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https://www.forbes.com/sites/caroli...ts-record-26-billion-revenue/?sh=74ad2ebf3187

Disneyland Paris Reports Record $2.6 Billion Revenue​

Caroline Reid
Mar 28, 2023,02:09pm EDT

Disneyland Paris revealed it made a $51 million (€47 million) operating profit last year on revenue which hit a record $2.6 billion (€2.4 billion) as the lifting of pandemic restrictions and the opening of a new land themed to Marvel super heroes led to a surge of guests through its turnstiles.

With two parks and seven hotels, Disneyland Paris is a bellwether of Europe's tourism sector so its strong performance indicates that the dark clouds blown in by Covid-19 have finally begun to clear.

Its results are all the more remarkable as Disneyland Paris has rarely made a profit since its ornate iron gates swung open in 1992, when it was known as Euro Disney.

Disney's then-chief executive Michael Eisner selected France over Spain as the location for the resort despite concerns about the weather. In a recent interview for The Times of London he said, "Disney executives in Burbank, California - but also theme park and resort management in Anaheim and Orlando - thought the winter would kill the park and hotel business.

"I'm from New York City. Unless there is a nor'easter storm, people go out, and if there is a subway to the front door, no problem. Later I insisted we put fireplaces in the lobby of each Euro Disney hotel, but that's another story. Plus, Tokyo Disneyland opened in spring 1983 and proved successful from the start, so we had real-world experience with a Disney theme park where it snowed."

Disneyland Paris covers an area of 5,500 acres which is around a fifth the size of the French capital. This locks out competitors from the local area and enables Disney to carefully control the standards of the land surrounding its parks. In order to get such a large amount of land, the French government asked Disney to enter into a public-private partnership.

Accordingly, Disneyland Paris was listed on the Paris Euronext exchange with only 49% in Disney's hands. As Disney didn't own the company outright, it gave it loans rather than pouring money into it. The resort also funded its construction with $1.8 billion (€1.7 billion) of bank borrowings and the finance charges on it fueled losses.

Eisner says that "from day one it was a hit with the people. I think we had 10 million people in year one, more than the Louvre." However, he adds that "various factors - the extreme costs associated with going for excellence, for building a castle where castles were real; financing costs of a highly leveraged entity structure; lower per capita spending by visitors who use all their allotted vacation time etc. - hurt the bottom line for a decade or so."

The debt burden was lifted in 2012 when Disney cleared the bank loans and five years later it took complete ownership of Disneyland Paris in a $2.17 (€2) a share offer. It was de-listed from the Euronext which reduced the visibility into its finances as it is no longer obliged to release quarterly figures.

Disney's own filings only give general guidance on the results of individual parks and their financial performance isn't itemized. However, the company which operates its French outpost, Euro Disney Associés, still files financial statements. They show that its revenue rose from $968 million (€893 million) in 2021 to $2.6 billion in the year to 30 September 2022. It far outstripped the 57.8% increase in the company's $2.5 billion (€2.3 billion) costs leaving it with a $51 million operating profit. As the graph below shows, this was its highest in a decade and a marked improvement on its $627 million (€579 million) operating loss the previous year.

Revenue and operating profit/loss for Disneyland Paris 2013-2022

Revenue and operating profit/loss for Disneyland Paris 2013-22

The increase in costs was driven by the re-opening of the resort's theme parks in June 2021. This led to it taking on 9.4% more staff giving it a total of 15,450. Disneyland Paris is the largest private employer in the Paris region and its staff are known as Cast Members due to their role in a themed environment. Their total pay rose 30.8% last year to a record $825 million (€761 million) as can be seen in the graph below.

Total staff numbers and total pay at Disneyland Paris

Total staff numbers and total pay at Disneyland Paris

Caroline Reid using Flourish
The resort is also Europe's most-visited tourist attraction and, according to infrastructure analysts AECOM, it welcomed an estimated 15 million guests in 2019. As reported in the Daily Telegraph at the time, the resort was set for a happy ending thanks to significant growth in guest spending and increases to average daily room rates in its hotels.

Capitalizing on this, the company invested $216 million (€199 million) in 2018 and said that it was "driven by costs incurred for the development of the resort and improvement of the existing assets. They also include costs linked to the renovation of theme parks and hotels." As we reported in 2017, Disneyland Paris was due to open a game-changing attraction in 2024 but Covid-19 cast a dark spell on these plans.

