DIS Shareholders and Stock Info ONLY

https://deadline.com/2023/12/amc-en...rs-debt-movie-theaters-box-office-1235662877/

AMC Entertainment Completes $350M Equity Offering And Lowers Debt By $62M With Lean Times At Box Office Ahead
By Dade Hayes - Business Editor
December 11, 2023 - 3:19pm PST

Leading movie theater operator AMC Entertainment has wrapped a $350 million at-the-market equity offering and reduced its debt by $62 million.

The transaction was announced after the close of trading Monday. AMC had announced the equity offering in November.

AMC said it raised $350 million of new equity capital, before commissions and fees, through the sale of about 48 million shares, at an average price of about $7.29 per share.

Exhibitors are facing a difficult stretch over the next few months due to a squeeze on the supply of studio films. Confronting the dual strikes by writers and actors, studios pushed a number of 2023 and early 2024 releases to later dates given production and promotion challenges. Theaters, though, depend on event titles and are heading toward a January period with only a handful of wide releases. Unlike past Christmases, when franchise titles like Avatar: The Way of Water drove significant box office, this year’s late-December slate has mainly Wonka and the Aquaman sequel as audience draws.

“Successfully raising an additional $350 million of equity capital and reducing debt by more than $62 million in a single month underscores our continued commitment to strengthen our balance sheet by bolstering liquidity and methodically reducing debt levels,” CEO Adam Aron said.

In 2023 to date, Aron said, AMC has raised $865 million of gross equity capital. It has also lowered liabilities by approximately $440 million by reducing our corporate borrowings by about $350 million and repaying more than $90 million of Covid-related deferred rent liabilities.

“Through methodically fortifying our financial position as we progress along our recovery trajectory, we ensure our ability to manage through industry challenges, including the ongoing impact of the Hollywood strikes earlier this year, and position AMC to thrive in the future as we deliver value to our shareholders,” Aron added.
 
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https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/com...r-to-sell-or-fix-her-media-empire/ar-AA1llVL6

Redstone’s Predicament: Whether to Sell or Fix Her Media Empire
by Jessica Toonkel
Updated Dec. 11, 2023 - 7:13 pm EST

Shari Redstone has a decision to make: fight or flight.

The media mogul, who controls Paramount Global through her family holding company National Amusements, is considering whether to sell the company or keep it and find a way to change its fortunes.

In recent weeks, Redstone has met with Skydance Media Chief Executive David Ellison and Activision CEO Bobby Kotick about a potential sale, according to people familiar with those talks.

Meanwhile, Paramount is bracing for further cost cuts. The company has discussed laying off more than 1,000 workers early next year, people with knowledge of the discussions said.

A weaker-than-expected ad-sales market has caused the company to more aggressively cut costs to meet its promise to investors that it would deliver positive earnings growth in 2024. The company has been paring down its head count since earlier this year.

Plus, the company’s carriage deals with two of the biggest cable companies in the country are set to expire in the coming months.

That Redstone is discussing a sale of National Amusements after battling with her late father Sumner Redstone, his girlfriends and senior company executives for control, is a sign of the difficult choices media executives are confronting.

Paramount’s once-lucrative cable channels are in structural decline; Hollywood is still recovering from monthslong actor and writers strikes that froze productions; and its flagship Paramount+ streaming business continues to burn cash.

Redstone wants to devote time to non-media pursuits. She has become more involved in organizations that oppose antisemitism since Hamas’s Oct. 7 attacks on Israel, according to people familiar with the situation. She also recently built a house in the Caribbean, where she hopes to spend more time with her family.

She had hoped Paramount’s stock would rebound before entertaining offers. Paramount’s shares were down almost 12% this year to $15 a share Thursday, before a report from newsletter Puck that Skydance was discussing buying National Amusements. The stock closed on Monday at $16.24 per share.

Many of the potential buyers for Paramount, which owns cable networks such as Nickelodeon and BET and broadcast network CBS, are primarily interested in its movie studio. That is a nonstarter for Redstone, who is adamant that Paramount Pictures, the crown jewel of the company and an asset her father insisted on keeping, not be sold on its own.

Adding to the urgency are coming distribution deals for networks such as MTV and Nickelodeon with Comcast and Charter. Paramount’s deal with Comcast expires at the end of this month, while its Charter agreement is set to end this spring, according to some of the people familiar with the situation. Renewing those deals is critical for Paramount to continue to have its TV networks beamed into households across the U.S.

Earlier this year, Disney’s networks, which include ABC and ESPN, went dark for more than a week as a result of a dispute with Charter over their carriage deal. In the end, Charter agreed to pay Disney more for its TV channels in return for being able to provide its streaming services to its cable subscribers. As part of that negotiation, Charter dropped eight Disney networks, including Freeform.

Entertaining suitors

Buyers that have considered a play for National Amusements’ assets include billionaires, studios, streamers and private-equity companies.

Kotick, who is set to step down as CEO of Activision as part of Microsoft’s acquisition of the company at the end of the year, met with Redstone in recent weeks about potentially buying National Amusements, said people familiar with the situation. Discussions haven’t progressed.

Netflix executives have broached the idea of a potential deal for some assets National Amusements controls as recently as this year, though conversations have cooled as the streamer focuses on its efforts to limit password sharing, according to people familiar with the situation. The streamer was particularly interested in Paramount’s movie studio, Paramount Pictures, home to hits such as “Mission Impossible,” and “Top Gun,” some of the people said.

SkyDance’s Ellison, with its investor RedBird Capital, also expressed interest in Paramount’s movie studio in recent weeks and is open to a deal for all of National Amusements to get it, those people said. Skydance and Paramount have worked together on multiple projects including “Top Gun: Maverick,” as well as other hits.

Puck first reported that Skydance and RedBird were discussing acquiring National Amusements.

Then there is Warner Bros. Discovery, whose chief executive David Zaslav has weighed the pros and cons of making a run at Paramount, according to people familiar with his thinking. In addition to its studio, Paramount owns CBS, which carries National Football League games and longtime hits with high ratings such as “NCIS.”

Both are appealing to Warner and there could be billions in savings by integrating the companies, but adding more cable networks to the company’s own large stable is a turnoff. Plus, a deal would likely involve adding debt to the company’s already significant load after its merger with Discovery.

Zaslav, who has dinner with Redstone a few times a year, so far hasn’t pursued a deal. The Warner CEO said on a November earnings call that the company could be on the hunt for deals soon.

“We could be really opportunistic over the next 12 to 24 months,” Zaslav said.

Future ready

Redstone has tried to keep National Amusements’ finances in check as she plots its future.

Merchant bank BDT & MSD, founded by former Goldman Sachs banker Byron Trott, took a $125 million preferred-equity investment in National Amusements in May to give the company additional liquidity after Paramount cut its dividend for the first time in years, the Journal reported. Dividends are a key source of income for the Redstones.

National Amusements paid down 20% of the roughly $250 million outstanding loan to its creditors in September, the Journal reported. The company is obligated to pay down another 15% in March.

Redstone and Paramount CEO Bob Bakish have so far been keen to only sell noncore assets and keep as much of the company intact as possible. Paramount sold Simon & Schuster earlier this year, and declined offers for other assets, including a $3 billion offer for Showtime last year.

The entertainment company this summer dropped plans to sell a majority stake in BET Media Group, which includes the VH1 and BET cable networks and BET+ streaming service. It had received some offers, but none that in its view would meaningfully deleverage Paramount.

The media firm has also brushed off requests by some investors to spin off its local broadcast stations, according to other people familiar with the situation.

Paramount has focused on partnerships and bundling its Paramount+ streaming service with rivals. The ad-supported version of Paramount+ is available at no cost to members of Walmart’s $98-a-year membership program, to some Verizon customers through a bundle with Netflix, and to Delta SkyMiles members on flights. The company has had discussions with Apple about bundling with its Apple TV+ streaming service, as the Journal previously reported.

Joe Flint contributed to this article.
Write to Jessica Toonkel at jessica.toonkel@wsj.com
 
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https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...ge-india-operations/articleshow/105916032.cms

RIL, Disney ready term sheet to merge India operations

By Arijit Barman & Javed Farooqui, ET Bureau
Last Updated: Dec 12, 2023, 07:16:07 AM IST

Mumbai: Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) and Walt Disney Co. are finalising details of a non-binding term sheet to move ahead with plans to merge their India media and entertainment operations, said executives involved in the matter. The deal is likely to give the Mukesh Ambani-led group a controlling stake in what will become the country’s largest media and entertainment business if the deal goes through.

The plan, as of now, is to create a step-down subsidiary of RIL’s Viacom18, which will become the country’s largest media and entertainment business if the deal goes through.

The plan, as of now, is to create a step-down subsidiary of RIL’s Viacom18, which will absorb Star India via a stock swap, said the people cited above. Reliance is pitching to be the larger shareholder with at least 51% in the merged company with Disney owning the residual 49%, they said. Both businesses are being treated as similar-sized ones, so RIL is likely to pay cash for the controlling stake.

The two sides are also negotiating a business plan to inject cash as immediate capital investment, expected to be $1-1.5 billion. The final shareholding structure of the entity will get crystallised and its value established based on the cash infusion from each of the parties.

The board is expected to have equal representation from Reliance and Disney of at least two directors each. Uday Shankar-led Bodhi Tree, the second largest shareholder in Viacom18 after Reliance with a 15.97% stake, is likely to get a seat. A minimum of two independent directors are being considered. This may change in the weeks ahead, said the people cited above.

Those involved in the talks from the US company include Justin Warbrooke, CFO, direct-to-consumer business, and international head of business operations, and Kevin Mayer, a former Disney executive brought back in July by chief executive Bob Iger as an adviser to help him navigate the company’s legacy television business and the ESPN sports network. Another participant is K Madhavan, Disney’s India head, along with The Raine Group, an advisory, said the people cited above. Warbrooke was in India recently.

