My guess is that it's closer to normal capacity numbers right now than one would think. We were there in early November and it was much more crowded than in our previous trip at that time of the year in 2019, it wasn't even close and included all parks. Most hotels were full including some we checked off property before we found a value at AKL for our arrival night. Disney isn't going to announce that they are at 100% because that would only serve to scare people into not coming but I bet they aren't far away.
They are not running at 100% capacity, and not as close as your might think. Although it seems a lot is open, there are still a lot of crowd eaters that are not. Examples - in MK, Meet and Greets (now Sightings) used to have people lined up, and do not exist. Parades - gone. PhillarMagic, Railroad are closed. Sorcerers is closed. At Animal Kingdom, Nemo, Primeval whirl (gone), Epcot, the entire middle which had a lot of people, Canada. Hollywood has probably the biggest amount with Fantasmic, Indiana Jones, Jedi Training, Little Mermaid, Launch Bay...
Even if you discount those things, the rides are not running at 100% capacity. With increased cleaning, they are running slower and with less vehicles on the tracks.
Pop up entertainment is all but gone at the moment (a BIG crowd eater in EPCOT and Hollywood).
Restaurant's are running at reduced table capacity (check out Chef Mickeys sometime - very few tables). Dinner shows are not open (Hoop Dee Doo, Luau). Typhoon Lagoon is still closed.
Big areas of the parks are still under renovation which were not planned to be closed to accommodate the crowds with the 50th.
Disney hotels are not at 100% capacity either. Only recently, did AKL just open Jambo house, Riverside, and French Quarter. They still have not opened All-star sports (2 weeks?)
But mainly it's the crowd eaters are missing (shows, street performers, etc),
Genie+ is a confusing beast and not packing them into waiting lines anymore, and the rides are not fully utilized due to lack of staffing. These types of things are harder to spot with the naked eye.
I probably didn't make myself clear (well, it was clear in my head, but sometimes it gets lost as a type).
As a
DVC owner, and AP holder, it is not impacting me at all that they have again paused AP sales.
I personally think that AP holders are the "bread and butter" business for Disney Parks. It is those people who go often, it is those people that bring friends and family. So, I think doing things that annoy them is counter productive.
I am not an expert in the operations of an amusement park, just a frequenter of many. However, my point above could be very wrong. I do not know.
As an investor, and a Disney shareholder, I am often conflated. Something that may be good for the company my be not so good for me, the park visitor.
However, it is hard to say the company is doing well if you look at the stock prices over the last month. Sure, Omicron hit everything on Friday, but it seem there has just been constant the stock price going down. So, as a shareholder, I do want to ask management, what are you doing?
Yeah, I get ya. I admit, I was happier with the stock nearing $190 then $150. Are there things that Disney could have done better for the Pandemic? ABSOLUTELY. Have they done everything perfectly? Of course not. However, the stock price is only partially reflective of their mistakes. It's also driven (as these things often are) by bigger winds in the market. A lot of stocks went sky-rocketing early this year when there was hope the Pandemic was almost over. A lot of them never materialized, or shrunk after - this is not just Disney, and you have to look at Disney along with the bigger picture - my entire portfolio has struggled to maintain the gains it had in May and has slipped in a few major industries - Travel and Leisure being perhaps the biggest.
TBH I was surprised they opened AP's as soon as they did. I personally was clamoring for them as a DVC member who has had to pay rack rates for several trips. But I also understand the challenges of selling too many and stopping the sales made sense in the overall context and most of wall street understands that. What is disappointing wall street is that we have not had to HUGE OVERWHELMING recovery that was expected around the end of the summer / early fall. That's not just Disney - that's all T&L.
Also, P&R is only 30% of their portfolio. Depressing sales for
DCL, Movie releases, and
Disney+ are major concerns.