Whatâs going on here? Disneyâs results, out on Wednesday, showed the media giantâs stepping â not leaping â toward its profit-improving targets. What does this mean? Letâs not beat around the bush: Disneyâs streaming service lost four million subscribers last quarter â on the face of it, a serious bummer for investors. But the firmâs price hikes and newfound frugality meant the divisionâs losses ultimately shrank way more than expected. That, plus a regal performance from Disneyâs theme parks â which scored a $1.7 billion profit, 50% above pre-pandemic levels â helped overall results inch in above expectations. Mind you, there was an important hiccup: revenue dropped 7% annually for the firmâs old-school TV business, with more and more folk ditching traditional television â and that âcord-cuttingâ could spell trouble. Why should I care? Zooming in: Knight in tarnished armor. Itâs not a surprise that cord-cutting has got Disneyâs old stalwart, the traditional TV business, on the wane. But with streaming â the firmâs knight in shining armor â losing viewers too, Disneyâs facing a real challenge. See, itâs not clear whether the firmâs current mishmash of a decaying old TV business and an unprofitable streaming service will ever hit the heights of Disneyâs pre-streaming TV days. And that uncertaintyâs got investors second-guessing whether the firmâs truly a clever long-term bet. The bigger picture: Park life. A trip to Disneyâs parks costs a pretty penny these days â so with 7% more Mickey fans making the pilgrimage last quarter compared to the year before, you might wonder whether this whole impending-recession shtick is more fiction than fact. After all, splurge-worthy vacations can be decent indicators of the economyâs overall health â and on Disneyâs evidence alone, everything seems fine and dandy. But cyclical businesses like theme parks can turn on a dime, so youâd be wise to keep an eye on future attendance stats for signs of any little cracks. |