Manoj Modi, Ambani’s key adviser, is fronting negotiations for RIL, with the group’s M&A team.

The two sides are likely to have key meetings before signing the term sheet, following which both are expected to go for an accelerated timeline to announce the merger, possibly as early as end-January, said the people cited above.

After the term sheet is decided and confirmatory due diligence is conducted, the valuation exercise will officially begin with independent valuers.

“It’s a merger not an acquisition but not with equal shareholding,” said one of the persons cited above. “Both sides will put equity instead of one buying the other out for cash. Even the junior shareholder will have rights.”

Reliance Industries spokesperson did not respond to ET's detailed questionnaire sent on Monday afternoon till press time. Walt Disney India declined to comment.

The US company is also expected to provide the joint venture company a five-year licence for exclusive subscription video on demand (SVOD) content for Disney+ originals and its library content.

A five-year lock-in, except in the case of an IPO of the merged company, is also expected to be agreed upon. Distribution channels and Jio Platforms are also to be made available to the joint venture on mutually agreed terms. A list of competitors with which any engagement is to be barred will be drawn up.

Upon signing the term sheet, there is likely to be a 45-60 day exclusivity that can be mutually extended.

Walt Disney CEO Iger said on an earnings call in November that the company was “considering options” but that it would like to stay on in India and try and “strengthen our hand, improve the bottom line”.

As per US media sector analysts at Barclays, one way to manage Disney’s cost base without standalone cuts could be to extract synergies out of transactions with other companies.

This could be “a significant immediate opportunity in the company’s largest international segment, Star India. This business appears to be running at breakeven ebitda on ~$2 billion of annual revenues because of factors unique to the market”, said Kannan Venkateshwar and Siyuan Huang in their recent report. “The company would benefit significantly if it is able to combine Star with Reliance Jio’s local media business... This could result in significant cost and revenue synergies and could transform the value of this business longer term.”

Viacom18, which also has TV18 and Paramount as shareholders, saw its FY23 net profit slump 98% to Rs 11 crore while revenue from operations rose 10% to Rs 4,554 crore. The company's expenses increased 33% to Rs 4,586 crore.

Walt Disney-owned Star India's consolidated net profit for FY23 dropped 31% to Rs 1,272 crore from Rs 1,834 crore in the previous fiscal year, according to its filing with the Registrar of Companies (RoC). While the company's operating revenue from the TV and digital businesses rose 6% to Rs 19,857 crore, total income increased 9% to Rs 20,699 crore, making it the largest traditional media and entertainment company in the country by revenue.

Novi Digital Entertainment, the subsidiary that owns Disney+ Hotstar, has seen its net loss more than double to Rs 748 crore, while revenue rose 35% to Rs 4,341 crore. Novi is in the process of merging with its parent company, Star, which holds a 78.07% stake in it.
 
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/com...r-to-sell-or-fix-her-media-empire/ar-AA1llVL6

Redstone’s Predicament: Whether to Sell or Fix Her Media Empire
by Jessica Toonkel
Updated Dec. 11, 2023 - 7:13 pm EST

Shari Redstone has a decision to make: fight or flight.

The media mogul, who controls Paramount Global through her family holding company National Amusements, is considering whether to sell the company or keep it and find a way to change its fortunes.

In recent weeks, Redstone has met with Skydance Media Chief Executive David Ellison and Activision CEO Bobby Kotick about a potential sale, according to people familiar with those talks.

Meanwhile, Paramount is bracing for further cost cuts. The company has discussed laying off more than 1,000 workers early next year, people with knowledge of the discussions said.

A weaker-than-expected ad-sales market has caused the company to more aggressively cut costs to meet its promise to investors that it would deliver positive earnings growth in 2024. The company has been paring down its head count since earlier this year.

Plus, the company’s carriage deals with two of the biggest cable companies in the country are set to expire in the coming months.

That Redstone is discussing a sale of National Amusements after battling with her late father Sumner Redstone, his girlfriends and senior company executives for control, is a sign of the difficult choices media executives are confronting.

Paramount’s once-lucrative cable channels are in structural decline; Hollywood is still recovering from monthslong actor and writers strikes that froze productions; and its flagship Paramount+ streaming business continues to burn cash.

Redstone wants to devote time to non-media pursuits. She has become more involved in organizations that oppose antisemitism since Hamas’s Oct. 7 attacks on Israel, according to people familiar with the situation. She also recently built a house in the Caribbean, where she hopes to spend more time with her family.

She had hoped Paramount’s stock would rebound before entertaining offers. Paramount’s shares were down almost 12% this year to $15 a share Thursday, before a report from newsletter Puck that Skydance was discussing buying National Amusements. The stock closed on Monday at $16.24 per share.

Many of the potential buyers for Paramount, which owns cable networks such as Nickelodeon and BET and broadcast network CBS, are primarily interested in its movie studio. That is a nonstarter for Redstone, who is adamant that Paramount Pictures, the crown jewel of the company and an asset her father insisted on keeping, not be sold on its own.

Adding to the urgency are coming distribution deals for networks such as MTV and Nickelodeon with Comcast and Charter. Paramount’s deal with Comcast expires at the end of this month, while its Charter agreement is set to end this spring, according to some of the people familiar with the situation. Renewing those deals is critical for Paramount to continue to have its TV networks beamed into households across the U.S.

Earlier this year, Disney’s networks, which include ABC and ESPN, went dark for more than a week as a result of a dispute with Charter over their carriage deal. In the end, Charter agreed to pay Disney more for its TV channels in return for being able to provide its streaming services to its cable subscribers. As part of that negotiation, Charter dropped eight Disney networks, including Freeform.

Entertaining suitors

Buyers that have considered a play for National Amusements’ assets include billionaires, studios, streamers and private-equity companies.

Kotick, who is set to step down as CEO of Activision as part of Microsoft’s acquisition of the company at the end of the year, met with Redstone in recent weeks about potentially buying National Amusements, said people familiar with the situation. Discussions haven’t progressed.

Netflix executives have broached the idea of a potential deal for some assets National Amusements controls as recently as this year, though conversations have cooled as the streamer focuses on its efforts to limit password sharing, according to people familiar with the situation. The streamer was particularly interested in Paramount’s movie studio, Paramount Pictures, home to hits such as “Mission Impossible,” and “Top Gun,” some of the people said.

SkyDance’s Ellison, with its investor RedBird Capital, also expressed interest in Paramount’s movie studio in recent weeks and is open to a deal for all of National Amusements to get it, those people said. Skydance and Paramount have worked together on multiple projects including “Top Gun: Maverick,” as well as other hits.

Puck first reported that Skydance and RedBird were discussing acquiring National Amusements.

Then there is Warner Bros. Discovery, whose chief executive David Zaslav has weighed the pros and cons of making a run at Paramount, according to people familiar with his thinking. In addition to its studio, Paramount owns CBS, which carries National Football League games and longtime hits with high ratings such as “NCIS.”

Both are appealing to Warner and there could be billions in savings by integrating the companies, but adding more cable networks to the company’s own large stable is a turnoff. Plus, a deal would likely involve adding debt to the company’s already significant load after its merger with Discovery.

Zaslav, who has dinner with Redstone a few times a year, so far hasn’t pursued a deal. The Warner CEO said on a November earnings call that the company could be on the hunt for deals soon.

“We could be really opportunistic over the next 12 to 24 months,” Zaslav said.

Future ready

Redstone has tried to keep National Amusements’ finances in check as she plots its future.

Merchant bank BDT & MSD, founded by former Goldman Sachs banker Byron Trott, took a $125 million preferred-equity investment in National Amusements in May to give the company additional liquidity after Paramount cut its dividend for the first time in years, the Journal reported. Dividends are a key source of income for the Redstones.

National Amusements paid down 20% of the roughly $250 million outstanding loan to its creditors in September, the Journal reported. The company is obligated to pay down another 15% in March.

Redstone and Paramount CEO Bob Bakish have so far been keen to only sell noncore assets and keep as much of the company intact as possible. Paramount sold Simon & Schuster earlier this year, and declined offers for other assets, including a $3 billion offer for Showtime last year.

The entertainment company this summer dropped plans to sell a majority stake in BET Media Group, which includes the VH1 and BET cable networks and BET+ streaming service. It had received some offers, but none that in its view would meaningfully deleverage Paramount.

The media firm has also brushed off requests by some investors to spin off its local broadcast stations, according to other people familiar with the situation.

Paramount has focused on partnerships and bundling its Paramount+ streaming service with rivals. The ad-supported version of Paramount+ is available at no cost to members of Walmart’s $98-a-year membership program, to some Verizon customers through a bundle with Netflix, and to Delta SkyMiles members on flights. The company has had discussions with Apple about bundling with its Apple TV+ streaming service, as the Journal previously reported.

Joe Flint contributed to this article.
Write to Jessica Toonkel at jessica.toonkel@wsj.com
Then maybe Kotick should take over Paramount Global since he's leaving Activision.

Big time debt load, "they" say.

https://deadline.com/2023/12/paramount-2024-credit-rating-studio-nfl-streaming-1235653226/

Paramount Has Some Big Checks To Write In 2024, With Its Credit Rating Still Under Scrutiny, S&P Global Analyst Says: “They Have To Show A Path”

By Dade Hayes - Business Editor
December 5, 2023 - 2:13pm PST

Paramount Global will start 2024 with some big bills to pay and questions swirling about its creditworthiness, in the view of a veteran S&P Global analyst.

