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https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/b...netflix-streaming-service-bundles-1235807432/

Netflix Is the King of Streaming. Is It a Benevolent Dictator?
While the streamer is pulling far ahead of rivals, it is extending an olive branch as a buyer of shows and as a possible bundle partner.
by Alex Weprin
January 26, 2024 - 5:05 am PST

In Netflix’s global smash hit Squid Game, the penultimate challenge sees the last few surviving competitors make their way across a glass bridge. One wrong move, and the player falls to their demise.

But as the players progressed, they hit upon a revelation: Yes, there will only be one winner of the final game, but if they work together, they can cross the chasm and survive for one more day.

Netflix, led by co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters, has won the streaming wars (Morgan Stanley proclaimed it “The Undisputed” in a Jan. 23 research note, and the next day Bernstein declared the company “clearly the winner in streaming”), and the company and Wall Street see plenty more room to grow.

But even as Netflix appears poised to reign as the streaming champion, it also finds itself more open than ever to partnering with its competitors-turned-suppliers, perhaps even helping them get through the messy slog from linear TV to streaming…all with a healthy dose of self-interest, of course.

It’s a counterintuitive thing, and yet: Netflix appears more eager than ever to acquire films and TV shows from other studios, and is paying substantially more than it did in the early days of streaming, when those same studios sold their content — the “lifeblood” of their business — “for pennies on the dollar,” MoffettNathanson’s Michael Nathanson noted in a Jan. 24 report.

And perhaps more significantly: As Netflix leans into advertising as its big growth opportunity, it is floating the idea of more aggressive and opportunistic bundles with those same companies. (Could a Netflix-Max-Peacock discounted offering be on the horizon?)

“We’re still very much in the early days of the ‘turn-a-profit phase’ for streamers and I’d expect to see less content and more bundling, ads and long-term subscription offers as the business of streaming matures,” says Scott Purdy, national media industry leader for KPMG. “[Tuesday’s] results show going back to the basics — ads and bundling — will be the blueprint other streaming companies follow to turn a profit.”
For other companies in streaming, the rush to turn a profit has turned into a battle against churn. It isn’t just about acquiring new subscribers, it’s also about keeping them. And it turns out bundles are an effective way to reduce churn.
“Lower-priced tiers and bundles that spread out costs could make it easier for more people to maintain subscriptions — and for streamers to sustain revenues,” the consultancy Deloitte wrote in its 2024 TMT Predictions report.

Indeed, on its quarterly earnings call, Netflix co-CEO Peters, when asked about striking deals with partners on bundles, was enthusiastic about their potential to boost the company’s ad tier.

“It’s very effective, very useful for us because that lower consumer-facing price means that we’ve got room now to bundle the ads plan into a set of lower-priced partner offerings where it was hard to make the economics work for everyone previously,” Peters said. “So we really think of this as a win-win-win and we’re going to continue to leverage these bundles going forward.”

Verizon currently offers a bundle of ad tiers of Netflix and Max for $10 per month, but Peters’ comments certainly suggest that more bundles are imminent.

And then there’s the licensed content. By now everyone in Hollywood knows that Netflix is an eager buyer of films and series. In fact, Netflix seems to have become the buyer of choice for many companies. What other platform has Sex and the City, Grey’s Anatomy, Star Trek: Prodigy, The Super Mario Bros. Movie in one place?

Or to hear Sarandos explain it: “I am thrilled that the studios are more open to licensing again, and I’m thrilled to tell them that we are open for business.”

“Against all odds, Netflix has succeeded in disrupting an industry where the incumbents once held the single most important resource: control of proprietary IP,” Nathanson added. “Even though this strategy is making Netflix stronger and more efficient, Netflix’s competitors appear willing to keep feeding the beast.”

But there may be a method to the madness, and a clear rationale, for both Netflix and the other entertainment giants. Yes, Disney, Paramount, WBD et al are getting paid, but Sarandos argues that streaming their shows on Netflix helps their platforms, too.

“Because of our recommendation and our reach, we can resurrect a show like Suits and turn it into a big pop culture moment,” Sarandos said. “I believe because of our distribution heft and our recommendation system that we can uniquely add more value to Studios’ IP than they can. Not all the time, but sometimes, and we’re the best buyer for it.”

