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Disney’s Earnings Outlook Rises as Streaming Unit Posts Gains
Streaming profit and studio are bright spots, while income from cable and theme parks declines


By Robbie Whelan
Updated Nov. 14, 2024 - 10:06 am ET

Disney’s streaming and studio businesses gained momentum in the September quarter, as the company reported a bullish outlook for the coming years.

After years of investing heavily in streaming, the company’s direct-to-consumer business swung to a profit of $321 million in the September quarter from a loss of $387 million a year earlier. The stark improvement for the business, home to Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+, marked its second consecutive quarterly profit.

Meanwhile, Disney’s cable TV unit continued to lose steam. Income from its traditional TV networks, which include both ABC and cable channels such as FX, the Disney Channel and Freeform, tumbled 38% to $498 million. Revenue fell 6% to $2.5 billion.

Disney and many of its rivals are betting that streaming is the future as the traditional cable TV model withers. The company’s performance in the September quarter highlights the delicate balancing act Disney faces as two of its most profitable legacy businesses show signs of strain and two other units notch wins.

Companywide, revenue rose to $22.6 billion, up 6% from a year earlier and roughly in line with analyst expectations, while net income climbed 74% to $460 million.

Disney forecast adjusted earnings per share growth in fiscal 2025 in the high single-digit percentage range, and double-digit adjusted EPS growth in the two subsequent years.

Theme parks

In Disney’s Experiences unit, which includes theme parks and cruises, income declined for the second consecutive quarter. The business has become the company’s main profit engine, in some recent years accounting for more than two-thirds of total operating income.

Experiences reported an operating income of $1.66 billion in the September quarter, down 6% from a year earlier, and roughly in line with Wall Street’s expectations. For the full fiscal year, the division represented 59% of Disney’s operating income, down from 70% the previous year.

Disney said the lower profit was due to rising costs, including those associated with the launch of two new cruise ships, and lower attendance at overseas theme parks, especially Disneyland Paris, which lost tourists to the Paris Olympic Games. Despite the decline in income, per capita spending at the domestic theme parks and on cruises rose last quarter, while foot traffic at the U.S. parks held relatively steady, the company said.

In Thursday’s call with investors, CFO Hugh Johnston said the company’s outlook for domestic consumers is strengthening. Disney expects operating income in the Experiences division to grow by 6% to 8% in fiscal 2025, with most of that growth coming during the second half of the year. The company is planning massive theme park upgrades, including for its Magic Kingdom, Animal Kingdom and Hollywood Studios parks.

Cable woes

Disney said higher marketing costs for a large crop of TV season premieres after last year’s writer and actor strikes, lower ad revenue and changes to one of its carriage agreements were among the reasons for the decline in cable profit.

Disney and Charter Communications, which has 13 million cable TV customers, forged a new carriage agreement late last year in which the cable company pays higher fees for Disney-owned networks such as ESPN in return for the right to offer Disney+ and ESPN+ to its subscribers. As part of the deal, which was viewed as a pivotal moment in the industry’s transition from traditional TV to streaming, Charter dropped several Disney-owned networks, including Freeform, Disney XD and FXX.

Comcast said last week that it is exploring spinning off its cable networks as it also contends with pressure in that part of its business. Johnston said during Thursday’s earnings call that the company explored divesting assets, but “there wasn’t a value-creation opportunity for Disney.”

CEO Bob Iger batted down a question from an analyst about making changes to the company’s lineup, too. “We don’t really need more assets right now, either from a distribution or a content perspective, to thrive in a disrupted media world,” he said.

Streaming gains

Disney added 4.4 million new core Disney+ subscribers, far more than the 900,000 new customers that Wall Street analysts polled by FactSet predicted, bringing the total number to more than 120 million. So-called core Disney+ subscribers are those in the U.S., Canada and other countries, excluding India, where Disney offers the lower-priced Hotstar service. Including both core Disney+ and Hulu subscribers, Disney’s two biggest streaming services have 174 million total customers.

The combined streaming business benefited from price increases, advertising revenue growth, lower marketing costs and strong subscriber growth. The Disney+, ESPN+ and Hulu parent has raised streaming prices repeatedly over the past few years, but has avoided a significant wave of cancellations and has continued to add new customers. The company said more than half of new U.S. Disney+ subscribers are opting for the ad-supported tier of service. Overall, 37% of U.S. subscribers use the ad-supported option, and 30% globally do.

Iger said that while raising prices for streaming is an important part of Disney’s strategy, “the pricing was designed to move people” toward ad-supported products.

The company warned of a “modest decline” in core Disney+ subscribers next quarter.

Disney said that next month it will add an ESPN tile to its Disney+ streaming service and plans to launch a fully direct-to-consumer streaming version of ESPN, known as ESPN Flagship, next fall. Iger said the service will include live sports, studio shows, integrated sports betting and other features that could use artificial intelligence to help the network meet consumer preferences.

“Imagine an A.I.-driven SportsCenter,” he said, referring to ESPN’s popular sports commentary show. “When you apply technology to the presentation of sports, almost anything is possible.”

Blockbusters

Disney’s studio business benefited from two box office hits—“Inside Out 2” and “Deadpool & Wolverine. ” With $1.7 billion in global ticket sales, “Inside Out 2” this summer became the highest-grossing animated movie of all time, while “Deadpool & Wolverine,” which grossed $1.3 billion at the global box office, set the record for an R-rated movie.