According to the latest estimates, attendance fell to just 5.4 million in 2021 but it has skyrocketed since the resort re-opened from the pandemic. In a recent report, I revealed that five of the seven on-site hotels at Disneyland Paris alone generated $102.2 million of revenue in the 12 months to September 30 2021, even though they were shuttered for more than seven months of that time. Their financial statements show that this revenue rose a staggering 497% last year to hit a record $617.8 million (€570.2 million).

The positive trend is continuing into 2023 as Disney's chief financial officer Christine McCarthy revealed last month. Announcing Disney's results for the three months to December 31, 2022, McCarthy said that "in this quarter, we had very strong performance, especially year-over-year from Disneyland Paris." Disney's earnings release noted that attendance and occupancy rose during the quarter whilst guests spent more money due to "an increase in average ticket prices and higher average daily hotel room rates."

Weak currencies coupled with ticket price increases have put Disney's parks in the United States out of reach for many European travelers. Disneyland Paris has been the beneficiary of this and made the most of it by opening new attractions. Last month McCarthy added that "at Disneyland Paris, we remain pleased with the positive results we're seeing from the substantial investments we've made there."

The resort celebrated its thirtieth anniversary in April last year with the debut of the first drone show in a Disney park and followed it up three months later by swinging the doors open to a land themed to the hugely-popular Marvel super hero movies.

The glitzy opening ceremony was attended by Hollywood A-lister Brie Larson who plays the super powered Captain Marvel on the silver screen and in a roller-coaster which is exclusive to Paris. Another ride uses motion-sensing cameras to make it seem like guests are firing webs from their wrists into a 3D screen alongside Spider-Man. Disneyland Paris isn't stopping there.

The Marvel land is the first stage in a multi-billion expansion which we revealed in the Express newspaper in 2017. The Euro Disney Associés financial statements show that $410 million (€378 million) of assets were under construction in 2022 and the bulk of it relates to a land themed to the hit animated film Frozen which will open over the coming years. It was due to be followed by another land set in the world of Star Wars but Disneyland Paris' president Natacha Rafalski recently cast doubt on that. She told the France Info television network that Disneyland Paris is "still working on the third theme. We will make announcements about this when we are ready."

It is rumoured that the third land could instead be themed to the Avatar franchise following the success of the second film in the series which recently became the third highest-grossing movie in history with total takings of $2.3 billion according to industry analyst Box Office Mojo. Pandora - The World of Avatar is one of the most popular lands at Walt Disney DIS +1.3% World in Orlando so it could be just the magic touch that Disneyland Paris needs to remain profitable.

Soon after Bob Iger began his second run as Disney's chief executive in November last year, he made it a priority to make the US parks more accessible. Since then, he has boosted the number of lower-priced tickets to Disneyland in California, scrapped parking fees at Walt Disney World hotels and removed restrictions for passholders after 2pm. There could be more to come.

Earlier this month, Iger said at the Morgan Stanley MS -0.2% media conference "I think that in our zeal to grow profits, we may have been a little bit too aggressive about some of our pricing. And I think there is a way to continue to grow our business but be smarter about how we price so that we maintain that brand value of accessibility." Lowering ticket prices to Disney's US parks could increase the competition for Disneyland Paris and it isn't the only challenge which could be on the horizon.

Disneyland Paris reported in 2016 that 32% of its guests arrived by plane or train as there is a direct line from the resort to the UK which is one of its biggest markets after France. However, the direct service will be suspended in June to ease bottlenecks in stations caused by the post-Brexit need to stamp passengers' passports when they cross the border. A new Entry/Exit System, known as the EES EES -0.4%, is due to replace the checks but the technology has been delayed several times and is now due to be introduced at the end of the year.

If this inconvenience tempts UK travelers to look at Disney's US parks again just as benefits to ticket-holders are increasing, Disneyland Paris could lose lucrative business. As Brits have to travel further to Disneyland Paris than many of their European counterparts, they often stay longer to make the most of it. This increases revenue and thereby profit for Disneyland Paris so any steps which reduce its appeal to the UK market mean that staying in the black might not be a walk in the park.
 
https://www.thestreet.com/media/analyst-says-one-tech-giant-should-buy-disney?puc=yahoo&cm_ven=YAHOO

Analyst Names a Tech Giant That Should Buy Disney​

Needham & Company's Laura Martin says the two companies would be worth more together than separate.
3/30/23
Jeffrey Quiggle

Disney (DIS) - Get Free Report CEO Bob Iger has said that if it weren't for Steve Jobs' death in 2011, his company may have merged with Apple (AAPL) - Get Free Report.