It’s also part of the argument for the $5 billion WWE deal, with the wrestling company still trying to expand beyond the United States, Canada, U.K. and a handful of international markets.

“WWE can leverage Netflix’s global reach and massive subscriber base to grow awareness of the sport in new international markets,” Bank of America’s Jessica Reif Ehrlich wrote Jan. 23.

And not only does Netflix receive a constantly refreshed fountain of content with these deals, but it can also land some legitimate bargains. With a deep menu of content from other companies to choose from, “it might be that we can deliver more on our programming spend with some licensed titles,” Sarandos acknowledged Jan. 23.

Despite the olive branch, a top advertising source expressed caution, comparing Netflix’s strategic moves to letting a fox into the henhouse.

Netflix’s ad business is small, and it does not expect it to be a meaningful driver of revenue this year. That is expected to change in 2025. The concern for the likes of Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery and NBCUniversal is that as Netflix scales up its ad business, it will come for their ad dollars, siphoning budgets that would otherwise be going to broadcast or cable TV, or streaming services like Peacock or Paramount+. It’s a threat looming from Amazon Prime Video, which will turn on ads for its members Jan. 29.

“Given its size, Netflix can amortize the content it licenses from competitors across a larger subscriber base and as the ad plan rolls out can sell more ads on a single piece of licensed content,” Macquarie analyst Tim Nollen wrote in a Jan. 24 note.

In other words, Netflix may be able to monetize acquired content better than the third-party studios can, a difficult situation for those companies to be in.

“Traditional media companies are back to the same place they found themselves 10 to 15 years ago: between a rock and hard place,” Nollen added, referencing the conundrum facing legacy studios: cash now, or hoard content for their own platforms? “The bigger Netflix gets, the more other studios will want to license its content, which then puts them in the familiar quandary of how to grow their own DTC services successfully in response.”

This moment in some ways is a textbook example of “what’s old is new.” The strategic shifts by Netflix are a significant departure from the company’s original streaming premise. But it’s likely to be a very profitable pivot, one that bears a striking resemblance to, well, cable TV.

The adjustments from the company “all portend for a much more profitable Netflix in the coming years,” Nathanson writes. “A few years back, at the start of the streaming wars, we argued that Netflix’s forced shift into greater and greater original content investment would be far tougher than their initial strategy of using other people’s content. Now, due to industrywide challenges, Netflix has been able to flip that model back.”

4rep_netflix_chart-EMBED.jpg
 
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/why-bob-iger-won-t-140000039.html

The Wrap

Why Bob Iger Won’t Sell Disney’s Linear Assets | Exclusive

Alexei Barrionuevo
Fri, January 26, 2024 at 8:00 AM CST

Since returning to lead Disney after a very short retirement, Bob Iger has faced anemic stock prices, flagship brands adrift and the worsening pressure from streaming, problems advisers are telling him can be alleviated by selling off most of the entertainment giant’s linear TV assets. But for now, Iger is resisting that advice, TheWrap has learned.

In July, Iger brought back former longtime Disney executives Kevin Mayer and Tom Staggs to advise him on what to do with Disney’s linear assets, which include ABC, ESPN, National Geographic, FX and Freeform.

Their unvarnished advice was to unload them — not urgently, but soon, two people knowledgeable with the company’s operations told TheWrap. The advisors have echoed the analysis of Wall Street — these assets are steadily declining over time, even if they still currently throw off profit. Given consumers’ move to streaming, cable and broadcast television is headed for history.

Some six months later, Iger has yet to take any action.

“He just doesn’t want to sell them off,” one of the individuals said. “The non-linear sports networks should be gone, they provide nothing — nothing but earnings decline.”

Iger’s stance on the viability of linear TV has sloshed around since he took the reins of the company again in November of 2022. Two months earlier, when he was in between stints, the former ABC/Capital Cities president and COO agreed that traditional TV, including broadcast, cable and satellite, was “marching to a distinct precipice, and it’s going to be pushed off.”

Then in July, he said the TV networks “may not be core” to the business, while being clear that when it came to ESPN, “we want to stay in the sports business.” And this past November, he said “it is not the case” that Disney would sell the linear assets, with Disney Entertainment co-chair Dana Walden adding that the linear channels are “very deeply embedded” in its streaming strategy.

