Shares of Walt Disney Company ( NYSE: DIS ) largely mirrored the broad market over the past month, posting a loss of -10.29% alongside sell-offs that drove both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite into correction territory.
DIS slips as travel sector weakens. Strong content but debt concerns persist.
The House of Mouse has buckled below the triple-digit mark. Shares of Walt Disney (DIS -5.03%) tumbled 5% to $97.90 on Tuesday, its first close below $100 in more than four months.
Disney (DIS) reported earnings 30 days ago. What's next for the stock?
Jim Cramer believes in the magic to be had in shares of The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS).
The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS ) Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference March 4, 2025 6:20 PM ET Company Participants Dana Walden - Co-Chairman, Disney Entertainment Conference Call Participants Ben Swinburne - Morgan Stanley Ben Swinburne All right. Good afternoon everybody.
Disney is planning to reduce headcount by roughly 6% of the total workforce of ABC News Group and Disney Entertainment Networks, a person familiar with the matter said on Tuesday, as the entertainment giant grapples with declining TV audience.
Walt Disney Co. (NYSE: DIS) stock rallied from two years of horrible performance when it announced earnings in mid-November. Since then, it has traded flat. Over the past year, the shares have risen less than 2%, while the S&P 500 has increased 16%. Disney’s earnings news turned out to be less than compelling. 24/7 Wall St. Key Points: Walt Disney Co. (NYSE: DIS) stock rallied when it announced earnings in mid-November. However, since then it appears that Disney’s growth may have tapped out. Take this quiz to see if you’re on track to retire. (sponsored) While the market briefly viewed Disney’s recent numbers as positive, they weren’t. Revenue rose only 5% to $24.7 billion. Per-share earnings were up 35% to $1.40, but part of that is that it stopped losing money in streaming after losses that stretched into the billions of dollars. Streaming margins are still less than modest. Disney+ subscriber count was flat at 125 million. This mediocre number compares to industry leader Netflix, which is still growing. In its most recent quarter, subscribers rose 15% yearly to 301 million. Disney+ and its other large streaming platform, Hulu, have trouble competing against Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Paramount+, Peacock, and Max, as well as a number of niche streaming channels. Americans do not subscribe to half a dozen services, and some channels get elbowed out. Disney’s Achilles’ heel is its theme park business, “Experiences.” Its revenue rose only 3% last quarter to $9.4 billion. Operating income was flat at $3.1 billion and is 60% of Disney’s total operating income. Investors worry that Disney’s parks have gotten too expensive for middle-class consumers. The New York Times recently reported, “As Disney has raised the cost of tickets and hotel rooms at its theme parks, and added pricey, difficult-to-navigate tools, even its most loyal fans are asking themselves if they should rethink their vacations.” Has Disney’s growth tapped out? Based on recent numbers, it never happened, and that is not likely to change. The Typical American Can’t Name the Companies Behind These Popular Brands The post Disney Is Still in Trouble appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
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Walt Disney Co. (NYSE: DIS) stock rallied from two years of horrible performance when it announced earnings in mid-November. Since then, it has traded flat. Over the past year, the shares have risen less than 2%, while the S&P 500 has increased 16%. Disney’s earnings news turned out to be less than compelling. 24/7 Wall St. Key Points: Walt Disney Co. (NYSE: DIS) stock rallied when it announced earnings in mid-November. However, since then it appears that Disney’s growth may have tapped out. Take this quiz to see if you’re on track to retire. (sponsored) While the market briefly viewed Disney’s recent numbers as positive, they weren’t. Revenue rose only 5% to $24.7 billion. Per-share earnings were up 35% to $1.40, but part of that is that it stopped losing money in streaming after losses that stretched into the billions of dollars. Streaming margins are still less than modest. Disney+ subscriber count was flat at 125 million. This mediocre number compares to industry leader Netflix, which is still growing. In its most recent quarter, subscribers rose 15% yearly to 301 million. Disney+ and its other large streaming platform, Hulu, have trouble competing against Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Paramount+, Peacock, and Max, as well as a number of niche streaming channels. Americans do not subscribe to half a dozen services, and some channels get elbowed out. Disney’s Achilles’ heel is its theme park business, “Experiences.” Its revenue rose only 3% last quarter to $9.4 billion. Operating income was flat at $3.1 billion and is 60% of Disney’s total operating income. Investors worry that Disney’s parks have gotten too expensive for middle-class consumers. The New York Times recently reported, “As Disney has raised the cost of tickets and hotel rooms at its theme parks, and added pricey, difficult-to-navigate tools, even its most loyal fans are asking themselves if they should rethink their vacations.” Has Disney’s growth tapped out? Based on recent numbers, it never happened, and that is not likely to change. The Typical American Can’t Name the Companies Behind These Popular Brands The post Disney Is Still in Trouble appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Shares of Walt Disney (DIS 2.24%) narrowly beat the market in 2024. The 2.2% year-to-date gain doesn't seem like much, but it means the entertainment giant is once again coasting just ahead of the S&P 500.