Now an analyst at Needham & Company is suggesting that Apple would stand to increase its value by as much as 25% if it bought Disney using Apple stock.

"Offensively, as an upside value driver, strong distribution and world-class content are complementary networks. That is, they are worth more together than separately, we believe," Martin said in a note, according to Markets Insider.
Apple could monetize its customers who use Apple devices for an average of four hours per day, Martin said. The company has 1.25 billion customers with 2 billion devices, she said.

Apple already has a number of subscription services, including Apple Music, Apple TV+, Arcade, Fitness+ and Apple News.

"What Apple does best is distribute content globally to 2 billion high-end mobile devices owned by 1.25 billion unique and wealthy users," Martin said. "And what Disney does best is create AAA content franchises, which it distributes globally across all screens, as well as in the physical world."

Both Apple and Disney have loyal global fans, premium pricing power and a wealthy consumer base, according to the note.

"This implies that these key assets and value-drivers become stronger, and are not diluted, if the two companies are put together," Martin said.

"I think Apple is doing a very mediocre job of streaming," Martin said on CNBC March 30, according to Markets Insider. "They just said they were going to do a billion dollars in film financing. That's sort of laughable, because these companies that are competing in content businesses are spending $30 billion a year. Even Netflix is spending $20 billion a year."

"Guess what the Walt Disney company has," she continued. "One hundred years of some of the best intellectual property, characters, and film franchises on earth. So to own that in perpetuity would actually lower Apple's cost."
 
I don’t see an Apple purchase of Disney easily being approved in the immediate regulatory environment. Apple is also a very acquisition shy company, when it comes to major company purchases. I also think the current economic environment makes mega deals less likely to happen right now.
 

I don’t see an Apple purchase of Disney easily being approved in the immediate regulatory environment. Apple is also a very acquisition shy company, when it comes to major company purchases. I also think the current economic environment makes mega deals less likely to happen right now.
If the stock price gets very much lower, it can easily happen. It almost did in 1984 and 2004.
 
Per DL Paris, I think that article backs up my own thoughts regarding the suspension of AP sales. Just as in WDW, the money is flowing to well into the parks so they suspended the program. Let customers keep paying per day at top dollar and then restructure a program that will make them more money.
 
I don’t see an Apple purchase of Disney easily being approved in the immediate regulatory environment. Apple is also a very acquisition shy company, when it comes to major company purchases. I also think the current economic environment makes mega deals less likely to happen right now.
For a "normal" company the current environment would prevent a big purchase with high interest rates and constricting money supply, not to mention the banking issues. But Apple is not a normal company, I haven't looked lately, but I think their cash on hand would cover the full purchase of Dis with a healthy premium. Heck, it may even be a safer place for their cash than keeping it in a bank. LOL

That being said, I don't think Apple wants to be in the theme park business, so they would offload that (the one growing cash cow of the business). That leaves them with low margin streaming, the hit and miss movie division, and the declining linear business (including ESPN). Doesn't sound like something Apple would like given their love of high margin study and growing businesses.
 
For a "normal" company the current environment would prevent a big purchase with high interest rates and constricting money supply, not to mention the banking issues. But Apple is not a normal company, I haven't looked lately, but I think their cash on hand would cover the full purchase of Dis with a healthy premium. Heck, it may even be a safer place for their cash than keeping it in a bank. LOL

That being said, I don't think Apple wants to be in the theme park business, so they would offload that (the one growing cash cow of the business). That leaves them with low margin streaming, the hit and miss movie division, and the declining linear business (including ESPN). Doesn't sound like something Apple would like given their love of high margin study and growing businesses.
https://www.apple.com/newsroom/pdfs/FY23_Q1_Consolidated_Financial_Statements.pdf

AAPL has about $50 billion in cash and marketable securities. And DIS' market cap is about $180 billion, so yes AAPL would need to sell some assets afterward. No matter what, it would be the end of DIS. If the share price were up around $150 or so, it wouldn't be an issue.
 
https://www.apple.com/newsroom/pdfs/FY23_Q1_Consolidated_Financial_Statements.pdf

AAPL has about $50 billion in cash and marketable securities. And DIS' market cap is about $180 billion, so yes AAPL would need to sell some assets afterward. No matter what, it would be the end of DIS. If the share price were up around $150 or so, it wouldn't be an issue.
Thanks for looking that up. I must have glanced at total current assets which is close to $150B.

