Cancellation rates for both streaming services doubled in September from a month earlier.
Walt Disney (DIS) closed the most recent trading day at $109.88, moving 1.64% from the previous trading session.
Disney plans to announce a successor to CEO Bob Iger in early 2026. Disney executives Dana Walden and Josh D'Amaro are both frontrunners for the job.
There is no sign yet of Taylor Swift fatigue, as a docuseries on Swift's “The Era's Tour” is set to be released on Disney+ in December, just months after her latest album was released.
Disney said on Wednesday it will raise prices for certain tickets to its theme parks in the U.S. during key holidays such as the Thanksgiving week and New Year's Eve.
DIS' 23% rally compresses valuation appeal. A strategic content pipeline and improved streaming economics support holding, but competition suggests patience.
AI video generation will drive major cost reductions and margin expansion for IP-heavy firms like Disney. Disney's Entertainment division, 28% of profits, stands to gain most as AI reduces animation and voice acting costs. Owning character IP protects Disney from cheap imitators while amplifying profitability as production costs decline.
Recently, Zacks.com users have been paying close attention to Disney (DIS). This makes it worthwhile to examine what the stock has in store.
Consumer discretionary stocks have lagged the market for the better part of two years. However, streaming stocks have been somewhat immune to this trend until recently.
Is the controversy over Jimmy Kimmel's comments regarding MAGA and President Donald Trump in the wake of Charlie Kirk's slaying a few weeks ago on his late-night ABC TV show now over? Maybe not.
The recommendations of Wall Street analysts are often relied on by investors when deciding whether to buy, sell, or hold a stock. Media reports about these brokerage-firm-employed (or sell-side) analysts changing their ratings often affect a stock's price.
Is this the company's biggest whopper yet?