Naveen Sarma, S&P’s Managing Director and Sector Lead for the U.S. Media and Telecom Sectors, was one of four analysts from the firm taking part in a panel discussion Tuesday at the UBS Global Media and Communications Conference. In addition to Paramount, the session touched on major challenges faced by Dish Networks, Altice USA and the broader media sector as economic models continue to shift.

Earlier this year, Sarma noted, Paramount’s credit rating was lowered from BBB to BBB-, which is the “bottom end of what we would call investment grade.” The primary motivation for the move was weaker cash flows resulting from the transition from linear TV to streaming. If the rating were to fall further, he said, “that could impact investors’ ability to hold” the company’s debt in their portfolios.

In addition to potential erosion in the institutional investor base, the company’s access to “commercial paper” (institutional loans at reasonable interest rates) could be compromised. Commercial debt is a crucial tool used by media businesses producing pricey films and TV series, whose budgets can reach into the hundreds of millions long before their release benefits the balance sheet. Plus, Paramount is going to owe $2 billion to the NFL for media rights in multiple installments over the span of a year, Sarma noted. “They don’t necessarily have the cash on the balance sheet to be able to make that payment,” he said.

(In a statement to Deadline following the panel discussion, an S&P Global rep clarified that Paramount had $1.8 billion of cash as of September 30. The company will soon have more than $3 billion on a pro forma basis due to the sale of book publishing division Simon & Schuster in the fourth quarter, in addition to access to borrowing capacity as needed.)

“A lot of other companies have given guidance on when they think break-even is” in their streaming businesses, Sarma said. Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery, he believes, “will be able to grow EBITDA. .. It isn’t as clear-cut with Paramount. Up until a couple quarters ago, we weren’t sure when that break-even point.”

Along with streaming uncertainty, the analyst continued, “the rest of their business is facing a lot more pressures because of the size and scale of that business relative to their peers. So, cash flow for that company was negative. For other companies, they were generating cash flow. For Paramount, they weren’t. So, when we’re going to look at this company next year and make an assessment, one of the things that’s clear is, they’ve got to start generating free cash flow. They also have to show a path toward break-even with their streaming business.”

The larger sector is susceptible to many of the pressures faced by Paramount.

“The media business isn’t as good a business as it was, from a credit standpoint, 10 years ago,” Sarma said. “Back then, you had advertising on linear television. That’s moving off of linear television and onto other platforms, some of which are owned by big media companies. But there’s also leakage to other companies. The affiliate fee revenue stream, which has really held up all of media .. is in decline. And it’s really not clear to any of us whether streaming is as good a business. I’m not going to say it’s a bad business, but it’s certainly not going to be as good a business as the linear TV business. If you look at all that together, the media companies are going to have weaker cash flows than they have historically had, and that’s going to have a ratings implication from our standpoint.”
Those lowering of credit ratings are because those alleged "creditors" are jealous.
 

Then maybe Kotick should take over Paramount Global since he's leaving Activision.


Those lowering of credit ratings are because those alleged "creditors" are jealous.
Has Kotick got a pile of money like Ellison? I've not followed his career at all.

Oh, I think Shari's money troubles are quite real. The dross about "spending more time with her family" is so old it has coprolites scattered all over it. This business of live sports getting more expensive is gonna weed out a bunch of tv who used to make a living off it.
 
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https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/shari-redstone-faces-tough-choice-140000059.html

Shari Redstone Faces Tough Choice as Paramount Seems Ripe for Asset Sale, Break-Up | Analysis
by Lucas Manfredi
Tue, December 12, 2023 at 8:00 AM CST

Paramount may be up for sale. Or it may not be. But in the wake of new reports that the company is on the block, analysts and media experts seem convinced that the celebrated entertainment brand is likely to be sold off for parts to get the highest value — making it the latest victim of consolidation in Hollywood.

Shari Redstone, Paramount Global’s non-executive chair, is reportedly in talks to sell either the entire company or her controlling stake through her holding company, National Amusements Inc., to Skydance Media CEO David Ellison and RedBird Capital’s Gerry Cardinale. Skydance and Redbird have signed NDAs with Paramount to explore a possible acquisition, though any potential deal is still far off, according to numerous insiders and media reports.
Representatives for Paramount, National Amusements, Skydance Media and RedBird Capital declined to comment for this story.

It’s been a tough year for Paramount’s stock price, which is down 17.4% in the past year and 4.8% year to date, though deal speculation sent the stock up last week. The company faces a complex set of challenges: Advertising revenue tied to its linear businesses is in steep decline, including for CBS and cable channels like MTV and Nickelodeon; its streaming operation continues to operate at a loss, and has more ground to make up than its legacy media rivals’ platforms.

“You have a brand name and production-capacity studio that is in distress right now, that has breakup value,” Sanjay Sharma, a USC adjunct professor and former investment banker, told TheWrap. “Nobody wants the baggage outside of [its] production.” Sharma sees 20% to 30% upside to Paramount’s stock in the event of a potential breakup.

Lloyd Greif, CEO of the Los Angeles-based investment banking firm Greif & Co., agreed that a sale of Paramount’s parts is likely: “It’d be like a supermarket, with certain major media companies grabbing shopping carts and going down the aisle to pick what they want and to bid for certain pieces of it,” he said.

Parting with Paramount

Speculation that Redstone is looking to part ways with Paramount, which has been in the Redstone family since 1987 when National Amusements became majority owner of Viacom, began last month when the company filed a change-of-control and severance plan, also known as a golden parachute, for certain “global senior executives.”

“Golden parachutes certainly signal that there’s increasing thought being given internally in the boardroom at Paramount about divesting the business,” Greif explained. “You wouldn’t need a golden parachute if you were just selling assets… you only need a golden parachute if you sell the entire company.”

Less than a month later, Ellison and Cardinale reportedly expressed an interest in Paramount either through an acquisition of the whole company or National Amusements’ majority stake. Redstone owns roughly 10% of Paramount’s equity capital. National Amusements owns 77.3% of Paramount Global’s Class A (voting) common stock and 5.2% of its Class B common stock.

Selling the National Amusements stake to Skydance and RedBird could be a “pretty deft strategic move” that would be cheaper than buying the entire company and “certainly eliminates any antitrust risk,” Greif said.

“It’s a way to get the prize without paying for the prize,” he added. “You can now pull the levers and increase the value of your controlling stake by increasing the value of the business, and you’re also in a position to control your destiny without having to take the entire risk of buying the company.”

Though Skydance was only valued at more than $4 billion as of October 2022 — Greif argued that the co-producer of “Top Gun: Maverick,” “Mission: Impossible” and “Jack Reacher” has had the “midas touch” when it comes to accomplishments in filmed entertainment, television and sports.

Meanwhile, RedBird Capital is run by “savvy Wall Streeters” who are focused on sports, entertainment, telecommunications, media and technology, with $8.6 billion in assets under management and backing from Chinese tech company Tencent and the investment firm KKR (which is also notably an investor in Skydance).

“We think there’s a decent chance a deal is done as we think the Redstone Trust may be ready to move on from operations to monetization,” Wells Fargo analyst Steve Cahall wrote in a note to clients on Sunday. “But, there is significant timing risk and complexity to any potential transaction.”

Break it up

Paramount, which had a market capitalization of $10.72 billion as of Monday’s close, is much smaller than legacy media peers Comcast ($171.7 billion), Disney ($167.8 billion) and Warner Bros. Discovery ($27.87 billion). As of the third quarter of 2023, the company had $1.8 billion in cash on hand and long-term debt of $15.6 billion. National Amusements took a $125 million preferred equity investment in May from BDT & MSD Partners to give Paramount additional liquidity after cutting its dividend earlier this year.

Adding to the possible pressure to do a deal, the company is also gearing up to negotiate new distribution deals for its cable networks, with The Wall Street Journal reporting its deal with Comcast expires at the end of December, and its contract with Charter ends in the spring. The Journal adds that Paramount has discussed the possibility of laying off more than 1,000 workers early next year.

If Ellison and RedBird’s bid for National Amusements’ majority stake were to be successful, they could combine Skydance with Paramount’s existing studios, shut down Paramount+ and sell Pluto and most of the media conglomerate’s linear assets, Cahall said.

“We estimate $13.5 billion divestiture enterprise value, or around $10 billion” after taxes, Cahall estimated. He collectively valued Paramount’s remaining assets, including CBS Studios, Paramount Studios, and content creation from Taylor Sheridan, Nickelodeon and MTV, at $23 per share.

Citigroup analyst Jason Bazinet was even more bullish on the benefits of a break-up, estimating Paramount’s equity could be worth around $38 per share if the firm’s networks, production assets and Direct to Consumer (DTC) business were sold individually. The bank’s sum-of-the-parts analysis values Paramount at roughly $38.8 billion, with its cable networks at roughly $7.4 billion, its broadcasting business at roughly $12.1 billion, its production assets at roughly $18 billion and its DTC business at $6.8 billion.

Bazinet pegged scenarios in which Paramount continues to operate as currently configured or is fully acquired by a strategic buyer at 25% likelihood. Meanwhile, a partial asset sale scenario in which Paramount’s cable and broadcast network businesses were sold for cash at roughly $9.6 billion and $15.8 billion, respectively, was given 50%.

Barclays Capital analyst Kannar Venkateshwar believes that Paramount Studios and CBS could have significant value — especially in the hands of the right buyers — with the firm estimating that the studios’ business could be worth roughly $5.5 billion before considering any premium attributable to its franchises.

“Even if we use say $10-12 billion for CBS and $8.5 billion for Paramount, it would essentially account for 70-75% of the company’s value based on last week’s close [of $16.82 per share],” Venkateshwar wrote in a note to clients on Monday. “In theory, this could imply further upside if the company’s streaming and cable network businesses can be monetized separately.”

