Disney stock sees biggest decline in six months after subscribers miss estimates


Disney (DIS) stock tumbled as much as 9% and closed down 8.7% on Thursday — its biggest decline in six months — after the media giant reported quarterly results on Wednesday that showed earnings per share missed estimates by a penny while Disney+ shed 4 million subscribers in the quarter.

The subscriber miss comes as streaming losses narrowed amid Disney’s continued efforts to slash $5.5 billion in costs this year.

The report was the first since Disney announced its new three-pronged business reorganization — Disney Entertainment, ESPN, and Disney Parks, Experiences and Products — as CEO Bob Iger attempts to streamline the media giant and reset its strategy. The company will begin reporting under the new structure later this year.

Theme parks, particularly international parks, continued to be a strong outperformer with operating income hitting $2.17 billion in the quarter, echoing recent trends at competitors like Comcast’s Universal (CMCSA).

Despite Disney+ subscribers missing expectations amid recent price hikes, streaming losses narrowed to $659 million in the second quarter— above consensus estimates of $850 million — from a loss of $887 million in the year-ago period. The company reported a streaming loss of $1.1 billion in Q1 and a $1.5 billion loss in Q4.

“We’re pleased with our accomplishments this quarter, including the improved financial performance of our streaming business, which reflect the strategic changes we’ve been making throughout the company to realign Disney for sustained growth and success,” Iger said in the earnings release. “From movies to television, to sports, news, and our theme parks, we continue to deliver for consumers, while establishing a more efficient, coordinated, and streamlined approach to our operations.”

Here are Disney’s second-quarter results compared with Wall Street’s consensus estimates, as compiled by Bloomberg:

  • Revenue: $21.82 billion versus $21.82 billion expected

  • Adj. earnings per share (EPS): $0.93 versus $0.94 expected

  • Total Disney+ subscribers: 157.8 million versus 163.1 million expected

  • Disney Parks, Experiences and Products revenue: $7.78 billion versus $7.67 billion expected

Iger, who stepped back into the CEO position in November, has remained hyper-focused on profitability as investors shift focus away from subscriber growth and put more emphasis on margins. The company’s direct-to-consumer division, which includes Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+, shed a whopping $4 billion-plus in its fiscal 2022 ended Oct. 1, after it spent an estimated $33 billion on content last year.

Since that time, Iger has worked hard to establish new revenue streams like Disney’s recently launched ad-supported tier, in addition to various price increases to help pare losses and lift metrics like average revenue per user, or ARPU.

Domestic ARPU at Disney+ improved 20% sequentially to reach $7.14 in Q2 2022. The company reported domestic ARPU of $5.95 in the prior quarter.

Iger has consistently reaffirmed the company’s outlook of reaching streaming profitability by the year 2024, although it will be a bumpy road ahead.

FILE – Bob Iger speaks at the Bloomberg Global Business Forum, Sept. 25, 2019, in New York. Since Iger returned to The Walt Disney Co. there’s been plenty of issues to keep him busy, one has definitely been top of mind: reconnecting with the Disney theme park die-hards and restoring their faith in the brand. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

The future of Hulu became more obvious on Thursday after Iger pivoted his previous stance that “everything was on the table” in regards to the streaming giant.

“I’ve now had another 3 months to really study this carefully and figure out what is the best path for us to grow this business. It’s clear that a combination of the content that is on Disney+ with general entertainment is a very positive,” Iger said on the company’s quarterly earnings call, adding he’s now “bullish” on the combination of Disney+ with Hulu.

The company revealed it will soon offer a one-app experience domestically that incorporates Hulu content via Disney+.

On the parks side of the business, operating income beat expectations of $2.14 billion to hit $2.17 billion, higher than Q2 2022’s $1.76 billion.

Parks soared to $3.05 billion in Q1 on strong domestic theme park trends. Analysts have remained largely bullish on the parks business despite heightened risks to margins amid inflation.

Earlier this year, Disney announced long-awaited updates to its parks reservation system and annual passholder program following intense backlash from consumers over lengthy wait times and sky-high ticket prices.

Advertising, meanwhile, continued to be a headwind, similar to competitors. Linear network revenues fell 7% in the quarter compared to the year-ago period.

Alexandra Canal is a Senior Reporter at Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter @alliecanal8193 and email her at [email protected]

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