The Disney CEO’s recent reticence contrasts sharply with the message communicated by Disney’s main rival Netflix on Tuesday: Broadcast television cannot be saved through more consolidation. “We’re not interested in acquiring linear assets,” Netflix said in its letter to investors announcing its fourth-quarter 2023 earnings. “Nor do we believe that further M&A among traditional entertainment companies will materially change the competitive environment given all the consolidation that has already happened over the last decade.”

Like other major entertainment companies with legacy assets, the company is trying to work out the transition from linear to digital. But the need to set a strategy is more urgent for Iger, as Disney’s value has plunged in the past few years without seeing clear recovery.
Disney stock Jan. 25 2024

Walt Disney Co.’s five-year market summary from Jan. 25, 2024.

Iger himself has pointed to a need to recharge Disney’s core creative franchises — Marvel, Star Wars and Pixar — which drive the global conglomerates’ flywheel of parks, merchandise, travel and content.

So why not shed linear? For one thing, these assets that are still profitable, even though declining. And Iger believes that the creative engine that drives linear television is critical to feeding a “rich flow of content” to the company’s streaming platforms, as the CEO told analysts in November.

In recent months, Iger has pointed to ESPN as having more potential, calling it a “core building opportunity” in November. Operating income for ESPN in 2023 fell by 2% to $2.8 billion from 2022, while revenues grew 2% to $16.4 billion.

But there may be more strategy to Iger’s thinking: The Disney CEO is worried that unloading the non-sports TV assets, which brought in $11.7 billion in revenues in 2023, or 13% of Disney’s total of $88.9 billion, could make the company too vulnerable to being acquired, another person familiar with Disney’s operations said. (Linear TV revenues fell 9% from 2022, while operating income plummeted by 21%.)

Facing the music

With Disney set to report its latest earnings on Feb. 7, Iger is facing a raft of challenges.

The company’s stock price, which closed at $94.86 on Thursday, is sluggish and trading at levels not seen for a decade. Its big-budget franchises, especially Marvel, are tired and creatively struggling. Disney is spending heavily to catch up on streaming. Activist investors are clamoring for board seats and for faster action to boost the stock price — and for a clear succession plan for Iger. Disney’s sprawling Experiences business, which brings in about 35% of overall revenues, had a disappointing summer, with lower-than-expected parks attendance. “And Pixar,” the knowledgeable person said, “is falling apart.”

Wall Street analysts and private equity executives have told TheWrap that Disney would be better off being acquired by a Big Tech company, most likely Apple. Or for a private equity firm – it could take multiple firms acting in unison — to attempt a history-making leveraged buyout of at least $200 billion.

Apple buying Disney “is the opportunity of a lifetime,” said Peter Csathy of Creative Media, a media, entertainment and tech advisory firm, who also writes for TheWrap. “If Disney is available, it could be one of those opportunities that breaks all the rules because it is such a unique asset.”

But tech companies, especially Apple, are unlikely to risk stoking the ire of regulators in Washington, D.C., who under President Biden have focused their sights on stemming potential monopolistic behavior, analysts told TheWrap.

To sell or not to sell

Iger is not seeking to sell all of Disney, the two people familiar with the company told TheWrap. And selling the company is not likely to solve all of Disney’s problems. “There is no silver bullet,” one knowledgeable person said. “It is going to be a slog to get back to $150 [per share].”

Analysts say that Disney, which currently has a market cap of $173.6 billion, could fetch upwards of $200 billion with a premium. That’s a price that only a company like Apple or Microsoft — the two largest companies in the world right now, each having passed $3 trillion in valuation — could afford. Up to now, Apple has been famously acquisition-shy: The largest deal it has ever done was the 2014 purchase of Beats Music and Beats Electronics for $3 billion.

Still, Disney and Apple have strong ties dating to when Iger, shortly after taking over as CEO in 2005, agreed to license a handful of TV programs to Apple for its iPod video player. Then Iger persuaded Apple CEO Steve Jobs to sell Pixar to Disney in 2006 for $7.4 billion. On the day the companies planned to announce the deal, Jobs confided to Iger that his pancreatic cancer had returned and offered to let Disney out of the deal, which Iger refused. The Apple co-founder served on Disney’s board until his death in 2011. Iger famously wrote in his own memoir, “The Ride of a Lifetime,” that had Jobs lived they would have combined their companies.