But others on Wall Street are skeptical about why Redstone would sell Paramount or National Amusements’ stake before exhausting other options.

“We suspect cost-cutting would be far more aggressive if Paramount were preparing to put itself up for sale,” LightShed Partners’ Rich Greenfield wrote in a Nov. 21 research note. “You would give up on your streaming ambitions and harvest cash before you got to the point of selling off NAI’s stake in Paramount to the highest bidder.”

Greenfield added that if Paramount was going the route of selling its studio assets, killing its streaming business and finding a private equity buyer for its linear TV assets, the company likely would have already shut down Paramount+ and transformed more than $1.5 billion in streaming losses into hundreds of millions in profits as a licensor “arms-dealer” to third-party platforms.

“This strategy would appear to be a way to create far more value before trying to auction off the company’s assets in pieces,” he said.

Paramount already sold publisher Simon & Schuster to investment firm KKR for $1.62 billion, and said it would sells its majority stake in Bellator to the Professional Fighters League for an undisclosed amount. It also began exploring a sale of its majority stake of BET in March — with suitors including Byron Allen, who offered $3.6 billion for the network, and Tyler Perry — but later reversed course. Redstone also turned down a $3 billion bid for Showtime, instead integrating the network into Paramount+.

The company’s direct to consumer division, which includes Paramount+ and Pluto TV, reported 63.4 million subscribers — which are dwarfed by competitors Netflix, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery — and a loss of $238 million in its third quarter. Looking ahead, Paramount anticipates that its full-year DTC losses in 2023 will be lower than in 2022, with the division’s losses in the fourth quarter of 2023 similar to the fourth quarter of 2022.

Though winding down Paramount+ would buy the company some time, Venkateshwar said it would not really solve any underlying structural challenges.

An alternative path would be selling its streaming assets, which would “eliminate the associated investment needs and help the balance sheet and cash flows heal a lot faster,” he said, but he noted such a deal would be complicated due to Paramount+’s reliance on sports. He added that it is unclear who would want the streaming business without the studio assets that anchor its content.

“Peacock and Apple may benefit more than most but Comcast and Apple may also have the choice of other potentially more-desirable assets such as WBD/Max,” Venkateshwar said.

Pluto, on the other hand, may draw “real demand from multiple buyers,” but Venkateshwar doesn’t think a sale of the asset would “move the needle enough from a balance sheet or earnings trajectory perspective to change the valuation framework materially.”

Shari’s Choice

It’s unknown at this point what Redstone will ultimately do with Paramount and National Amusements. The 69-year-old has not chosen a successor and remains on the board, but has been open about her current focus on educational initiatives around tolerance and antisemitism, especially since the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7. Her father, Sumner Redstone, ran the company, then called Viacom, until 2016, stepping down at age 92, and had expressed that he didn’t want to sell off the studio.

Ultimately it is her call whether to give up control of Paramount, four years after merging it with CBS in a bid to make Paramount bulky enough to withstand the pressures of the changed Hollywood landscape. According to the Journal, Redstone views selling off Paramount Pictures on its own as a nonstarter and previously brushed off requests to spin off the company’s local broadcast stations.

In addition to interest from Skydance and RedBird, Redstone has fielded interest from Netflix and Activision CEO Bobby Kotick about potential deals for Paramount, according to The Wall Street Journal. Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav has also considered the pros and cons of making a run at Paramount, according to the Journal, though doing so would likely add to WBD’s heavy debt load. Others who held conversations with Redstone about potential deals earlier this year include Amazon and Apple, according to The New York Times.

Amazon and Warner Bros. Discovery declined to comment, while representatives for Apple, Netflix and Kotick did not immediately return TheWrap’s request for comment.
 
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/shari-redstone-faces-tough-choice-140000059.html

Shari Redstone Faces Tough Choice as Paramount Seems Ripe for Asset Sale, Break-Up | Analysis
by Lucas Manfredi
Tue, December 12, 2023 at 8:00 AM CST

Paramount may be up for sale. Or it may not be. But in the wake of new reports that the company is on the block, analysts and media experts seem convinced that the celebrated entertainment brand is likely to be sold off for parts to get the highest value — making it the latest victim of consolidation in Hollywood.

Shari Redstone, Paramount Global’s non-executive chair, is reportedly in talks to sell either the entire company or her controlling stake through her holding company, National Amusements Inc., to Skydance Media CEO David Ellison and RedBird Capital’s Gerry Cardinale. Skydance and Redbird have signed NDAs with Paramount to explore a possible acquisition, though any potential deal is still far off, according to numerous insiders and media reports.
Representatives for Paramount, National Amusements, Skydance Media and RedBird Capital declined to comment for this story.

It’s been a tough year for Paramount’s stock price, which is down 17.4% in the past year and 4.8% year to date, though deal speculation sent the stock up last week. The company faces a complex set of challenges: Advertising revenue tied to its linear businesses is in steep decline, including for CBS and cable channels like MTV and Nickelodeon; its streaming operation continues to operate at a loss, and has more ground to make up than its legacy media rivals’ platforms.

“You have a brand name and production-capacity studio that is in distress right now, that has breakup value,” Sanjay Sharma, a USC adjunct professor and former investment banker, told TheWrap. “Nobody wants the baggage outside of [its] production.” Sharma sees 20% to 30% upside to Paramount’s stock in the event of a potential breakup.

Lloyd Greif, CEO of the Los Angeles-based investment banking firm Greif & Co., agreed that a sale of Paramount’s parts is likely: “It’d be like a supermarket, with certain major media companies grabbing shopping carts and going down the aisle to pick what they want and to bid for certain pieces of it,” he said.

Parting with Paramount

Speculation that Redstone is looking to part ways with Paramount, which has been in the Redstone family since 1987 when National Amusements became majority owner of Viacom, began last month when the company filed a change-of-control and severance plan, also known as a golden parachute, for certain “global senior executives.”

“Golden parachutes certainly signal that there’s increasing thought being given internally in the boardroom at Paramount about divesting the business,” Greif explained. “You wouldn’t need a golden parachute if you were just selling assets… you only need a golden parachute if you sell the entire company.”

Less than a month later, Ellison and Cardinale reportedly expressed an interest in Paramount either through an acquisition of the whole company or National Amusements’ majority stake. Redstone owns roughly 10% of Paramount’s equity capital. National Amusements owns 77.3% of Paramount Global’s Class A (voting) common stock and 5.2% of its Class B common stock.

Selling the National Amusements stake to Skydance and RedBird could be a “pretty deft strategic move” that would be cheaper than buying the entire company and “certainly eliminates any antitrust risk,” Greif said.

“It’s a way to get the prize without paying for the prize,” he added. “You can now pull the levers and increase the value of your controlling stake by increasing the value of the business, and you’re also in a position to control your destiny without having to take the entire risk of buying the company.”

Though Skydance was only valued at more than $4 billion as of October 2022 — Greif argued that the co-producer of “Top Gun: Maverick,” “Mission: Impossible” and “Jack Reacher” has had the “midas touch” when it comes to accomplishments in filmed entertainment, television and sports.

Meanwhile, RedBird Capital is run by “savvy Wall Streeters” who are focused on sports, entertainment, telecommunications, media and technology, with $8.6 billion in assets under management and backing from Chinese tech company Tencent and the investment firm KKR (which is also notably an investor in Skydance).

“We think there’s a decent chance a deal is done as we think the Redstone Trust may be ready to move on from operations to monetization,” Wells Fargo analyst Steve Cahall wrote in a note to clients on Sunday. “But, there is significant timing risk and complexity to any potential transaction.”

Break it up

Paramount, which had a market capitalization of $10.72 billion as of Monday’s close, is much smaller than legacy media peers Comcast ($171.7 billion), Disney ($167.8 billion) and Warner Bros. Discovery ($27.87 billion). As of the third quarter of 2023, the company had $1.8 billion in cash on hand and long-term debt of $15.6 billion. National Amusements took a $125 million preferred equity investment in May from BDT & MSD Partners to give Paramount additional liquidity after cutting its dividend earlier this year.

Adding to the possible pressure to do a deal, the company is also gearing up to negotiate new distribution deals for its cable networks, with The Wall Street Journal reporting its deal with Comcast expires at the end of December, and its contract with Charter ends in the spring. The Journal adds that Paramount has discussed the possibility of laying off more than 1,000 workers early next year.

If Ellison and RedBird’s bid for National Amusements’ majority stake were to be successful, they could combine Skydance with Paramount’s existing studios, shut down Paramount+ and sell Pluto and most of the media conglomerate’s linear assets, Cahall said.

“We estimate $13.5 billion divestiture enterprise value, or around $10 billion” after taxes, Cahall estimated. He collectively valued Paramount’s remaining assets, including CBS Studios, Paramount Studios, and content creation from Taylor Sheridan, Nickelodeon and MTV, at $23 per share.

Citigroup analyst Jason Bazinet was even more bullish on the benefits of a break-up, estimating Paramount’s equity could be worth around $38 per share if the firm’s networks, production assets and Direct to Consumer (DTC) business were sold individually. The bank’s sum-of-the-parts analysis values Paramount at roughly $38.8 billion, with its cable networks at roughly $7.4 billion, its broadcasting business at roughly $12.1 billion, its production assets at roughly $18 billion and its DTC business at $6.8 billion.

Bazinet pegged scenarios in which Paramount continues to operate as currently configured or is fully acquired by a strategic buyer at 25% likelihood. Meanwhile, a partial asset sale scenario in which Paramount’s cable and broadcast network businesses were sold for cash at roughly $9.6 billion and $15.8 billion, respectively, was given 50%.

