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BURBANK, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The annual meeting of shareholders of The Walt Disney Company (NYSE: DIS), including remarks by management regarding the Company, will be available live via webcast at www.disney.com/investors beginning at 1:00 p.m. ET / 10:00 a.m. PT on March 20, 2025. The webcast presentation will be archived. Webcast may include forward-looking information.
DIS slips as travel sector weakens. Strong content but debt concerns persist.
The House of Mouse has buckled below the triple-digit mark. Shares of Walt Disney (DIS -5.03%) tumbled 5% to $97.90 on Tuesday, its first close below $100 in more than four months.
Disney's strong Q1'25 results highlight significant growth in its streaming segment, with operating income surging 31% year-over-year due to subscriber monetization. Despite a 1% subscriber decline in Disney+, the streaming company saw net subscription growth of 0.9M due to Hulu. Disney is seeing improving subscriber monetization and long term trends in revenue, operating income and EBITDA point upwards.
Wall Street has started to worry about a slump in consumer spending—and that would be bad news for the tourism sector.
Disney (DIS) reported earnings 30 days ago. What's next for the stock?
Jim Cramer believes in the magic to be had in shares of The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS).
NEW YORK , March 6, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Kuehn Law, PLLC, a shareholder litigation law firm, is investigating whether certain officers and directors of The Walt Disney Company (NYSE: DIS) breached their fiduciary duties to shareholders. According to a federal securities lawsuit, Insiders at Disney caused the company to misrepresent or fail to disclose that (i) Disney+ was suffering decelerating subscriber growth, losses, and cost overruns; (ii) the true costs incurred in connection with Disney+ had been concealed by Disney executives by debuting certain content intended for Disney+ initially on Disney's legacy distribution channels and then making the shows available on Disney+ thereafter to improperly shift costs out of the Disney+ segment; (iii) Disney had made platform distribution decisions based not on consumer preference, consumer behavior, or the desire to maximize the size of the audience for the content as represented, but based on the desire to hide the full costs of buil
The Walt Disney Co. (DIS) is laying off around 200 employees, or just under 6% of the combined staff at its ABC News Group and Disney Entertainment Networks units, according to a new report from The Wall Street Journal.
The company is set to let go of about 200 people across ABC News and Disney Entertainment Networks.