Even under CEO Tim Cook, the ties continue, albeit the companies have never been as close as during the Jobs-Iger years. Apple’s latest product, the Vision Pro, a $3,500 mixed-reality headset set to launch next month, will include 150 3D movies, including Disney titles like “Avengers: Endgame,” “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” and “Encanto.”

When asked directly by an analyst in November about whether Disney was open to being acquired by a technology company, Iger said he would not speculate, but noted that people making such predictions should “consider the global regulatory environment.” He added: “It’s not something that we obsess about.”

Most analysts TheWrap spoke to don’t see Apple or any other tech company being interested in acquiring Disney’s sprawling Experiences business, which includes theme parks, cruise ships and resorts. A more likely scenario would see Disney selling off its premium content, including its content library, film studios and maybe Hulu and ESPN — and then selling its TV networks and broadcast stations to a private equity firm or strategic consolidator like Nexstar.

“Disney would be worth more today in a breakup,” said Barton Crockett, an analyst at Rosenblatt Securities.

The parks, which include properties in the United States, Europe and Asia, could be spun off to trade as a separate company, and be granted licensing rights in perpetuity for Disney’s IP, Crockett said.

Csathy, for one, sees another option. He outlined a scenario to TheWrap where Candle Media, the private equity firm founded by Mayer and Staggs, which is backed by Blackstone, would buy Disney in its entirety and then take the company private, build its value and then put it back on the public market a few years later. “It’s the perfect storm because you have the right management team, they know the assets inside and out,” Csathy said.

But a private equity deal for Disney would be several times larger than the biggest P.E. deal ever closed in U.S. history — the $32 billion leveraged buyout of TXU energy in 2007 — and likely take multiple firms to pull off, analysts and the people knowledgeable about Disney’s operations told TheWrap.

“Is there theoretically enough firepower out there” one of the people knowledgeable about Disney’s operations said. “Sure. But I just don’t see it. That is a pretty large equity check and there are a whole bunch of people you would need to bring together.”
Forget the linear assets, I think Disney should sell off 20th Century Studios, Searchlight Pictures, and 20th Television, plus the libraries of those assets (with some exceptions). 😂
 
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/disneylands-vision-includes-2-5-130048217.html

Los Angeles Times

Disneyland's new vision includes up to $2.5-billion investment and a plan to take over city streets

Salvador Hernandez
Sat, Jan 27, 2024, 7:00 AM CST

For decades, Disneyland has been hampered from expanding its Anaheim resort due to streets, highways and businesses that encircle the self-proclaimed "Happiest Place on Earth."

But Disneyland hopes to get around those limits with a plan to spend up to $2.5 billion to reimagine the resort with new attractions, hotels and shops within its current 100-acre footprint — a proposal that would require taking over some surrounding city streets.

The plan already has critics who fear it will create more traffic headaches for neighbors and not provide enough tax revenue for the city.

The plan, presented to the Anaheim City Council Tuesday, would turn the theme park into an even more "immersive" experience by building new areas that would combine theme park attractions, hotels, restaurants and stores in the same spaces, said Disney's Global Development Vice President Rachel Alde during the presentation.

Dubbed DisneylandForward, the plan is not specific about what exactly would be built but asks Anaheim to relax zoning rules and give Disney flexibility to redesign the existing resort, which includes Disneyland, Disney California Adventure Park and the Downtown Disney business district.

"This will allow, for example, theme park attractions alongside or even embedded in hotels and vice versa," Ted White, planning and building director for the city, said during the Tuesday presentation.

Disneyland's footprint is not expected to expand. But Disney, a powerful and dominant broker in Anaheim politics, is also asking the city to hand over some adjacent streets to the company. The move would give Disneyland control over Magic Way, Hotel Way and part of Clementine Street near the resort.

In exchange, according to the plans, Disney is proposing to pay $40 million for the roads, what city planners said is fair market price. That payment would be part of a plan by Disney to spend $90 million on Anaheim street improvements near the theme park, including widening Katella Avenue.

Disney is also asking Anaheim to halt its previous plans to extend Clementine Street and Gene Autry Way.

Disney is offering to give the city tens of millions of dollars more in taxes and fees, earmarked for affordable housing, public parks and road improvements.

In all, Disney expects to invest up to $2.5 billion over the next decade on the project and, in addition, pledges to give the city of Anaheim more than $100 million for street improvements, parks and affordable housing.