Barclays Capital analyst Kannar Venkateshwar believes that Paramount Studios and CBS could have significant value — especially in the hands of the right buyers — with the firm estimating that the studios’ business could be worth roughly $5.5 billion before considering any premium attributable to its franchises.

“Even if we use say $10-12 billion for CBS and $8.5 billion for Paramount, it would essentially account for 70-75% of the company’s value based on last week’s close [of $16.82 per share],” Venkateshwar wrote in a note to clients on Monday. “In theory, this could imply further upside if the company’s streaming and cable network businesses can be monetized separately.”

But others on Wall Street are skeptical about why Redstone would sell Paramount or National Amusements’ stake before exhausting other options.

“We suspect cost-cutting would be far more aggressive if Paramount were preparing to put itself up for sale,” LightShed Partners’ Rich Greenfield wrote in a Nov. 21 research note. “You would give up on your streaming ambitions and harvest cash before you got to the point of selling off NAI’s stake in Paramount to the highest bidder.”

Greenfield added that if Paramount was going the route of selling its studio assets, killing its streaming business and finding a private equity buyer for its linear TV assets, the company likely would have already shut down Paramount+ and transformed more than $1.5 billion in streaming losses into hundreds of millions in profits as a licensor “arms-dealer” to third-party platforms.

“This strategy would appear to be a way to create far more value before trying to auction off the company’s assets in pieces,” he said.

Paramount already sold publisher Simon & Schuster to investment firm KKR for $1.62 billion, and said it would sells its majority stake in Bellator to the Professional Fighters League for an undisclosed amount. It also began exploring a sale of its majority stake of BET in March — with suitors including Byron Allen, who offered $3.6 billion for the network, and Tyler Perry — but later reversed course. Redstone also turned down a $3 billion bid for Showtime, instead integrating the network into Paramount+.

The company’s direct to consumer division, which includes Paramount+ and Pluto TV, reported 63.4 million subscribers — which are dwarfed by competitors Netflix, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery — and a loss of $238 million in its third quarter. Looking ahead, Paramount anticipates that its full-year DTC losses in 2023 will be lower than in 2022, with the division’s losses in the fourth quarter of 2023 similar to the fourth quarter of 2022.

Though winding down Paramount+ would buy the company some time, Venkateshwar said it would not really solve any underlying structural challenges.

An alternative path would be selling its streaming assets, which would “eliminate the associated investment needs and help the balance sheet and cash flows heal a lot faster,” he said, but he noted such a deal would be complicated due to Paramount+’s reliance on sports. He added that it is unclear who would want the streaming business without the studio assets that anchor its content.

“Peacock and Apple may benefit more than most but Comcast and Apple may also have the choice of other potentially more-desirable assets such as WBD/Max,” Venkateshwar said.

Pluto, on the other hand, may draw “real demand from multiple buyers,” but Venkateshwar doesn’t think a sale of the asset would “move the needle enough from a balance sheet or earnings trajectory perspective to change the valuation framework materially.”

Shari’s Choice

It’s unknown at this point what Redstone will ultimately do with Paramount and National Amusements. The 69-year-old has not chosen a successor and remains on the board, but has been open about her current focus on educational initiatives around tolerance and antisemitism, especially since the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7. Her father, Sumner Redstone, ran the company, then called Viacom, until 2016, stepping down at age 92, and had expressed that he didn’t want to sell off the studio.

Ultimately it is her call whether to give up control of Paramount, four years after merging it with CBS in a bid to make Paramount bulky enough to withstand the pressures of the changed Hollywood landscape. According to the Journal, Redstone views selling off Paramount Pictures on its own as a nonstarter and previously brushed off requests to spin off the company’s local broadcast stations.

In addition to interest from Skydance and RedBird, Redstone has fielded interest from Netflix and Activision CEO Bobby Kotick about potential deals for Paramount, according to The Wall Street Journal. Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav has also considered the pros and cons of making a run at Paramount, according to the Journal, though doing so would likely add to WBD’s heavy debt load. Others who held conversations with Redstone about potential deals earlier this year include Amazon and Apple, according to The New York Times.

Amazon and Warner Bros. Discovery declined to comment, while representatives for Apple, Netflix and Kotick did not immediately return TheWrap’s request for comment.
There's no way David Ellison (or any new owner for that matter) would listen to what Steve Cahall says and sell off Paramount's assets after a purchase.
 
It is interesting that PARA and WBD are wrestling with the same issues that DIS faces. It is my opinion that were it not for the parks and experiences, DIS stock would be @ around $10-$15/share, right along with the others.
 
And earlier this year, Netflix announced a partnership with Skydance Animation, the studio run by former Pixar bigwig John Lasseter. The first movie born out of the partnership, "Spellbound," is expected in 2024.
I had missed this bit of annoying news...that is a lot of Pixar's former success that walked on over to their main streaming competitor.


https://www.thewrap.com/skydance-animation-movies-leave-apple-netflix/

Skydance Animation Shocker: Entire Film Slate Exits Apple for Netflix

October 18, 2023 @ 12:30 PM

In a shocking move, Skydance Animation has inked a multiyear agreement with Netflix to develop and produce animation features that will be released directly on Netflix. According to the release, the deal also brings Skydance’s full existing animated feature slate exclusively to Netflix.

The move comes only two years after a wide-ranging partnership between Skydance Animation and Apple TV+ was announced, following Apple’s acquisition of Skydance Animation’s “Luck.” That deal was meant to include both television and features. (The Netflix release doesn’t mention television series.)

“Spellbound,” a high-concept musical fantasy from director Vicky Jenson, will be the first film released under the pact, in 2024. The movie features a score by composer Alan Menken and lyrics by Glenn Slater and an all-star voice cast led by Rachel Zegler, Nicole Kidman, Javier Bardem, John Lithgow, Jenifer Lewis, Nathan Lane and Tituss Burgess. The movie was previewed at this year’s Annecy International Animation Film Festival and seems like a winning blend of humor and heart, with Zegler playing a princess whose parents are transformed into monsters.

“Pookoo,” directed by “Tangled” filmmaker Nathan Greno, will arrive in 2025. According to the news release, the movie is a “buddy comedy about a small woodland creature and a majestic bird, two natural sworn enemies of The Valley, that magically trade places and set off on an adventure of a lifetime.”

The announcement also states that future films from the studio will include “Ray Gunn,” the latest feature from director Brad Bird; and an untitled “Jack and the Beanstalk” project (at one time referred to as “Gothic”) directed by Rich Moore. We had heard both movies faced major hurdles at Apple, so it’s nice that they are now safe at Netflix.

Former Pixar head John Lasseter will continue to head Skydance Animation and its creative vision along with the President of Skydance Animation, Holly Edwards.

Netflix’s feature animation output has been pretty unimpeachable. Their first feature, “Klaus,” was nominated for the Best Animated Feature Oscar. And since then they have cultivated a robust slate, including Richard Linklater’s “Apollo 10 ½,” the Sony co-production “The Mitchells vs. the Machines,” and last year’s Oscar-winning stop-motion marvel “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio.”

Their nimbleness and willingness to partner with outside studios has made them a unique force in the animation marketplace, with several upcoming projects from Aardman (“Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget”), DreamWorks (“Orion and the Dark”) and Sony (“K-Pop: Demon Hunters”), with more on the way, along with projects developed in-house like “Leo” and next year’s “Ultraman Rising” (which features animation from Industrial Light & Magic), with a sequel to last year’s Oscar-nominated “The Sea Beast” also on the way. This partnership with Skydance Animation makes total sense and ensures that Netflix Animation’s output will be robust.

Skydance’s animation unit was formed in 2017, with the offices in Los Angeles and the animation studio in Madrid. Their first feature, Peggy Holmes’ “Luck,” was released last year.
 
I had missed this bit of annoying news...that is a lot of Pixar's former success that walked on over to their main streaming competitor.


https://www.thewrap.com/skydance-animation-movies-leave-apple-netflix/

Skydance Animation Shocker: Entire Film Slate Exits Apple for Netflix

October 18, 2023 @ 12:30 PM

In a shocking move, Skydance Animation has inked a multiyear agreement with Netflix to develop and produce animation features that will be released directly on Netflix. According to the release, the deal also brings Skydance’s full existing animated feature slate exclusively to Netflix.

The move comes only two years after a wide-ranging partnership between Skydance Animation and Apple TV+ was announced, following Apple’s acquisition of Skydance Animation’s “Luck.” That deal was meant to include both television and features. (The Netflix release doesn’t mention television series.)

“Spellbound,” a high-concept musical fantasy from director Vicky Jenson, will be the first film released under the pact, in 2024. The movie features a score by composer Alan Menken and lyrics by Glenn Slater and an all-star voice cast led by Rachel Zegler, Nicole Kidman, Javier Bardem, John Lithgow, Jenifer Lewis, Nathan Lane and Tituss Burgess. The movie was previewed at this year’s Annecy International Animation Film Festival and seems like a winning blend of humor and heart, with Zegler playing a princess whose parents are transformed into monsters.

“Pookoo,” directed by “Tangled” filmmaker Nathan Greno, will arrive in 2025. According to the news release, the movie is a “buddy comedy about a small woodland creature and a majestic bird, two natural sworn enemies of The Valley, that magically trade places and set off on an adventure of a lifetime.”

The announcement also states that future films from the studio will include “Ray Gunn,” the latest feature from director Brad Bird; and an untitled “Jack and the Beanstalk” project (at one time referred to as “Gothic”) directed by Rich Moore. We had heard both movies faced major hurdles at Apple, so it’s nice that they are now safe at Netflix.

Former Pixar head John Lasseter will continue to head Skydance Animation and its creative vision along with the President of Skydance Animation, Holly Edwards.

