confronting Iger is the company’s streaming business. Disney has promised investors for nearly three years that Disney+ would be profitable by September of 2024. According to people familiar with the situation, some Disney executives have expressed doubts about whether the company can hit that target.

The streaming business—which buoyed Disney during the pandemic when theme parks and movie theaters were closed—continues to lose money. Disney’s direct-to-consumer segment, which includes Disney+, ESPN+ and a controlling stake in Hulu, has lost more than $10 billion since it began reporting results in late 2019.

Listening to advice gleaned from conversations with major shareholders ahead of Disney+’s 2019 launch, Iger spent heavily on content, from the Star Wars-themed spinoff show “The Mandalorian” to Fox’s “The Simpsons,” so that Disney+ could better compete with the mass-market appeal of Netflix, its top streaming competitor.

Last year, Disney’s spending on content reached $32 billion, nearly twice what Netflix spent to produce and acquire rights to shows and movies. That’s in part because Disney produces content for multiple platforms, including its film studios, streaming services and TV networks such as ESPN, ABC and the Disney Channel.

In exchange for shareholders’ blessing to spend heavily on streaming, Iger agreed to be more transparent with investors about the goals and outlook for the business. Each quarter, Disney made predictions about its subscription numbers and provided some granular detail about revenue in its earnings reports.

Chapek told investors in late 2020 that its core streaming service, Disney+, would be profitable by the end of fiscal 2024.

Iger has told colleagues he’s eager to keep reassuring investors that Disney+ would start making money by September 2024, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Other executives have voiced concern in internal business meetings in recent months that Disney’s stalling subscriber growth and high level of spending will likely make that target unreachable, people familiar with the matter said.

The streaming business’s fortunes were hurt in part by Disney’s failure to secure a major cricket rights package in India last year.

Subscriber losses, on top of declining revenue and profit margins, have prompted Disney to explore strategic options for the India business, which could include a sale or joint venture, the Journal reported.

Back home, Disney’s traditional TV business is also showing signs of strain. Once a workhorse that helped subsidize losses elsewhere, the TV business has declined faster than expected in recent quarters. On Thursday, Iger said in a CNBC interview that Disney was more challenged than he had anticipated, and that the company was considering selling off some of its TV networks to ease the pressure. Hollywood actors on Friday joined writers on strike, halting production of new shows and films industrywide.

The Disney Iger returned to in November was little like the company he left. Under Chapek, price increases at theme parks and an intense focus on streaming subscriber growth had replaced Iger’s old regime, which gave priority to expanding Disney’s library of characters and stories.

Iger quickly set about remolding Disney according to his vision of an entertainment giant led by creative executives rather than number-crunchers. He fired top executives who were seen as loyal to Chapek and restructured Disney’s studio and streaming businesses to put more decisions in the hands of content chiefs.

Those decisions were welcomed by many executives in Disney’s creative businesses, who felt they had been undermined in the previous regime.

In February, Iger fended off a proxy battle launched by activist investor Nelson Peltz, who had teamed up with Isaac “Ike” Perlmutter, the former chairman of Marvel Entertainment. Perlmutter, with 30 million shares to his name, is one of Disney’s largest individual shareholders, and helped with Peltz’s unsuccessful effort to pressure the company into adding him to Disney’s board of directors.

Peltz backed down from a boardroom battle after Iger announced a reorganization and cost-cutting plan. The plan included $5.5 billion in budget cuts and reducing head count by 7,000, including thousands of layoffs. Perlmutter thinks the cuts to TV and movie budgets haven’t gone far enough and that the company needs to lay off more high-paid managers, according to a person familiar with his thinking.

In an interview with the Journal after he was terminated from his role at Marvel earlier this year, Perlmutter said one major point of contention between Peltz and Iger was the $71.3 billion 2019 purchase of 21st Century Fox entertainment assets, which Iger spearheaded. The deal, which brought “Avatar” and the tens of millions of Indian streaming subscribers into the Disney fold, also saddled the company with billions in debt.

“This decision brought Disney to the brink of financial disaster,” Perlmutter said in the interview.

Disney said earlier this year the transaction “was critical to better positioning Disney to address key secular shifts in the media sector” and helped the company compete against streaming rivals.

Disney announced in June that Christine McCarthy, the company’s chief financial officer who had clashed with Iger over the restructuring of the company and earlier, with his top entertainment deputies over spending cuts, would leave the company.

Over the years, McCarthy had pushed for the company to take additional write-downs of some of the assets acquired from Fox beyond the $5 billion it took on international TV channels in 2020. As the two companies’ businesses became further entwined after the merger, that proved too difficult, people familiar with the matter said.

Disney said McCarthy was leaving the company after more than two decades to take a family medical leave. McCarthy hasn’t had any significant changes to her family health situation in recent months that would require her to step back, people familiar with the matter said.

Iger’s budget cuts and layoffs have so far failed to win over investors, and quarterly losses continue to stack up. Wall Street has grown impatient with how long it’s taken traditional entertainment companies to embrace streaming, and investors are clamoring for profitability.

Disney’s theme parks, which are typically reliable cash engines, logged lower attendance rates over the usually-mobbed July 4 holiday. And on the big screen, Disney’s heavyweight animation division Pixar, has hit a multiyear rough patch.

Once the undisputed champion of children’s’ movies with titles including “Toy Story” and “The Incredibles,” Pixar is losing box-office battles with competitors, especially Universal’s “Minions” and “Super Mario” movies. The unit’s latest movie “Elemental,” a romantic comedy that cost around $200 million to produce, earned just $29.5 million in its debut, the studio’s worst-ever opening weekend result.

