Disney sees outlays for parks down, attendance up
February 12, 2004 1:48:00 PM ET
LOS ANGELES, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Attendance at Walt Disney Co.'s (DIS) theme parks is improving and the company intends to limit investment in the destinations to improve profitability, the president of its parks and resorts division said on Thursday.
In a presentation to financial analysts at a company conference in Orlando, Florida, Jay Rasulo said travel trends were working in the company's favor.
"The strong growth in attendance we've seen in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2003 and the first quarter of fiscal year 2004 give us some confidence that volumes will continue to recover," Rasulo said.
Since cable operator Comcast Corp. (CMCSA) launched an unsolicited $50 billion takeover bid for Disney on Wednesday, speculation has swirled about whether Comcast would be interested in holding on to the parks on a long-term basis. Rasulo did not address the Comcast offer.
He did, however, address the economics of running the parks, noting that the company thought it could increase attendance while reining in development costs.
"We fundamentally believe that we can continue to drive and grow the business to our existing properties, which still (have) substantial growth opportunities ... with significantly below $1 billion a year in capital investment," he said. "We expect to keep capital spending in our domestic parks meaningfully below $1 billion a year for the foreseeable future."
Employee benefits, an area previously identified by the company as a source of increasing costs, remained an issue for the company, Rasulo said.
"The employee benefit challenge is significantly dampening our margins in the near-term," he said. REUTERS
© 2004 Reuters
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Looks like investments in the park will be going down, ,not good news at all!!
Your thoughts
February 12, 2004 1:48:00 PM ET
LOS ANGELES, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Attendance at Walt Disney Co.'s (DIS) theme parks is improving and the company intends to limit investment in the destinations to improve profitability, the president of its parks and resorts division said on Thursday.
In a presentation to financial analysts at a company conference in Orlando, Florida, Jay Rasulo said travel trends were working in the company's favor.
"The strong growth in attendance we've seen in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2003 and the first quarter of fiscal year 2004 give us some confidence that volumes will continue to recover," Rasulo said.
Since cable operator Comcast Corp. (CMCSA) launched an unsolicited $50 billion takeover bid for Disney on Wednesday, speculation has swirled about whether Comcast would be interested in holding on to the parks on a long-term basis. Rasulo did not address the Comcast offer.
He did, however, address the economics of running the parks, noting that the company thought it could increase attendance while reining in development costs.
"We fundamentally believe that we can continue to drive and grow the business to our existing properties, which still (have) substantial growth opportunities ... with significantly below $1 billion a year in capital investment," he said. "We expect to keep capital spending in our domestic parks meaningfully below $1 billion a year for the foreseeable future."
Employee benefits, an area previously identified by the company as a source of increasing costs, remained an issue for the company, Rasulo said.
"The employee benefit challenge is significantly dampening our margins in the near-term," he said. REUTERS
© 2004 Reuters
Back to Recent News
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Looks like investments in the park will be going down, ,not good news at all!!
Your thoughts