Netflix’s feature animation output has been pretty unimpeachable. Their first feature, “Klaus,” was nominated for the Best Animated Feature Oscar. And since then they have cultivated a robust slate, including Richard Linklater’s “Apollo 10 ½,” the Sony co-production “The Mitchells vs. the Machines,” and last year’s Oscar-winning stop-motion marvel “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio.”

Their nimbleness and willingness to partner with outside studios has made them a unique force in the animation marketplace, with several upcoming projects from Aardman (“Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget”), DreamWorks (“Orion and the Dark”) and Sony (“K-Pop: Demon Hunters”), with more on the way, along with projects developed in-house like “Leo” and next year’s “Ultraman Rising” (which features animation from Industrial Light & Magic), with a sequel to last year’s Oscar-nominated “The Sea Beast” also on the way. This partnership with Skydance Animation makes total sense and ensures that Netflix Animation’s output will be robust.

Skydance’s animation unit was formed in 2017, with the offices in Los Angeles and the animation studio in Madrid. Their first feature, Peggy Holmes’ “Luck,” was released last year.

Interesting. I had wanted to watch Luck, but don't have access to Apple. Time to fire up my (buddy's 😉 ) Netflix!
 
https://www.thenation.com/article/society/netflix-disney-media-consolidation/

How 2 Companies Came to Dominate the Media Business
Once upon a time, six companies controlled the media in this country. That, it turns out, was the good old days…
12/13/2023
Thomas Schatz

This article appears in the December 25, 2023/January 1, 2024 issue, with the headline “And Then There Were Two.”

Although it seems like an eternity now, it wasn’t so long ago that the traditional film and television business was thriving. The Big Six media conglomerates—General Electric, Time Warner, Sony, Disney, News Corporation, and Viacom—ruled the industry. But the double whammy of streaming and the pandemic toppled the old-media oligopoly, which, with the singular exception of Disney, was woefully—if not fatally—slow to respond to the radically changing conditions. So most of the legacy media giants now are struggling simply to survive, while a new breed of digital-age behemoths, led by Amazon and Apple, gauge their film and television prospects, and Disney and Netflix lead the way into an uncharted online landscape.

The failure of the conglomerates to adapt is none too surprising, considering the unrivaled success they had enjoyed for decades. Spurred by Reagan-era economic policies and the FCC’s deregulation campaign, the media industries converged in a series of M&A waves that began in the 1980s with the News Corp–Fox, Time-Warner, and Sony-Columbia mergers and culminated in the acquisition of Universal by GE, NBC’s owner, and the launch of NBC Universal in 2004. At that point, the Big Six owned all the major film studios, all the broadcast networks, and most of the top cable networks. They dominated other media industries as well, but their key assets were their film and television holdings.

The NBC-Universal union also marked a decisive reset in the old guard’s response to new media. In 2000, Time Warner merged with the Internet colossus AOL (in a shocking deal valued at $165 billion), and Universal was acquired by the French conglomerate Vivendi (for $35 billion). The architects of both deals were betting on high-speed Internet delivery, then referred to as “broadband,” which was ramping up but not yet widely available. The rollout of broadband, however, proved to be disastrously slow, which was a key factor in the dot-com bust of the early aughts and the collapse of both the AOL–Time Warner and Vivendi-Universal deals in 2002.

In the wake of that dot-com bust and the consolidation of the Big Six, the film studios retrenched, doubling down on their traditional theater-driven business and blockbuster franchises. They also fixated on the exploding overseas markets, which couldn’t get enough of Hollywood’s franchise fare. Foreign revenues had started to climb in the 1990s, pulling even with the domestic returns and edging ahead in the early 2000s. Then, in 2004, foreign releases took off, leaping more than 50 percent ahead of the domestic returns. The gap became an abyss, with the foreign market doubling the domestic take by 2010 and nearly tripling it in 2019. At that point, 83 of the top 100 all-time worldwide hits had been released since 2004, and every one of them was a franchise film. The conservative turn paid off, as the studios reaped record profits and relied more and more heavily on high-cost, low-risk series spectacles. That put the squeeze on midrange and prestige pictures as well as on “Indiewood,” a formidable bloc of conglomerate-owned independent studios that was decimated after 2004.

The M&A action also stalled. The only significant deal over the next decade involved NBCUniversal, which GE sold to Comcast in a buyout that closed in 2013. Then, five years later, came the first inklings of another wave: AT&T’s buyout of Time Warner, an $85.4 billion deal that closed in June 2018, and Disney’s buyout of 21st Century Fox in a $71.3 billion deal approved by the feds that same month. More than simply a realignment of the old-media giants, the deals signaled the conglomerates’ first real response to streaming—the technology itself and the growing threat of Netflix and Amazon, two fast-rising media powerhouses. Both companies were launched during the digital revolution—Amazon by Jeff Bezos in 1994 and Netflix by Reed Hastings and Marc Randolph in 1997—and parlayed the new DVD technology into early success in the booming home-video sector. Both also shrewdly used the Internet, initially to market their inventory and, by the mid-2000s, to deliver films and TV series via streaming.

As digital delivery began overtaking DVDs in the early 2010s, Netflix revamped its business model. Hastings and his chief content officer (and eventual co-CEO), Ted Sarandos, increasingly built Netflix’s library around long-form TV series and moved aggressively into original programming to ensure a steady supply. Netflix premiered its first original series in 2012, the Nordic noir Lilyhammer, followed by a run of homegrown hits in 2013 that included House of Cards and Orange Is the New Black. Those cued Netflix’s swing to original programming, as its stockpile grew from 73 hours in 2013 to over 1,500 hours in 2018 and the company matured into a streaming-era TV network. In fact, Netflix nabbed 112 Emmy nominations in 2018, the first year since 2001 that any network outpaced HBO. Its subscriber count grew from 40 million to 140 million during that explosive five-year span, while its market value soared from $22 billion to $130 billion. Amazon followed suit, but at a more modest pace, building a massive film library on its Amazon Prime service and easing into original series programming, producing its first hit, Transparent, in 2014.

As their series production caught on, both streamers inevitably challenged Hollywood, and Amazon scored the first movie hit with Manchester by the Sea in 2016. But again, Netflix was more aggressive, releasing more than 50 feature films per annum by 2017, far outpacing Amazon and any of the studios, and edging into the theatrical arena with Oscar-qualifying limited releases of prestige pictures like Alfonso Cuarón’s Roma (2018). In fact, Roma provided one of two clear signals in early 2019 that Netflix had arrived as a Hollywood player. On the morning of January 22, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences showered the film with 10 Oscar nominations, including Best Picture and Best Director. Later that same day, the Motion Picture Association designated Netflix a major Hollywood studio.

That was obviously a watershed moment for the streaming and movie industries, although Netflix would be overshadowed on both fronts in 2019, when multiple high-risk acquisitions by Disney CEO Bob Iger paid off in truly historic fashion. Three involved motion-picture companies: Disney’s buyout of Pixar (in 2006, for $7.4 billion), Marvel Entertainment (in 2009, for $4 billion), and Lucasfilm, the creator of the Star Wars franchise (in 2012, for $4.05 billion). Those new assets, along with Disney’s animation division, recast the company as a coalition of franchise-driven micro-studios. Disney released fewer features and relied more heavily on presold IP than the other major studios, and that strategy carried it to phenomenal heights. It led the industry four straight years in the late 2010s, peaking in 2019 with a 33 percent domestic market share on just 10 theatrical releases, nine of which were franchise blockbusters.

Disney’s foray into streaming in 2019 was also keyed to earlier acquisitions. In 2017, the company secured control of BAMTech, a streaming service owned by Major League Baseball, and later that year Iger announced the buyout of 21st Century Fox, which increased Disney’s heft in the media sector while giving it a controlling interest in Hulu, then the No. 2 streamer behind Netflix. The Fox buyout officially closed in March 2019, at which point Iger and company began gearing up for the November 12 debut of Disney+. The launch faced stiff competition from Apple, which rolled out its much-hyped streaming service Apple TV+ on November 1. But the latter’s meager lineup of nine original series and its lack of a library attracted few new subscribers, and the rollout was a bust.

Disney+, on the other hand, was a runaway hit, enrolling more than 10 million subscribers on day one and more than 25 million by late December. Its success was fueled by several factors: an ad-free, low-cost service ($6.99 per month, versus $12.99 for Netflix); the momentum of its theatrical hits; its small but incomparable library; and a slate of 25 original series and 10 new features, most of them tied to Disney IP—including a hit Star Wars series, The Mandalorian, that established the prototype for subsequent franchise offshoots.

The Disney+ launch was a tipping point in the streaming era, prompting the ramp-up of Warner’s HBO Max, NBCU’s Peacock and ViacomCBS’s Paramount+. It also came just before the outbreak of Covid-19, which accelerated the global move to streaming. The world learned to live online during the pandemic, rendering Netflix, Amazon, and Apple stronger than ever while pressuring the legacy companies that were betting on streaming to stay in the game, despite the crippling start-up and content costs. Netflix was the only profitable streaming service coming out of the pandemic, netting over $5 billion in 2021 and again in 2022, while the legacy companies lost billions.

Meanwhile, the theatrical market began to recover in 2021 and climbed to roughly two-thirds of its pre-pandemic levels in 2022. Franchise fever ran higher than ever, with the top 10 hits that year—all of them big-budget sequels or franchise films—accounting for over half the ticket sales in the United States. The M&A action also resumed, highlighted by two landmark deals announced in May 2021. One was Amazon’s $8.45 billion acquisition of MGM, giving it a legendary Hollywood brand and adding some 4,000 film titles to its massive library. The other saw AT&T, struggling with the move to streaming and with mounting debt, unload WarnerMedia in a deal with Discovery, a second-tier cable company that paid $43 billion for a minority stake and complete control of the stumbling media giant, which it rebranded Warner Bros. Discovery.