Not that I think it will ever happend but I would assume it would be an all stock deal anyway so no check needed.
 
Thanks for looking that up. I must have glanced at total current assets which is close to $150B.

Not that I think it will ever happend but I would assume it would be an all stock deal anyway so no check needed.
If the stock price doesn't improve, it WILL happen. I just ran the numbers on DIS from early 2015 to today. That's eight (8) years. The SAME price. Meanwhile, DOW 2x, S&P 2X, NASDAQ 2 1/2X over the same period.
 
I don't think the Apple thing makes any sense at all, and only is proffered because people keep wondering what Apple will do with the giant pile of cash the C-suite officers go swimming in on Friday afternoons.

But, in a hypothetical world in which it might make sense:
I don't think Apple wants to be in the theme park business, so they would offload that (the one growing cash cow of the business). That leaves them with low margin streaming, the hit and miss movie division, and the declining linear business (including ESPN).
The parent company would presumably retain the rights to all of the IP, and so would insist on some sort of licensing agreement between the (now-separate) "parks & resorts" company and the parent. That might make this a vaguely more interesting thing.

But, I still don't think it makes any sense. Apple has been extremely good at staying in its lane: It's a high-end hardware manufacturer, and the hardware drives the rest of the company's offerings. In particular, it has never wanted to be the "everyone everywhere" hardware manufacturer, and has been happy to cede that space to Samsung, Lenovo, and friends, all of whom operate their hardware businesses at lower margins.

Services for said hardware has been growing--they are now north of 900M people with some form of subscription service--but those services are at the behest of the hardware and exist to improve the hardware's value porposition, not the other way around. Who else would fork off their Classical music platform but Apple? It's a niche market, but a very high end one.

They've also gotten more invested in the components, and have put a relentless focus on quality there as well, taking higher margins over larger market share. Apple silicon is some really great stuff, and pivoting their hardware to it from Intel has been a game-changer for them in the laptop space. Yes, it's all based on ARM, but it's tailored specifically to Apple's platforms, and only those platforms. Apple is never going to sell those components to other manufacturers. They don't care about volume-at-any-cost.

Even their video streaming strategy is very Apple: a small stable of content, but with the expectation that every piece is a high-quality diamond. They don't need or want to be big. They want to create a walled garden to help them sell more high-margin hardware.

That's just Not Disney. Disney is also focused on "quality" but (until very recently) has not at all been willing to give up market share for it. The "fewer more profitable guests" idea has been very recent for the Parks, and they've been going the opposite direction in streaming with the ad-supported tier.
 
Even their video streaming strategy is very Apple: a small stable of content, but with the expectation that every piece is a high-quality diamond.
That is a good point and would just not be possible in the mass market world disney lives in. All of a sudden the Apple name becomes associated with the occasional box office bomb...not a good look for them.


giant pile of cash the C-suite officers go swimming in on Friday afternoons.
Just a big LOL !!!
 
The whole margin-vs-market-share thing is pretty deep in Apple's bones. There's a great Fake Steve Jobs blog-rant about it. As with anything FSJ, it is vaguely NSFW.

https://www.fakesteve.net/2010/08/we-do-not-care-about-android.html

The kicker is the last paragraph. (Remember, this was written in late 2010):
In three years, maybe less, Android will be way bigger than us. And we’ll have the better business.

The factual part of that prediction was dead on. The opinion part I think was absolutely true--and still is.

Apple is a boutique high-quality/high-margin hardware business that happened to grow to mass-market scale. Disney is a mass-market media company that happened to create some high-quality/high-margin businesses. But they start from completely different views of the world.
 
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/iger-firms-up-disney-strategy-ahead-of-shareholder-meeting-as-espn-hulu-futures-loom-153103911.html

Iger firms up Disney strategy ahead of shareholder meeting as ESPN, Hulu futures loom
Alexandra Canal
·Senior Reporter
Fri, March 31, 2023 at 10:31 AM CDT

Disney (DIS) CEO Bob Iger has enacted the first steps of his long-awaited turnaround strategy ahead of the media giant's annual shareholder meeting on April 3.

Iger, who stepped back into the CEO position in November, will likely face questions over the future of core assets like ESPN and Hulu, in addition to the company's restructuring efforts after the media giant began mass layoffs earlier this week.