The multibillion-dollar investment, Disney officials said, could mean thousands of jobs and millions of dollars of tax revenue for the city in what could be one of the most significant expansions of the storied theme park since it was first built in 1954.

Already, hotel stay-tax revenue is Anaheim's largest source of funding, said Mike Lyster, spokesperson for the city of Anaheim. The city expects to collect $236.3 million from hotel taxes for the last 12 months ending in June, he said.
But the expansion of the theme park, as well as the proposal to privatize public roads, is already raising concerns from some Anaheim residents who worry the plan could mean worse traffic in their community, and the resort's expansion could further increase rents and the cost of living.

"The 'Happiest Place on Earth' has the saddest communities next door," said one resident in Spanish, who identified herself as Maricela during Tuesday's meeting.

She and other residents at a nearby apartment building received notices, saying they had to leave their homes in December, she said, a decision she believes may have been prompted by the resort's expansion plan.

"The expansion hasn't started, and some of us are already being expelled," she said.

Lyster, the city spokesperson, said eviction notices received by apartment building residents are not related to Disney's expansion plans.

"Our thoughts and concerns are with anyone dealing with relocation," he said. "But it appears the owner is renovating the property within their rights with 60-day notice and relocation assistance as required by state law."

He said the city has reached out to residents for assistance in apartment searches.

Some residents have also created an online petition in opposition to the privatizing of streets, with worries that Disney's privatization of the streets will mean the public will no longer have access to them.

"Road closures mean that high-value, taxpayer-owned real estate would be privatized for Disney's profitable use," the petition reads. As of Friday, 230 people have signed the petition.

City officials, however, say two of the roads that could be privatized — Hotel Way and Clementine Street — are now used as entryways into a Disney parking lot. Magic Way, Lyster said, would remain open to vehicles heading into the resort.

Among the planned construction, Disney is looking to expand the theme park across Disneyland Drive to Walnut Street, an area designated strictly for hotels under its original plan with the city.

DisneylandForward is asking the city to give the company more flexibility to overhaul areas that were originally designated for hotels to also include park rides, attractions and retail stores.

Disney also looks to build a new 17,000-space parking garage, as well as three pedestrian bridges to cross over Harbor Boulevard, and two additional bridges over Disneyland Drive.

Under the plan, Disney promises to invest between $1.9 billion to $2.5 billion within the next 10 years. If Disney's investment does not reach the $2.5-billion mark, the company vows to pay an additional $5-million payment to the city.

But the proposal, which has been in the works since 2021, follows an Anaheim City Hall corruption scandal. An internal report found a "potential criminal conspiracy" regarding COVID-19 relief funds and accused former Mayor Harry Sidhu and the former head of the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce of "influence peddling."

The report came after an FBI affidavit accused Sidhu of misdeeds and being part of a self-described "cabal" of public figures and influential figures in the city, including a Disney power broker.

The scandal underscored concerns by some residents and city officials that Disney holds undue influence in Anaheim at a cost to its residents.

"Instead of making this franchise richer, I urge you to really invest in our communities who are struggling to afford each and every day despite holding two or three jobs," resident Yesenia Altamirano said during the Tuesday meeting.

During the meeting, Anaheim Mayor Pro Tem Norma Campos Kurtz, said some residents have already approached her with concerns about privatizing city roads and how it could lead to increased traffic on Walnut Street and Ball Road.

City staff said a plan and funding are already in the works to improve traffic flow at the intersection of the two streets.
City Councilmember Natalie Rubalcava said she'd like Disney to make a greater commitment than the $30 million the company has promised to give the city for affordable housing.

"One of the things I would love to see Disney commit to in perpetuity is some additional funding for housing, whether it's first-time home buyer program or a last-mile funding for affordable housing projects," she said. "I would love to see that in addition."

But Disney has argued that its multibillion-dollar investment will translate into millions of dollars in revenue for the city.
According to a report cited by Disney, every billion dollars invested by Disneyland could generate $253 million in annual economic output for the city, as well as $15 million in tax revenue. According to the city, an average of 25 million visitors come to Anaheim each year, primarily to visit Disneyland.
 

Comcast’s earnings report makes me laugh a little when they talk about theatrical revenue. Yeah it grew by 59% comparing to the previous year quarter but it’s $343M vs $216M from Q4 2022.

The $ maker for the studios is licensing, CMCSA with $2.4B worth of studio licensing revenue.
 