For much of this year, Disney’s share price has traded under $100 per share and in recent weeks has hovered below $90, around its lowest level in nearly a decade. Just two years ago, Disney shares hit $190.

The biggest challenge for Iger is that fixing Disney’s issues is going to take time, and Wall Street is impatient, said media analyst Michael Nathanson with MoffettNathanson. Between fixing the content strategy, finding the best structure for the streaming business and figuring out what to do with ESPN and the TV networks, there is a lot to be done.

“Given the structural headwinds hitting the sector, Wall Street is not willing to wait for solutions,” he said.

Disney’s board met for its regular meeting in Anaheim, Calif., the last week of June, with streaming profits one of several important priorities. Managers from Disney’s television division made a presentation to the board about how best to distribute shows that air on both regular TV and the streaming services, people briefed on the meeting said.

Even with an extended contract, the issue of CEO succession remains. Mark Parker, a Nike executive who serves as chairman of Disney’s board, is leading a committee to find a successor to Iger.

Although no clear front-runner has emerged, rumors have swirled inside the company that Dana Walden and Alan Bergman, co-chairs of Disney’s entertainment and studio business, and parks chief Josh D’Amaro are all being strongly considered.

In recent months, the board had hired Heidrick & Struggles, a prominent executive search firm, to help examine external candidates, according to a person familiar with the matter. A spokeswoman for the recruiting firm declined to comment.

Analyst Doug Creutz of Cowen wrote Wednesday that keeping Iger on as CEO, while understandable, “also reinforces the notion that Disney continues to have serious succession planning issues.”

“He’s a brilliant CEO and no one will out hustle him,” said former ESPN CEO Steve Bornstein.

—Suzanne Vranica and Emily Glazer contributed to this article.

Write to Robbie Whelan at robbie.whelan@wsj.com, Joe Flint at Joe.Flint@wsj.com and Jessica Toonkel at jessica.toonkel@wsj.com
 
View attachment 777474
Networks have out performed DPEP forever. Both are money machines but you can see why Disney hasn’t sold off the networks.

DPEP also includes Consumer products which made up $2.810b of the $7.905b in Operating Income for DPEP in FY22. Remove Consumer Products and you see that Networks clearly have been the main profit centre for years.

View attachment 777478

FY23 looks like entire DPEP divison will overtake Networks. But if we remove the Consumer Products and just compare Parks & Experiences it will be close this FY23. Depends how strong Parks & Experiences close out the fiscal year.

Losing that overhead of 100s of stores and now only owning/operating 21 really seems to have made a shift for the Consumer Products division. Another store closed earlier this year in Hershey, PA.
 
He's not learning. ABC and ESPN are Disney's prime assets. Screw him for calling them "not core brands"!
I don't see a scenario on planet Earth that Iger sells ESPN. ESPN is TWDC ticket to gambling, specifically sports betting. I get that TWDC could always try to purchase a current company that runs sports gambling. I'm not confident TWDC will go down that road with ESPN already in hand.

One thing I'm very confident about is that once TWDC gets a taste of that sweet, sweet gambling dough, ESPN will be not only a core brand but also perhaps the most important division.
 
View attachment 777541
Consumer Products margin growth has been extraordinary.
Wonder how much growth in Consumer Products came as a result of getting rid of brick and mortar stores in malls and moving onto an end cap in Target? How much of the product sales come through the web? The shopping thread on this site has many wonderful things to buy, from Disney and other licensed sellers.
 
We don't know how Disney would structure a sale of ABC+ESPN, so it's difficult to speculate how this would all work. For instance, Disney may want to go direct-to-consumer with ESPN and ditch the legacy network distribution model, in which case they might only sell the ESPN "shell".

In that case, ESPN+Disney Plus+Hulu will all continue to live on as Disney properties, but with a more focused delivery model, while shedding the worst parts of linear TV.
 
I think people are jumping the gun on this sale thing anyway. He didn't say he would sell, just that the units and business model have a lot of problems. This certianly could mean a sale, but it could also mean a massive restructuring or strategic shift. He is clearly aware of the challenes faced by the linear model though. Personally, I still think that ABC is a valuable brand, but it may be time to do something radical with it.
 
I agree with Brian on this. I simply think Iger is saying he is looking at any and all options to return the company to the profitability that the investors want. More than anything this media tour is an effort to calm down and reassure the investors imho.
 
View attachment 777474
Networks have out performed DPEP forever. Both are money machines but you can see why Disney hasn’t sold off the networks.

DPEP also includes Consumer products which made up $2.810b of the $7.905b in Operating Income for DPEP in FY22. Remove Consumer Products and you see that Networks clearly have been the main profit centre for years.

View attachment 777478

FY23 looks like entire DPEP divison will overtake Networks. But if we remove the Consumer Products and just compare Parks & Experiences it will be close this FY23. Depends how strong Parks & Experiences close out the fiscal year.
Here's the trend however. This is the Q2 earnings report. Advertising doesn't show any prospect of improving anytime soon, it appears.

https://thewaltdisneycompany.com/app/uploads/2023/05/q2-fy23-earnings.pdf

"Linear Networks revenues for the quarter decreased 7% to $6.6 billion, and operating income decreased 35% to $1.8 billion. The following table provides further detail of Linear Networks results."
 

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