The company reportedly eliminated its metaverse division, shrank the size of its ABC News executive team, and let go of Isaac Perlmutter, the chairman of Marvel Entertainment, as part of this first round of layoffs.

More job cuts will come in April and right before the summer to reach the company's previously announced 7,000-job target, Iger said in an internal memo obtained by Yahoo Finance.

In addition to the layoffs announced in February, Disney also disclosed plans to restructure the organization into three core business segments: Disney Entertainment, ESPN, and Disney Parks, Experiences and Products.

In his prepared remarks during the company's first quarter earnings report on Feb. 8, Iger said the new strategic organization "will result in a more cost-effective coordinated and streamlined approach to our operations, and we are committed to running our businesses more efficiently, especially in a challenging economic environment."

Amid that challenging environment, Iger has stressed a direct link between content decisions and financial performance — stressing his preference of differentiated content over general entertainment.

"Disney is facing some big decisions on its streaming services, and we wonder if the fates of ESPN and Hulu could be intertwined," Macquarie analyst Tim Nollen wrote in a note published on Wednesday.

Nollen suggested Disney might sell its majority stake in Hulu in order to fund ESPN's over-the-top network initiatives as Iger remains bullish on the sports behemoth.

Iger, who described ESPN as "a differentiator" for Disney, said the biggest challenge centered around monetization but that the ESPN brand was "very healthy."

Iger's ESPN comments very much differ what he told CNBC about Hulu in February, revealing "everything was on the table" in regards to Hulu’s future.

"I’ve talked about general entertainment being undifferentiated. I'm not going to speculate if we're a buyer or a seller of it," Iger said. "But I'm concerned about undifferentiated general entertainment. We're going to look at it very objectively."

Disney currently owns two-thirds of Hulu with Comcast’s Universal (CMCSA) controlling the rest.

Under the terms of the joint ownership agreement, Comcast could require Disney to buy out its stake in Hulu as early as January 2024 at a guaranteed minimum equity value of $27.5 billion (or about $9.2 billion for the 33% stake.)

Some analysts have suggested Disney could sell its majority stake to help offset streaming losses in an ultra-competitive landscape.

Citi analyst Jason Bazinet previously estimated Hulu's price tag could be valued anywhere from $19.8 billion to $27.5 billion.

"Selling Hulu for >$18bn could go a long way for the rest of Disney," Macquarie's Nollen wrote. "CEO Bob Iger has indicated ESPN remains a core business but needs to figure out a streaming future. Iger has sounded less sure on Hulu."

"Selling 2/3 of Hulu for a minimum of $18 billion equates to nearly 40% of Disney’s current debt, or it could be reinvested into the core Disney and ESPN," the analyst suggested.

Disney vs. DeSantis

Iger may also face questions from shareholders regarding Disney's long-standing special tax district after the new oversight board, appointed by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, accused the previous board (controlled by Disney) of passing a last minute agreement to essentially render them powerless.

According to the agreement, published by the Orlando Sentinel, Disney can veto any major changes to the parks to "ensure consistency with the overall design and theming." It also prohibits the board from using Disney's name or characters like Mickey Mouse without the corporation's approval first.

The agreement also invokes something called a "royal lives" clause, which says the declaration is valid until "21 years after the death of the last survivor of the descendants of King Charles III, king of England living as of the date of this declaration," if it is deemed to violate rules against perpetuity, according to the document.

"We’re going to have to deal with it and correct it,” board member Brian Aungst Jr. said. "It’s a subversion of the will of the voters and the Legislature and the governor. It completely circumvents the authority of this board to govern," according to the Orlando Sentinel.

The board has hired conservative D.C. law firm Cooper & Kirk to challenge the agreement. In a statement, Disney told the Associated Press "all agreements signed between Disney and the District were appropriate, and were discussed and approved in open, noticed public forums."

Disney and DeSantis did not immediately respond to Yahoo Finance's requests for comment.