The $ maker for the studios is licensing, CMCSA with $2.4B worth of studio licensing revenue.
There is something to be said about letting everyone else swallow the overhead of putting up a streaming operation, and just "renting" the content out to them.
 
There is something to be said about letting everyone else swallow the overhead of putting up a streaming operation, and just "renting" the content out to them.
Peacock revenue and expenses are included under their Media Segment, not the Studios.
 
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/why-netflix-earnings-victory-may-000000643.html

Why Netflix’s Earnings Victory May Not Be a Bullish Signal for the Streaming Industry | Charts​

Christofer Hamilton
Mon, January 29, 2024 at 6:00 PM CST

Netflix handily beat Wall Street estimates when it reported adding 13 million subscribers to end 2023. This brings the platform’s total number of subscribers to over 260 million globally. The company’s stock price rallied by more than 10% in response to the positive results. However, this might be a sign that Netflix is expanding its moat as the undisputed streaming and entertainment leader in 2024 and beyond, rather than a bullish signal for the streaming business more broadly.

The final quarter of 2023 marked the fourth consecutive quarter of slowed output from streaming services collectively. Each quarter of 2023, the rate of new streaming original series premieres slowed down. In the middle of the year this could be attributed fairly directly to the dual strikes paralyzing Hollywood, but it does not look like there was a quick rebound in the number of new shows in the final months of the year.

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While the broader market may have slowed down its content pipeline, whether as a result of the strikes or in a bid to improve profitability, Netflix bucked the trend and had a greater number of new series premiere in Q4 than in any other quarter this year. Combined with significantly fewer premieres on competitive platforms, Netflix’s increased output translated to a large jump in the share of new series premieres. This increase in new content likely gave Netflix an advantage in attracting subscribers.


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In Q4 2023, Netflix grew its demand share for original series with global and US audiences for the first time in over four years, since before Disney+ and Apple TV+ launched. The wave of new content this quarter helped Netflix reverse the trend of losing U.S. market demand share to the competition. The last time it was able to turn the tide in the U.S. (even if only for a single quarter) was in Q3 2022 when the return of “Stranger Things” gave the platform a massive boost in audience attention.

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In Q4 2023 Netflix managed to gain market demand share without new episodes of “Stranger Things,” “Wednesday” or “The Witcher.” Does this point to a more sustainable shift? A single data point does not make a trend but we will be watching how the rest of this earnings season shapes up for the streaming industry to see if the competition is on a divergent path from Netflix.

Christofer Hamilton is a senior insights analyst at Parrot Analytics, a WrapPRO partner. For more from Parrot Analytics, visit the Data and Analysis Hub.
 
https://cordcuttersnews.com/could-e...ogether-a-disney-activist-investor-thinks-so/

Could ESPN+ and Netflix Be Bundled Together? A Disney Activist Investor Thinks So
By Roger Cheng
January 30, 2024

Activist investor Nelson Peltz is agitating for more changes at Walt Disney. One of them includes the idea of bundling ESPN+ with Netflix together.

That’s according to Bloomberg, which shared details from a white paper published by Peltz, whose Trian Fund Management controls nearly $3 billion in Disney shares. Peltz is seeking a Disney board seat for himself and former Chief Financial Officer Jay Rasulo in a bid to steer the ship in another direction. Disney has rejected the nominees.

A combination between the two services would make sense- at least on paper. Netflix is by far the leader in subscription streaming, and Disney hooking ESPN+ to its larger rival might provide a shot of growth. Netflix, meanwhile, has been keen to expand its presence in sports, and just signed a $5 billion deal to bring the WWE to its service in 2025. A bundle would come as companies like Verizon are increasingly offering packages of different services at a discount, including Netflix and Max.

Peltz’s attempt to shake things up represents just the latest in a myriad of problems for Disney, which has seen some of its biggest franchises from Marvel to its Disney animation flop at the box office, while its shows on Disney+ have failed to resonate like they once had. CEO Bob Iger himself unintentionally stirred up controversy by opening the door to the sale of assets like ABC and ESPN, prompting Allen Media Group, which owns Local Now and The Weather Channel, to make an unsolicited bid for the ABC Network and its cable channels.

Trian is also seeking more details on Disney’s plans to spend $60 billion on its theme parks over the next decade, as well as Iger’s recent cost cuts, according to Bloomberg.