This was a stunning setback for the once-mighty Warner, but the Disney-Warner duopoly that had ruled since the early 1990s was history. Disney’s main rival now was Netflix—a vastly different adversary that continued to expand at a staggering rate. Netflix released more than 450 titles in 2021 and over 700 in 2022, with far more feature films and series (in all formats) than its competitors as well as far more international productions. And Netflix accomplished this as a pure-play media company that was not conglomerate-owned and was not itself a conglomerate. Disney, conversely, was the consummate media-and-entertainment combine, a global juggernaut whose portfolio now included three streaming services and a total subscriber count of roughly 235 million—just surpassing Netflix’s 230 million and far ahead of the other legacy company streamers.

Netflix and Disney were thus a study in contrasts, although a few recent developments did bring them into closer accord. Brutal “market corrections” hit the industry in 2022, with the streamers’ stock value increasingly gauged in terms of profitability as well as subscriber growth. Disney and Netflix saw the steepest drops, as their market caps plunged more than $100 billion that year—Netflix down to $130 billion, about where it stood before the pandemic, and Disney down to the $170 billion range. Netflix tumbled when its decade-long growth suddenly slowed in early 2022, although its revenues and profits held up thanks to high subscription fees. Meanwhile, Disney struggled as a result of low fees and enormous content costs.

Despite the different reasons for their Wall Street woes, Disney and Netflix turned to the same remedy: TV commercials. Both launched ad-supported tiers in late 2022 to attract new subscribers and generate new revenues. This was hardly a novel strategy; all of the other major streamers already offered ad-supported plans. And the adjustment came easily enough for Disney, given its experience with commercial television and with Hulu’s ad-supported platform. It was a bitter pill for Reed Hastings, however, who had vowed never to sully Netflix with ads. But there was no stopping the online migration of commercial television, and an added benefit for Netflix was its alliance with Microsoft, which took sole responsibility for building and managing the streamer’s advertising business.

“Consolidation” was the industry buzzword in early 2023, with the Disney-Fox, Warner-Discovery, and Amazon-MGM mergers seen as mere previews in a Darwinian struggle to adapt and survive. But the major players stood pat, waiting for the recent disruptions—and the writers’ and actors’ strikes—to play out. More M&A action is inevitable, though, with Amazon and Apple increasingly invested in their media operations, and the tech giants Microsoft and Alphabet (the parent company of Google, which owns YouTube) ready to pounce. And the weaker legacy companies—Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount Global, and what’s left of Fox—cannot possibly hold on without deep-pocketed digital-age allies (or owners).

The most intriguing M&A prospects are Disney and Netflix. Both have the capacity to survive and thrive on their own, but they are unlikely to sit still for long. Indeed, the question for both is whether they can afford not to attach themselves to a tech giant. Rumors have been swirling for years about a partnership between Apple and Disney, due largely to Iger’s penchant for high-stakes dealmaking and a long-standing rapport with Apple dating back to his close friendship with the late Steve Jobs, who sold Pixar to Disney. Netflix’s likeliest partner is Microsoft, which already handles its ad business and recently acquired the gaming superpower Activision Blizzard. Netflix has been quietly expanding into gaming for a few years, and together the two could rule the online gaming realm—and introduce yet another vital subindustry into the digital entertainment ecosystem.

Thomas Schatz is a professor in the Department of Radio-Television-Film at the University of Texas at Austin.
 
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/b...-2024-uptick-strikes-pwc-forecast-1235751945/

More Media Megadeals in 2024? Top Accounting Firm Thinks It’s a Good Bet

Expect "to see upward momentum in the sector and an increase in transformational deals," PricewaterhouseCoopers forecast in a report.

by Georg Szalai
December 13, 2023 - 9:22am PST

This year saw a slowdown in terms of media and telecommunications sector dealmaking, but there are signs of a recovery in M&A activity, top accounting and consulting services firm PricewaterhouseCoopers said in a Wednesday report.

Deal talk has returned to the sector with a vengeance, driven by recent talk that Paramount Global and its parent company National Amusements could be in play. And bankers are licking their chops ahead of April 8, 2024 when the Reverse Morris Trust lock-up period of the deal that created Warner Bros. Discovery ends, meaning that the company can get involved in possible M&A without having to worry about a tax penalty.

PwC also sees the end of the Hollywood strikes playing into sector deal ambitions. “As the Writers Guild of America (WGA) and Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) strikes have officially concluded, we expect to see upward momentum in the sector and an increase in transformational deals and creative deal structures,” its report highlighted.

“Despite continued financing challenges and regulatory pressure, we nonetheless expect an uptick in 2024 M&A as market players have spent the last several months re-evaluating their portfolios and are committed to seeking strategic partnerships that can drive growth — all with a consumer-centric focus on finding new and innovative ways to engage with their customers,” noted Bart Spiegel, global entertainment & media deals leader and partner at PwC U.S.

The firm’s latest deals report highlighted though that “the slowdown of deal activity in the media and telecommunications sector continued through the second half of 2023, with an uptick in deal value primarily driven by the $27 billion stock merger between Dish Network Corporation and EchoStar Corporation.” Without this transaction, the value of deals over the last 12 months through Nov. 15 would have amounted to $68 billion, “commensurate with the first half of 2023,” when that figure hit $59 billion, PwC emphasized. For the 12 months through mid-November 2022, PwC had calculated deal values totaling $256 billion.

How will the resolutions of the Hollywood strikes play into deal trends? “As a result, there is less uncertainty around go-forward economics and the time may be ripe for streaming platforms to re-evaluate their competitive positioning,” PwC argued in its report. “As cord-cutting continues and replacement options and pricing alternatives proliferate, streaming providers may increasingly seek strategic partnerships that have both complementary subscriber bases, accretive intellectual property and an aligned vision and strategy for attracting new subscribers.”

Sports also play into the M&A calculation. “Consolidation should help position the ecosystem to further the decline of linear TV as the remaining market players should have both the motivation and the financial means to aggressively pursue sports rights as they become available (e.g. the current NBA media rights expire at the end of the 2024/2025 season),” PwC noted. “Since live sports significantly contribute to the stickiness of linear subscribers, any transition of media rights to streaming platforms should serve to accelerate linear churn. Based on the above, we believe the conditions are ripe for consolidation in the streaming ecosystem as we turn the corner to 2024.”

Wall Street has as of late also mentioned sports as a potential driver of sector M&A. “We see Warner Bros. Discovery as a potential asset acquirer in the next round of media consolidation,” Guggenheim analyst Michael Morris wrote in a November report. Why? “Because airing NFL games has been shown to be critical to a leadership position in the evolving video ecosystem,” he explained, suggesting WBD could make a play for Paramount or Fox Sports. “No single content property drives U.S. consumer engagement like the NFL.”
 
https://uk.sports.yahoo.com/news/1-activist-investor-peltz-seeks-154042931.html

UPDATE 1-Activist investor Peltz seeks two Disney board seats
Reuters
Thu, 14 December 2023 at 9:40 am GMT-6)

Dec 14 (Reuters) - Activist investor Nelson Peltz is seeking two board seats at Disney, his fund said on Thursday, less than a year after abandoning an earlier bid as the media conglomerate outlined plans that addressed his criticism.
While Peltz is one of the candidate nominated, former Chief Finiancial Officer of Disney James Rasulo is the other nominee, Trian Fund Management said.

Trian owns roughly $3 billion worth of Disney stock and ranks among the industry's oldest and most respected corporate agitators.

The fund had said last month that during a conversation with CEO Bob Iger, Disney extended an offer for Trian to meet with the company's board but rejected the request for seats on a board that will soon have 12 members.

Peltz had launched a battle for a board seat at Disney in January this year to rescue the entertainment giant from what he called a "crisis" of overspending on the streaming business, a little after Iger returned from retirement to become the CEO in a surprise comeback.

The activist investor ended his quest about a month later after Iger laid out plans to restructure and cut costs.
Over the past 12 months, Disney has restructured the company and significantly reduced costs. It told investors last month it is on track to achieve about $7.5 billion in cost savings – $2 billion more than its original target.

Disney has also said it would work to make its streaming business profitable, build ESPN into the "pre-eminent" digital sports brand, improve the performance of its film studios and "turbocharge" growth at its theme parks, through $60 billion in investment over the next decade.

Trian said that since it gave Disney the time "to prove it could right the ship" in February, up to its re-engagement weeks ago, shareholders lost about $70 billion of value.

Disney had announced the appointment of James Gorman, chairman and chief executive of Morgan Stanley, and
Jeremy Darroch, a veteran media executive and former group chief executive of Sky, as new directors last month.

(Reporting by Samrhitha Arunasalam and Yuvraj Malik in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)
 
https://trianpartners.com/wp-conten...ndidates-To-The-Walt-Disney-Company-Board.pdf

TRIAN NOMINATES TWO CANDIDATES TO THE WALT DISNEY COMPANY BOARD

Believes the Disney Board’s Lack of Focus, Alignment, and Accountability Has Resulted in Chronic
Underperformance at One of the World’s Most Iconic Companies

NEW YORK AND PALM BEACH, FL., December 14, 2023 – Trian Fund Management, L.P. (together with its
affiliates, “Trian”, “our” or “we”), which beneficially owns $3 billion of common stock in The Walt Disney
Company (NYSE: DIS) (“Disney” or the “Company”), today submitted a notice of its intention to nominate two
independent director candidates for election to the Disney Board of Directors (the “Board”) at the Company’s
2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders (the “2024 Annual Meeting”).

Disney is one of the most iconic companies in the world with unrivaled scale, unparalleled customer loyalty,
irreplaceable intellectual property (“IP”), and an enviable commercial flywheel. However, Disney has woefully
underperformed its peers and its potential.