Alexandra is a Senior Reporter at Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter @alliecanal8193 and email her at alexandra.canal@yahoofinance.com
 
APPL doesn't deal in large scale M & A. They deal in small (quiet) M & A deals that bolster their patents or talent for ongoing/future products or services. *IF* Apple wanted to get into any business that DIS is currently doing they would likely start from scratch and do it their own way.
 
https://www.apple.com/newsroom/pdfs/FY23_Q1_Consolidated_Financial_Statements.pdf

AAPL has about $50 billion in cash and marketable securities. And DIS' market cap is about $180 billion, so yes AAPL would need to sell some assets afterward. No matter what, it would be the end of DIS. If the share price were up around $150 or so, it wouldn't be an issue.
Apple has had the best (and maybe the only successful)stock buy-back plan. They planned to go to $0 cash a few years ago as it seems analysts like it when companies have $0 free cash on hand vs. $200b. I don't understand why, tbh.
 
https://www.forbes.com/sites/caroli...ts-record-26-billion-revenue/?sh=74ad2ebf3187

Disneyland Paris Reports Record $2.6 Billion Revenue​

Caroline Reid
Mar 28, 2023,02:09pm EDT

Disneyland Paris revealed it made a $51 million (€47 million) operating profit last year on revenue which hit a record $2.6 billion (€2.4 billion) as the lifting of pandemic restrictions and the opening of a new land themed to Marvel super heroes led to a surge of guests through its turnstiles.

With two parks and seven hotels, Disneyland Paris is a bellwether of Europe's tourism sector so its strong performance indicates that the dark clouds blown in by Covid-19 have finally begun to clear.

Its results are all the more remarkable as Disneyland Paris has rarely made a profit since its ornate iron gates swung open in 1992, when it was known as Euro Disney.

Disney's then-chief executive Michael Eisner selected France over Spain as the location for the resort despite concerns about the weather. In a recent interview for The Times of London he said, "Disney executives in Burbank, California - but also theme park and resort management in Anaheim and Orlando - thought the winter would kill the park and hotel business.

"I'm from New York City. Unless there is a nor'easter storm, people go out, and if there is a subway to the front door, no problem. Later I insisted we put fireplaces in the lobby of each Euro Disney hotel, but that's another story. Plus, Tokyo Disneyland opened in spring 1983 and proved successful from the start, so we had real-world experience with a Disney theme park where it snowed."

Disneyland Paris covers an area of 5,500 acres which is around a fifth the size of the French capital. This locks out competitors from the local area and enables Disney to carefully control the standards of the land surrounding its parks. In order to get such a large amount of land, the French government asked Disney to enter into a public-private partnership.

Accordingly, Disneyland Paris was listed on the Paris Euronext exchange with only 49% in Disney's hands. As Disney didn't own the company outright, it gave it loans rather than pouring money into it. The resort also funded its construction with $1.8 billion (€1.7 billion) of bank borrowings and the finance charges on it fueled losses.

Eisner says that "from day one it was a hit with the people. I think we had 10 million people in year one, more than the Louvre." However, he adds that "various factors - the extreme costs associated with going for excellence, for building a castle where castles were real; financing costs of a highly leveraged entity structure; lower per capita spending by visitors who use all their allotted vacation time etc. - hurt the bottom line for a decade or so."

The debt burden was lifted in 2012 when Disney cleared the bank loans and five years later it took complete ownership of Disneyland Paris in a $2.17 (€2) a share offer. It was de-listed from the Euronext which reduced the visibility into its finances as it is no longer obliged to release quarterly figures.

Disney's own filings only give general guidance on the results of individual parks and their financial performance isn't itemized. However, the company which operates its French outpost, Euro Disney Associés, still files financial statements. They show that its revenue rose from $968 million (€893 million) in 2021 to $2.6 billion in the year to 30 September 2022. It far outstripped the 57.8% increase in the company's $2.5 billion (€2.3 billion) costs leaving it with a $51 million operating profit. As the graph below shows, this was its highest in a decade and a marked improvement on its $627 million (€579 million) operating loss the previous year.

Revenue and operating profit/loss for Disneyland Paris 2013-2022

Revenue and operating profit/loss for Disneyland Paris 2013-22

The increase in costs was driven by the re-opening of the resort's theme parks in June 2021. This led to it taking on 9.4% more staff giving it a total of 15,450. Disneyland Paris is the largest private employer in the Paris region and its staff are known as Cast Members due to their role in a themed environment. Their total pay rose 30.8% last year to a record $825 million (€761 million) as can be seen in the graph below.

Total staff numbers and total pay at Disneyland Paris

Total staff numbers and total pay at Disneyland Paris

Caroline Reid using Flourish
The resort is also Europe's most-visited tourist attraction and, according to infrastructure analysts AECOM, it welcomed an estimated 15 million guests in 2019. As reported in the Daily Telegraph at the time, the resort was set for a happy ending thanks to significant growth in guest spending and increases to average daily room rates in its hotels.