Spokesmen for Trian, Disney, and Netflix weren’t immediately available for comment.

Disney offers a bundle that includes a trio of its own services: Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+. The company is also in the middle of integrating Hulu content into Disney+ with the intent to push a combined app.
 
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/mar...offer-for-all-of-paramount-global/ar-BB1hwfKR

Byron Allen Makes $14 Billion Offer for All of Paramount Global
  • The media mogul offering to pay a 50% premium for voting stock
  • Allen already has interest from investors for assets
By Christopher Palmeri
January 30, 2024 at 9:05 PM CST


(Bloomberg) -- Media mogul Byron Allen has made a $14.3 billion offer to buy all of the outstanding shares of Paramount Global, according to people familiar with his terms.

Allen offered $28.58 each for the voting shares of Paramount, a 50% premium to recent trading, and $21.53 for the non-voting shares, according to the people, who asked to not be identified discussing terms that weren’t public. Including existing debt, the total value of the deal rises to about $30 billion.

His company, Allen Media Group, confirmed that he made an offer in a statement to Bloomberg News. Representatives for Paramount declined to comment.

“This $30 billion offer, which includes debt and equity, is the best solution for all of the Paramount Global shareholders, and the bid should be taken seriously and pursued,” Allen’s company said in the statement.

Paramount — one of the crown jewels in a global media empire controlled by the Redstone family — would be a tough deal to complete. The company generated operating income before depreciation and amortization of $1.87 billion in the first nine months of last year, a 30% decline from the year before. Sales, at $22 billion, were flat. Allen would be borrowing at a time of much higher interest rates than some of his previous acquisitions.

Allen’s plan, according to the people, is to sell the Paramount film studio, real estate and some other intellectual property. He will keep the TV channels, including the Paramount+ streaming service, and run them on a more cost-efficient basis. He has banks and other investors lined up, the people said.

Paramount, the parent of CBS, Nickelodeon and other channels, has been in play for months after independent producer David Ellison began discussing a buyout of the Redstone family’s shares last year.

Allen sent his offer via text message and email to Paramount senior management and board members.

A stand-up comic who branched into producing TV shows, Allen has spent more than $1 billion in recent years to acquire assets such as the Weather Channel and a string of local TV stations from Honolulu to Tucson. If he’s successful in his bid, he would roll his existing TV assets into the new company.

Allen has said he has a better chance of acquiring media assets than many because he’s already won regulatory approvals to own stations. His station group isn’t large enough to trigger limits on ownership, however.

Last year, Allen bid for Paramount’s BET and VHF channels, reiterating his $3.5 billion offer just last month in an email to the board.

In September, he sent Walt Disney Co. Chief Executive Officer Bob Iger a text offering $10 billion, albeit tentatively, for Disney’s flagship ABC broadcast network as well as the FX and National Geographic cable channels. Iger, who had previously suggested he’d considered offers, later said he didn’t want to sell.

Allen has unsuccessfully thrown his hat in the ring at other times to purchase properties ranging from TV station owner Tegna Inc. to the Denver Broncos football team.
 
Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+ will start cracking down on password sharing
https://stocks.apple.com/AKDaYIDFsSx-ONrCQz6c5hg

Disney is banning password sharing on its streaming services, following in the footsteps of competitor Netflix.

In an email to Hulu subscribers on Wednesday, the company said it would start “adding limitations on sharing your account outside of your household” beginning March 14.

Hulu’s user agreement, along with the agreements for Disney+ and ESPN+, explicitly prevent users from impersonating someone else by using their username or password.

“You agree not to impersonate or misrepresent your affiliation with any person or entity, including using another person’s username, password or other account information, or another person’s name or likeness, or provide false details for a parent or guardian,” the agreement terms say.

All three user agreements were last updated on January 25, though it is unclear when the password-sharing language was added to the agreements for Disney+ and ESPN+.

The user agreements say that the company may analyze users’ accounts to ensure they comply with password-sharing rules. Violators of the terms could have their accounts limited or terminated, according to the user agreements.
 
https://deadline.com/2024/01/nelson...irectors-he-wants-out-proxy-fight-1235810556/

Nelson Peltz Names Disney Directors He Wants Ousted In Proxy Fight
By Jill Goldsmith - Co-Business Editor
January 31, 2024 5:44pm PST

Nelson Peltz wants Disney shareholders to elect him and former Disney executive Jay Rasulo to the company’s board, and today he unveiled the two current directors he’d like unseated to make room.

