Moliphino
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2016
- Messages
- 11,955
I enjoyed it and still rewatch it sometimes.Well he may have been right about Captain Marvel, as that movie was terrible.
I enjoyed it and still rewatch it sometimes.Well he may have been right about Captain Marvel, as that movie was terrible.
I've followed this thread for a while and not really commented on anything. I guess I'll throw my $.02 in at this point.Was hoping this thread was different and could stay on topic. Talk about the stock, show some data/trends and talk about the earnings calls but nope.
This is it. Do I think Disney is a growth stock? No. But I feel the stock is under-valued by quite a bit at its current price. The ebbs and flows of the stock market will find the sun shining on $DIS again. It is a profit machine and soon the dividend will be back.I've followed this thread for a while and not really commented on anything. I guess I'll throw my $.02 in at this point.
I started grabbing stock back in 2022 when the stock was around $156 a share. I'm not swimming in money or anything, so it was a small dribble of buying shares. Got a smidge over 14 shares as of today with an average purchase price of $118 and change.
Yes, the stock is down right now...and I keep buying. Why? Every time I buy any stock, I am reducing my average purchase price and theoretically getting closer to break even or a gain. Right now, I'm about $530 away from that point.
Sure, the company has a lot of things going on and lots of areas for improvement. But I'm not down on it in any way. I'll keep buying and get closer to a gain than a loss for me. What do I base this on? Nothing bad lasts forever (strikes will end, Marvel and SW will get their movie acts together, etc.) and I want to be ready for the rebound.
That's the other thing I'm thinking about: the dividend. Whether it comes back this year or next or whatever, I'm still accumulating shares while they're "on sale" which will get me dividends in the future.This is it. Do I think Disney is a growth stock? No. But I feel the stock is under-valued by quite a bit at its current price. The ebbs and flows of the stock market will find the sun shining on $DIS again. It is a profit machine and soon the dividend will be back.
Sure, the company has a lot of things going on and lots of areas for improvement. But I'm not down on it in any way. I'll keep buying and get closer to a gain than a loss for me. What do I base this on? Nothing bad lasts forever (strikes will end, Marvel and SW will get their movie acts together, etc.) and I want to be ready for the rebound.
Big difference, at least based on what I know:Sears was also an American iconAnd I'd argue that Warner Bros was also an American icon, but execs/shareholders let that brand basically evaporate.
There's a lot of value with Disney IP, but they can't afford endless missteps.
Going totally off the top of my head but the dividend was nothing much to get excited about -sure, it’s something but no one is getting rich off a DIS dividend. If you want dividends I could roll a dozen off without blinking. Not being critical …it’s just not a “dividend” stockThat's the other thing I'm thinking about: the dividend. Whether it comes back this year or next or whatever, I'm still accumulating shares while they're "on sale" which will get me dividends in the future.
And I do believe the dividend is coming back. I know they said it will happen this year, so we'll see.
As that article says, "Charter no longer sees video as a means of profitability but rather a tool to drive its core internet connectivity business. And at this point, it seems less concerned about preserving its remaining pay TV bathwater than the 'baby' of mobile and wireline broadband connectivity."Price increases are inevitable in any industry. Quality and service decline is preventable. Mismanagement by corporate directors is long-lasting.
Back to DIS:
"According to Moffett, Charter is setting up a QR code that takes its pay TV customers directly to signup pages for virtual pay TV services Fubo and YouTube TV, which do carry ESPN."
https://www.nexttv.com/news/how-rea...ay-night-football-fans-to-fubo-and-youtube-tv
If this is true, Charter is basically giving up on its paid TV service.
But the question I have is why?
I'm up to four Internet Service Providers (3 fiber, 1 cable) in my neighborhood. This summer, I've watched as my yard has been dug up 3x to run fiber lines and I live in a mid-size suburb in a very rural state. That doesn't even include things like StarLink that are coming.
Serious competition is coming for these cable providers. What's the end goal here? Why would you try to dump on your paid tv subscribers now? I would understand if this was 5 years ago and you were one of two ISPs in town, but that's quickly changing.
So they can drive people to more expensive Internet service plans and not worry much if people drop cable TV service along the way.
Disney will get some revenues from streaming services that carry ESPN, but I bet not as much as the $9/month or whatever it is now that cable companies have been paying for ESPN.
The Disney execs might be breathing a small sigh of relief that with the Hollywood strikes delaying the fall TV season, it isn't a disaster that ABC is off of cable TV in some of the country's largest markets, including NYC and LA. But if production resumes and ABC is still unavailable in those markets, Disney will hurt.
Retail investors are not the people you are targeting with a dividend. It is the institutional investors who have millions of shares. They likely would have held the stock if it paid something out. Without it, it makes no sense to hold if trying to get your clients returns.Going totally off the top of my head but the dividend was nothing much to get excited about -sure, it’s something but no one is getting rich off a DIS dividend. If you want dividends I could roll a dozen off without blinking. Not being critical …it’s just not a “dividend” stock
Which is exactly the inertia that I think gives Charter a big edge in areas where they have a legacy presence, despite other companies coming in.I guess I just consider ISPs to be a commodity at this point. You pick the fastest and/or cheapest in your neighborhood once and don't give much thought to it again until you move.
But ESPN isn't on Hulu+Live, so its cost doesn't tell us anything about what Disney gets from Fubo and YouTube.I don't know what the breakdown is on that, but the Hulu Live TV bundle is as expensive as cable (runs around $80+ per month) and it's going up later this year.
I've seen articles over the past several years about more people getting OTA antennas, but I doubt it's a large number. And many people live where they don't line of sight to nearby TV transmitters. OTA signal quality is outstanding (I have a small indoor antenna I switch to occasionally), but I don't see many people relying on it. And, of course, a lot of big sports games aren't even on broadcast TV stations any more. In fact, I just saw a TV commercial for Amazon Prime's Thursday Night Football airings a few minutes ago; as of this season, they have exclusive rights to those games.That's an interesting take. Although you could just put up a cheap OTA antenna in those markets and easily enjoy Monday Night Football if you didn't have streaming.
I’m worried Charter and Disney will NEVER come to an agreement at all. They’ve laid their ties to rest. Now Charter will take its own cable TV operations off the air.Price increases are inevitable in any industry. Quality and service decline is preventable. Mismanagement by corporate directors is long-lasting.
Back to DIS:
"According to Moffett, Charter is setting up a QR code that takes its pay TV customers directly to signup pages for virtual pay TV services Fubo and YouTube TV, which do carry ESPN."
https://www.nexttv.com/news/how-rea...ay-night-football-fans-to-fubo-and-youtube-tv
If this is true, Charter is basically giving up on its paid TV service.
But the question I have is why?
I'm up to four Internet Service Providers (3 fiber, 1 cable) in my neighborhood. This summer, I've watched as my yard has been dug up 3x to run fiber lines and I live in a mid-size suburb in a very rural state. That doesn't even include things like StarLink that are coming.
Serious competition is coming for these cable providers. What's the end goal here? Why would you try to dump on your paid tv subscribers now? I would understand if this was 5 years ago and you were one of two ISPs in town, but that's quickly changing.