Disney’s studio business reported a $316 million profit compared with a loss of $149 million a year earlier.

In a statement, Bob Iger, Disney’s chief executive, called this past fiscal year “pivotal and successful” for the company, and highlighted “one of the best quarters in the history of our film studio,” as well as accolades in the entertainment and experiences businesses.

Disney is scheduled to release two new films, “Moana 2” and “Mufasa: The Lion King,” in theaters later this year.

The company said Thursday that it planned to buy back $3 billion in stock and increase its dividend over the coming fiscal year.

Write to Robbie Whelan at robbie.whelan@wsj.com
 


Just had a chance to watch this. I don't agree with her "streaming is a winner take all" industry. The entertainment industry has always had 3 or 4 major players (winners) - not just TV (4 major networks), but movies with the major studios and music with a few major labels. I don't think that long history is going to change just because the delivery system is changing to streaming.
 
Just had a chance to watch this. I don't agree with her "streaming is a winner take all" industry. The entertainment industry has always had 3 or 4 major players (winners) - not just TV (4 major networks), but movies with the major studios and music with a few major labels. I don't think that long history is going to change just because the delivery system is changing to streaming.
I agree, Disney's IP is extremely valuable and IMO would keep them profitable in the streaming game all by itself. I agree that Netflix could use some deep-rooted IP to build around, but I can't see targeting Disney or Disney not safeguarding themselves from that happening
 


I view throwing Netflix into the mix as just noise beyond the standard “Apple/Amazon should buy Disney” that’s been out there for years.

Netflix should add to their portfolio, but I would say buying a smaller studio would be their move.
i could see Netflix running partnerships with companies that fall out of the traditional media realm. ie Nintendo over purchasing another media giant
 
https://www.wsj.com/business/media/disney-stock-profit-fiscal-year-229e73e6

Disney’s Flywheel Picks Up Some Speed
Long-term forecast buoys hopes that streaming can make strong profit while theme parks show resilience

By Dan Gallagher
Nov. 14, 2024 - 11:56 am EST

Whoever ends up as Disney’s next CEO won’t be inheriting a complete fix-up job. That doesn’t mean it will be an easy one.

The entertainment giant reported relatively strong results for its fiscal fourth quarter on Thursday morning. They included better-than-expected profits in both streaming and domestic theme parks—the company’s two most important business units. Disney also broke with tradition by giving a more detailed earnings projection for the next two years.

That projection showed two things of particular import to Wall Street. The first is that Disney doesn’t expect weakened consumer spending and Universal’s planned opening of a grand new park in Florida to cripple its own theme-park earnings next summer. The company projected operating income for its Experiences segment to grow by between 6% and 8% in fiscal 2025; analysts had been expecting growth of only 1% for the year, according to consensus estimates by Visible Alpha.

The second is that Disney expects its entertainment-streaming business, made up of Disney+ and Hulu, to achieve a 10% operating margin in the fiscal year ending in September 2026. That business barely turned a profit in the just-ended fiscal year after losing a combined $5.9 billion over the previous two. Wall Street only had been expecting the operating margin for entertainment streaming to hit 6.6% by fiscal 2026.

The results and forecast boosted Disney’s stock price by more than 8% Thursday morning. That too is a nice change from the past two reports, which sent the shares tumbling. Disney could use the lift; prior to Thursday’s report, the company’s stock was up less than 14% for the year to date, lagging both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500.

Such a ho-hum performance was still a bright spot compared with most of Disney’s traditional media peers. The industry has been laid low this year by the continued meltdown of the cable-TV business and a still wildly unpredictable box office. Disney isn’t immune to either: Revenue from the company’s linear TV business, which includes advertising and cable affiliate fees, slid nearly 9% in the just-ended fiscal year, while operating income for that business fell even more sharply—by 16% for the year. Disney’s theatrical distribution revenue dropped 29% for the year.

But its box-office performance also got a big lift in the just-ended quarter from blockbusters “Inside Out 2” and “Deadpool & Wolverine.” The company also has two more major releases set for this calendar year—“Moana 2” and “Mufasa: The Lion King”—that are expected to do very well. The online ticketing service Fandango announced late last month that the first day of presales for “Moana 2” have topped every other animated film this year, including “Inside Out 2,” which grossed nearly $1.7 billion globally in its theatrical run.

Even with the overall movie business still struggling to return to pre-Covid levels, movies are a key part of Disney’s flywheel strategy, where success in one business feeds the others. Popular movies have long been turned into consumer products and attractions in the company’s theme parks. But they are also now important feeders into the streaming operation, where consumption of older movies “spikes significantly” ahead of new big releases, according to comments from Disney Chief Executive Bob Iger on Thursday’s earnings call. That plays into the company’s strong outlook for the streaming business, with Iger noting that “we have considerable visibility on our content pipeline” for the next two years.

Improving the earnings potential of streaming is key if Disney is to ever restore the magic of its once-mighty bottom line. The company is bigger than it has ever been—revenue of $91.4 billion for the just-ended fiscal year is a new record. But while its annual operating margin of 17% is the highest in five years, it is still well below the 28% range the company commanded in the middle of the last decade, when the cable-TV business was at its zenith.

Fully returning to that level is a job that will likely fall to Iger’s successor, who is expected to be named next year. If the company can hit the goals it laid out Thursday, the new boss will at least get a nice starting point.

Write to Dan Gallagher at dan.gallagher@wsj.com
 














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