Trian, Peltz’s investment firm, asked shareholds to withhold votes for Maria Elena Lagomasino and Michael Froman and vote for himself and Rasulo instead as he ramps up his campaign against Disney for what he calls poor management that’s resulted in a lagging stock price. The board showdown will come at Disney’s annual meeting this spring — the date hasn’t been announced. Peltz has been slamming the company in shareholder communications and on a website called Restore The Magic.

In an SEC filing today, Trian said Froman “has no experience as a public company director outside of Disney and has spent most of the past 25 years of his career in fields which appear largely unrelated to Disney’s businesses: working as a federal trade representative, a national security advisor, and a financial executive.”

Trian said Lagomasino’s “background in wealth management also appears largely unrelated to Disney’s businesses.”

“Furthermore, as a member of Disney’s Compensation Committee since 2015 and its Chair since 2019, Ms. Lagomasino has overseen a number of misaligned compensation practices, including the award of a massive compensation package to Mr. Iger in connection with the acquisition of Twenty-First Century Fox,and more recently, the approval of a fiscal year 2023 compensation program that we believe fails to align the compensation of Disney executives with the Company’s financial and operational performance.”

It said “she also has a track record of overseeing problematic compensation practices at other companies where she has served on the compensation committee, including as chair.”

“Finally, each of the Opposed Company Nominees is a member of the Company’s Governance and Nominating Committee, where they have overseen poor corporate governance and significant succession issues.”

Disney didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on the filing.

Froman joined the board in 2018 as a top Mastercard executive and former U.S. Trade Representative. “Given his broad experience and extraordinary career spanning both the public and private sectors, Mike brings a unique perspective that will be extremely valuable as we continue to build the future of Disney,” Iger said then.

Trian had targeted Froman a year ago in a similar fight with Disney but one that Peltz dropped before the annual meeting after a newly returned Iger announced a sweeping restructuring.

Lagomasino joined the board in 2015 as CEO and managing partner of financial advisory firm WE Family Offices. She had previously worked at JP Morgan, Chase and Citi. “Ms. Lagomasino is a respected leader in the finance and investment field and also has a wealth of experience with, and keen understanding of, global consumer brands,” said Iger.

According to Disney, Peltz had not contributed “one strategic idea that would benefit shareholders” and that Rasulo had been out of the business for too long and would have an “outdated perspective,” and that since he was passed over for CEO in 2015 he’d have a hard time working constructively for Iger.

https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1345471/000090266424000845/p24-0490prrn14a.htm

https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1345471/000090266424000827/p24-0511dfan14a.htm
 
May not impact the stock, but it could impact Disney’s future investment choices for the parks sector.
You are absolutely correct. I couldn't agree more.

The lawsuits are a great excuse for TWDC to cite when it eliminates investment choices at WDW (the flagship resort) and budget cuts expansions and new attractions / shows. In fact, it's exactly the type of situation that allows TWDC executives to point fingers and blame someone else. There will be shareholders that will appreciate that type of leadership too, I'm sure.

I could easily see Iger or D'Amaro or Vahle look into a camera and say "We would love to spend $30 Billion at Walt Disney World, but we just cannot invest that kind of money if we don't have total control of the local municipality. That control was removed from us and we just cannot justify further investment." The Board will be supportive of that type of talk.

Those folks cannot look into the camera and say we are really cheap, or we made poor choices with D+, or our movies are regularly losing money at the box office, or ESPN lacks the ad revenue to pay for the contracts it signed with professional sports leagues, or any other legitimate reason why a business sector is operating in the red and why CMs are getting laid off, hotels get closed, maintenance is sketchy and improvements drag on for years to help the accountants, etc.
 
You are absolutely correct. I couldn't agree more.

The lawsuits are a great excuse for TWDC to cite when it eliminates investment choices at WDW (the flagship resort) and budget cuts expansions and new attractions / shows. In fact, it's exactly the type of situation that allows TWDC executives to point fingers and blame someone else. There will be shareholders that will appreciate that type of leadership too, I'm sure.
Rumors are out there that CFTOD is acting as a hindrance and delaying permitting for work around WDW. Even on things such as a new quick service snack building.
 












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