raidermatt
Be water, my friend.
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2000
- Messages
- 6,856
We agree that most don't care how or why things happen, but I'm also pointing out that how/why they happen has a direct impact on the quality of products Disney produces. Disney's customers most certainly care about that, and they have been seeing less consistency in this as time has gone buy.I could be wrong, but I think we're argueing the same point. Those of us that do post on boards like this do care about what is happening within Disney. The other 99% don't which has allowed ME to make wholesale changes within the company - its entire business philosophy - without so much as a peep of outcry until the last couple of years.
Disney used to "out-content" their rivals. Now they increasingly rely on outside companies to supply the content, and then try to "out-distribute" and "out-market" their rivals, where its much harder to differentiate yourself. The Street may like the idea of spending less money up-front, but if the results on the backend don't measure up, they won't cut you any slack.
Which brings us back to the stock. Any chart longer than 3 years shows Disney falling short of both the S&P and DJIA. Disney had a decent run-up in the last couple of years, but even that didn't leave them much better off than the S&P, and the DJIA has been closing the gap, despite a few positive brokerage comments.
But debating where the stock is going is almost as pointless as debating who will win the Super Bowl in 5 years. What was said was that the investors were dictating policy to Disney, and Iger had little choice but to go along with it. The point I'm making is that Disney has been doing this for years now, yet the investors have not responded. So perhaps decisions should be made based on what will actually be the best strategic direction for the company rather than what some Wall Street number crunchers think is best.
Now, if Disney's management team thinks that cutting loose its creative soul is the best strategic direction, and apparently they do given how they've handled animation and Imagineering, then I submit that this management team has not been the best team for Disney, and isn't the best team for the future. Not that anyone in any position of power gives a rat's patoot what I think, but then again, at least we're all in the same boat on that front.
I don't blame the guys/gals on Wall Street, though. They're going to stick with what they know, and if they knew how to create entertainment, they probably would have chosen a different career path.You would think someone on Wall Street would notice that this stagegy stopped reaping benefits years ago, but apparently they haven't.
Its up to Disney's management team to tell Wall Street what will work. True, if its not exactly what the Street was expecting, then they will be skeptical. But what's going to happen that hasn't already? The stock will stagnate "more"?
Of course, the pressure will then be on Disney to deliver results, which is all the Street cares about, but how is that any different than now?