Capitalizing on this, the company invested $216 million (€199 million) in 2018 and said that it was "driven by costs incurred for the development of the resort and improvement of the existing assets. They also include costs linked to the renovation of theme parks and hotels." As we reported in 2017, Disneyland Paris was due to open a game-changing attraction in 2024 but Covid-19 cast a dark spell on these plans.

According to the latest estimates, attendance fell to just 5.4 million in 2021 but it has skyrocketed since the resort re-opened from the pandemic. In a recent report, I revealed that five of the seven on-site hotels at Disneyland Paris alone generated $102.2 million of revenue in the 12 months to September 30 2021, even though they were shuttered for more than seven months of that time. Their financial statements show that this revenue rose a staggering 497% last year to hit a record $617.8 million (€570.2 million).

The positive trend is continuing into 2023 as Disney's chief financial officer Christine McCarthy revealed last month. Announcing Disney's results for the three months to December 31, 2022, McCarthy said that "in this quarter, we had very strong performance, especially year-over-year from Disneyland Paris." Disney's earnings release noted that attendance and occupancy rose during the quarter whilst guests spent more money due to "an increase in average ticket prices and higher average daily hotel room rates."

Weak currencies coupled with ticket price increases have put Disney's parks in the United States out of reach for many European travelers. Disneyland Paris has been the beneficiary of this and made the most of it by opening new attractions. Last month McCarthy added that "at Disneyland Paris, we remain pleased with the positive results we're seeing from the substantial investments we've made there."

The resort celebrated its thirtieth anniversary in April last year with the debut of the first drone show in a Disney park and followed it up three months later by swinging the doors open to a land themed to the hugely-popular Marvel super hero movies.

The glitzy opening ceremony was attended by Hollywood A-lister Brie Larson who plays the super powered Captain Marvel on the silver screen and in a roller-coaster which is exclusive to Paris. Another ride uses motion-sensing cameras to make it seem like guests are firing webs from their wrists into a 3D screen alongside Spider-Man. Disneyland Paris isn't stopping there.

The Marvel land is the first stage in a multi-billion expansion which we revealed in the Express newspaper in 2017. The Euro Disney Associés financial statements show that $410 million (€378 million) of assets were under construction in 2022 and the bulk of it relates to a land themed to the hit animated film Frozen which will open over the coming years. It was due to be followed by another land set in the world of Star Wars but Disneyland Paris' president Natacha Rafalski recently cast doubt on that. She told the France Info television network that Disneyland Paris is "still working on the third theme. We will make announcements about this when we are ready."

It is rumoured that the third land could instead be themed to the Avatar franchise following the success of the second film in the series which recently became the third highest-grossing movie in history with total takings of $2.3 billion according to industry analyst Box Office Mojo. Pandora - The World of Avatar is one of the most popular lands at Walt Disney DIS +1.3% World in Orlando so it could be just the magic touch that Disneyland Paris needs to remain profitable.

Soon after Bob Iger began his second run as Disney's chief executive in November last year, he made it a priority to make the US parks more accessible. Since then, he has boosted the number of lower-priced tickets to Disneyland in California, scrapped parking fees at Walt Disney World hotels and removed restrictions for passholders after 2pm. There could be more to come.

Earlier this month, Iger said at the Morgan Stanley MS -0.2% media conference "I think that in our zeal to grow profits, we may have been a little bit too aggressive about some of our pricing. And I think there is a way to continue to grow our business but be smarter about how we price so that we maintain that brand value of accessibility." Lowering ticket prices to Disney's US parks could increase the competition for Disneyland Paris and it isn't the only challenge which could be on the horizon.

Disneyland Paris reported in 2016 that 32% of its guests arrived by plane or train as there is a direct line from the resort to the UK which is one of its biggest markets after France. However, the direct service will be suspended in June to ease bottlenecks in stations caused by the post-Brexit need to stamp passengers' passports when they cross the border. A new Entry/Exit System, known as the EES EES -0.4%, is due to replace the checks but the technology has been delayed several times and is now due to be introduced at the end of the year.

If this inconvenience tempts UK travelers to look at Disney's US parks again just as benefits to ticket-holders are increasing, Disneyland Paris could lose lucrative business. As Brits have to travel further to Disneyland Paris than many of their European counterparts, they often stay longer to make the most of it. This increases revenue and thereby profit for Disneyland Paris so any steps which reduce its appeal to the UK market mean that staying in the black might not be a walk in the park.
Still waiting for this post covid demand to wane... theme parks have been unbelievably resilient.