Earnings per share (“EPS”) in the most recent fiscal year were lower than the EPS generated by Disney a
decade ago and were over 50% lower than peak EPS despite over $100 billion of capital invested. Margins in
both Disney’s Direct-to-Consumer business and its consolidated media operations significantly lag peers
despite Disney having scale and superior IP.i

For shareholders, this subpar performance has destroyed value. Disney stock has underperformed the stocks
of Disney’s self-selected proxy peers and the broader market over every relevant period during the last
decade and during the tenure of each non-management director. Furthermore, it has underperformed since
Bob Iger was first appointed CEO in 2005 – a period during which he has served as CEO or Executive
Chairman (directing the Company’s creative endeavors in this role) for all but 11 months. Disney shareholders
were once over $200 billion wealthier than they are now.

Unfortunately, the Board and CEO appear to have no conviction that things will get better. The non-
management directors collectively own less than $15 million of Disney stock, and Mr. Iger has sold the vast
majority of his ownership stake built up primarily through share-based compensation – more than $1 billion of
Disney stock – leaving shareholders alone to face the daunting reality of a complex turnaround in a rapidly
evolving industry.

And, that turnaround does not appear to be materializing. Since Mr. Iger’s first earnings call after returning as
CEO:

• Tens of billions of shareholder value has been lost;
• Consensus EPS estimates for fiscal years 2024 and 2025 have fallen meaningfully, even as the
Company claims to be cutting billions of costs; and
• Studio content continues to disappoint consumers, slowing the speed of the flywheel and threatening
future earnings growth.

More generally, Disney appears no closer to adequately addressing the compensation misalignment,
governance, and succession issues that have plagued the Company for decades.

The root cause of Disney’s underperformance, in our view, is a Board that is too closely connected to a long-
tenured CEO and too disconnected from shareholders’ interests.iv The Board, we believe, lacks objectivity as
well as focus, alignment, and accountability. Although the recent appointment of two new directors to the
Disney Board is a step toward greater Board objectivity (and a belated acknowledgement by the Company of
the need for change), this reactive Board self-refreshment on the eve of a proxy contest is insufficient in our
opinion both because the new directors were chosen without shareholder input and because they seemingly
do not own meaningful amounts of stock.

“As Disney’s largest active shareholder, we can no longer sit idly by as the incumbent directors and their
hand-picked replacements stand in the way of necessary change, and peers and competitors continue to
outperform,” said Nelson Peltz, Trian’s Chief Executive Officer and a Founding Partner. “In our view, Disney’s
Board has failed to fulfill its essential responsibilities – overseeing the development of an effective strategy,
planning for orderly succession, aligning executive pay with performance, and ensuring accountability for
operational execution. Shareholder-led board refreshment with focused and aligned directors who are
accountable to the owners of the company is long overdue.”

Trian’s director candidates are dedicated, experienced, and positioned to help address the Company’s
considerable governance, strategic, financial, and operational challenges.

Trian’s director candidates are:

• Nelson Peltz. Nelson is Trian’s Chief Executive Officer and a Founding Partner and has served as a
director on more than a dozen public company boards, including at world-class companies with best-
in-class brands such as Procter & Gamble, Unilever, H. J. Heinz, Mondelēz and Ingersoll-Rand. Mr.
Peltz’s experience is unparalleled among public company directors as is his track record for prompting
bold action to drive operational turnarounds, transformations, effective leadership succession
processes, and value creation across numerous industries.

• James A. (“Jay”) Rasulo. Jay spent three decades at Disney and served as Senior Executive Vice
President and Chief Financial Officer of the Company from 2010 to 2015. During his tenure as CFO,
the Company delivered compound annual returns for shareholders of approximately 27% and
compounded EPS at a rate of approximately 20%, paid a consistent and generous dividend, and
Disney’s share price appreciated over 250%. Before being appointed CFO, Jay was Chairman of Walt
Disney Parks and Resorts Worldwide from 2005 to 2009 and was President of Walt Disney Parks and
Resorts from 2002 to 2005, delivering compounded high single-digit revenue and segment operating
income growth annually. Bob Iger called Jay “a vital contributor to Disney’s success” with “strategic
acumen and savvy insight.”v

“To resolve the malaise and crisis of confidence among Disney shareholders, the Board needs fresh
perspectives from truly independent directors selected by the shareholders themselves,” Mr. Peltz added.
“Jay and I have the strategic, operating, financial, and governance expertise to help Disney and are
committed to working with the other members of the Board and management team to address the
fundamental issues underlying the Company’s continued poor performance. There is much that can be done
to revive Disney and restore the confidence of Disney shareholders, and Trian looks forward to discussing
these opportunities with our fellow shareholders over the coming months.”

“The Disney I know and love has lost its way,” said Jay Rasulo. “As independent voices in the boardroom,
Nelson and I are confident that the combination of my decades of experience at Disney, Nelson’s significant
boardroom skills and history of driving positive strategic change, and our combined consumer brands
expertise and financial acumen, will be additive to the Disney Board. With a shareholder mandate, Nelson and
I look forward to helping the Board and management reorient the Company towards delighting its consumers
again and driving significant value for its owners."
Trian expects that the 2024 Annual Meeting will take place in the Spring of 2024. Shareholders do not need to
take any action at this time.
 
https://variety.com/2015/film/news/disney-cfo-jay-rasulo-stepping-down-at-months-end-1201509331/

Jun 1, 2015 - 9:34am PST

Disney CFO Jay Rasulo Stepping Down at Month’s End
by James Rainey

Jay Rasulo, the Disney chief financial officer who was passed over in February for the company’s No. 2 job, will step down at the end of the month, Disney chief executive Robert Iger announced Monday morning.

The company said Rasulo will stay on an an adviser and help Iger assist with the transition. The longtime executive has been rumored as a possible CEO at a number of companies, including game maker Mattel, but his immediate plans remained unspecified.

“Jay has been a valued colleague and friend, as well as a vital contributor to Disney’s success, particularly in his roles as chief financial officer and chairman of our Parks and Resorts division,” Iger said in a statement. “I look forward to working with him in this new advisory role, where his strategic acumen and savvy insight will continue to benefit the company.”

In his own statement, Rasulo called it “a true honor” to work at Disney. He complimented Iger as “a great leader.” He said his friendship with Iger would continue and he looked forward to working as an adviser for the company.

Rasulo, 59, carried the title of senior executive vice president, as well as CFO. He helped Disney acquire Maker Studios and previously served as chairman of Walt Disney Parks and Resorts. He swapped jobs in 2010 with then-CFO Tom Staggs, who became boss of the company’s theme parks.

When Staggs was named chief operating officer of the company on February 5, the assignment made him heir apparent to Iger, who is scheduled to step down as CEO in mid-2018. Speculation began immediately that Rasulo’s time at the company might be limited.

He worked at Disney for 29 years, arriving in 1986 as director of Strategic Planning and Development. He advanced repeatedly, at one point serving as senior vice president of corporate alliances, before taking the job running theme parks.

Rasulo’s contract had expired at the end of January and was not renewed. That heightened expectations that Staggs would soon be named as Iger’s eventual replacement, and the COO nod came his way shortly into February.

Prior to coming to Disney, Rasulo held positions with Chase Manhattan Bank and the Marriott Corporation.

A new chief financial officer for Disney will be named at a later date.
 
I remember the Jay years well and have missed them. The band seems to be slowly getting back together, all from unexpected places - Jay, Staggs, Mayer...
 
https://thewaltdisneycompany.com/statement-from-the-walt-disney-company-4/

December 14, 2023
Statement From The Walt Disney Company

The Walt Disney Company (NYSE: DIS) confirmed today that Trian Fund Management, L.P., alongside certain affiliates, including Trian’s previously disclosed partnership with Isaac Perlmutter pursuant to which it obtained beneficial ownership of Mr. Perlmutter’s Disney shares (collectively, “Trian”), has provided notice of its intent to nominate two individuals for election to the Company’s Board of Directors at the 2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

Disney has an experienced, diverse, and highly qualified Board that is focused on the long-term performance of the Company, strategic growth initiatives including the ongoing transformation of its businesses, the succession planning process, and increasing shareholder value.

The Governance and Nominating Committee, which evaluates director nominations, will review the proposed Trian nominees and provide a recommendation to the Board as part of its governance process.

The Company expects to file preliminary materials with respect to the 2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), which will include the Board’s recommended slate of director nominees. Disney shareholders are not required to take any action at this time.
 
https://thewaltdisneycompany.com/statement-from-the-walt-disney-company-4/

December 14, 2023
Statement From The Walt Disney Company

The Walt Disney Company (NYSE: DIS) confirmed today that Trian Fund Management, L.P., alongside certain affiliates, including Trian’s previously disclosed partnership with Isaac Perlmutter pursuant to which it obtained beneficial ownership of Mr. Perlmutter’s Disney shares (collectively, “Trian”), has provided notice of its intent to nominate two individuals for election to the Company’s Board of Directors at the 2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

Disney has an experienced, diverse, and highly qualified Board that is focused on the long-term performance of the Company, strategic growth initiatives including the ongoing transformation of its businesses, the succession planning process, and increasing shareholder value.

The Governance and Nominating Committee, which evaluates director nominations, will review the proposed Trian nominees and provide a recommendation to the Board as part of its governance process.

The Company expects to file preliminary materials with respect to the 2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), which will include the Board’s recommended slate of director nominees. Disney shareholders are not required to take any action at this time.
I wonder how they can say no to Rasulo? He has all the experience you could want and I believe he would be the only board member with any direct Parks experience. Sounds like a win win to me but I'm sure certain egos will get in the way.
 












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