If all goes to plan I will be in Disneyland Paris in August. It will be our 1st time there.
 
https://www.fool.com/investing/2023/04/01/why-disneys-decision-to-bring-back-its-dividend-th/


Why Disney's Decision to Bring Back Its Dividend This Year is a Big Deal​


By Matthew DiLallo – Apr 1, 2023 at 3:40AM

Key Points​

Disney plans to bring back its dividend later this year.

While it will be a modest payout, the company intends to grow it over time.

That rising dividend payment could help drive returns in the coming years.

Companies that pay dividends outperform their stingier peers.

Disney (DIS 2.07%) recently brought back a familiar friend as longtime CEO Bob Iger came out of retirement and returned to his former role. He plans to do something similar for shareholders by reinstating a dividend later this year. That's a big deal, even for investors who don't really care about collecting dividend income.

Here's why Disney's decision to bring back the dividend is a potential catalyst investors won't want to overlook.

The details on Disney's dividend

Like many companies, Disney had to suspend its dividend during the pandemic to conserve cash due to its impact on its business. While many of those companies have since resumed paying dividends, Disney kept its payout on ice while working through the pandemic's lingering impact and making heavy investments in streaming. However, that's about to change.

In his first quarterly conference call since returning to the company, Iger stated:

Now that the pandemic's impacts to our business are largely behind us, we intend to ask the board to approve the reinstatement of a dividend by the end of the calendar year. Our cost-cutting initiatives will make this possible. And while initially, it will be a modest dividend, we hope to build upon it over time.

CFO Christine McCarthy provided more commentary on the future payout later on the call. She stated: "given our recovery from the pandemic, strong balance sheet, and commitment to cost cutting, we believe we'll be on track to declare a modest dividend by the end of this calendar year. The amount will likely be a small fraction of our pre-COVID dividend with the intention to increase it over time as our earnings power grows."

Why Disney's dividend is a big deal

Disney's future dividend might underwhelm income-focused investors. Iger and McCarthy said it would be a modest payout, with the CFO suggesting it would be a fraction of its prior level (Disney made semi-annual dividend payments of $0.88 per share or $1.76 per year). As such, Disney will likely offer an unappealing dividend yield (for perspective, a fully reinstated rate would yield 1.8% at the current stock price versus 1.7% for the S&P 500).

However, the size of the dividend doesn't matter. What matters is that Disney is initiating a payment that it intends to grow. That's because the data shows that dividend initiators and growers have historically delivered superior returns:


Dividend statusAverage annual total return
Dividend Growers & Initiators10.2%
Dividend Payers9.2%
Equal-Weight S&P 500 Index7.7%
No Change in Dividend Policy6.6%
Dividend Cutters & Eliminators4%
Dividend Non-Payers-0.6%

Data source: Ned Davis Research and Hartford Funds. NOTE: Returns data from 1973 to 2022.

Before the pandemic, Disney was a dividend growth stock. It steadily increased its payout during Bob Iger's term as CEO. Unsurprisingly, its stock outperformed:


A slide showing Disney's performance when it paid a dividend during Iger's tenure.

Image source: Disney Investor Relations Presentation.

However, since announcing the suspension of its dividend in May 2020, Disney's stock has woefully underperformed the market. Overall, shares have declined by about 4% (a negative 1.5% average annual total return) against a more than 45% total return for the S&P 500 (13.7% annualized).

That's not to say Disney will magically start outperforming once it reinstates the dividend. However, history suggests that companies that grow their payouts (because their earnings are rising to support a higher payment level) tend to outperform dividend cutters, non-payers, and non-growers. In Disney's case, it aims to pay a growing dividend supported, as McCarthy notes, "as our earnings power grows." That combination of earnings and dividend growth could give Disney's stock the power to outperform over the longer term.

An important driver of total returns

Disney had to suspend its dividend during the pandemic to conserve cash. However, the company's returns have significantly lagged behind the broader market since then, which isn't surprising since that's often the case for non-dividend-paying stocks.


That's why the company's revelation that it plans to bring back the shareholder payout later this year is such a big deal. Companies that pay a growing dividend have historically outperformed (as Disney showcased during Iger's tenure). The company's dividend resumption is therefore a potentially significant catalyst that investors won't want to overloo
 












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