Activist investor Dan Loeb is agitating for sweeping changes at Disney, including a shake-up of its board, a spin-off of the sports television network ESPN and aggressive cost-cutting after rebuilding a stake in the entertainment and media group.
The head of the Third Point hedge fund also recommended that the company take full control of the streaming service Hulu by buying a minority stake from rival Comcast. Shares of Disney rose 2.8 per cent to $125 (€123) on Monday.
Disney’s “costs are among the highest in the industry”, Mr Loeb wrote in a letter to Bob Chapek, the company’s chief executive, adding that “a strong case can be made that the ESPN business should be spun off to shareholders” to reduce Disney’s debt. ESPN broadcasts live sports in the US including games of the National Football League, National Basketball Association and Big League Baseball.
Disney has invested heavily to build out its video streaming service Disney Plus, and is expected to spend roughly $30 billion on content this year. Last week Mr Chapek said Disney remained on track to reach its goal of achieving profitability at Disney Plus by 2024 as the company reported quarterly net profit of $1.4 billion.
Ballroom Blitz review: Adam Clayton’s celebration of Irish showbands hints at the burden of being in U2
Our Little Secret: Awkward! Lindsay Lohan’s Christmas flick may as well be AI generated
Edwardian three-bed with potential to extend in Sandymount for €1.295m
‘My wife, who I love and adore, has emotionally abandoned our relationship’
Mr Loeb said he did not mean to single out individuals to be removed from Disney’s 11-member board, but he did say that Third Point has identified candidates who “would make essential contributions” to the company. “We believe there are gaps in talent and experience as a group that must be addressed,” the letter said.
Disney said it welcomes “the views of all our investors” but pushed back against Mr Loeb’s criticism of the board. “Our Independent and experienced board has significant expertise in branded, consumer-facing and technology businesses as well as talent-driven enterprises,” the company said. “The board has also benefited from continuous refreshment with an average tenure of four years.”
Third Point previously took a position in Disney in the second quarter of 2020, not long after Disney Plus was launched as a rival to Netflix, and then sold it off as the stock rose. Shares in Disney increased 70 per cent from May 2020 until August 2021, when Third Point first disclosed the previous position.
Disney’s stock has declined 21 per cent so far this year, though it rose by 30 per cent over the past month before Loeb disclosed his new stake on Monday.
The move by the billionaire hedge fund manager appeared to be friendly, as he praised the company’s shift to streaming and its recent third-quarter results, which topped Wall Street estimates.
“Disney’s complex transformation is succeeding and our confidence in Disney’s current trajectory is such that we have, in recent weeks, repurchased a significant stake in the company,” he wrote.
Some Wall Street analysts have been clamouring for some of the changes Mr Loeb is recommending, including a potential ESPN spin-off and an early resolution of the Hulu ownership structure.
Disney owns 67 per cent of Hulu. Mr Loeb urged the company to buy Comcast’s 33 per cent stake in the streaming services before 2024, when a contract enables Comcast to force Disney to buy it. Analysts estimate Disney may have to pay $15-$20 billion for the stake.
Despite his tone with Disney, Mr Loeb is best known for being an aggressive investor who uses tough tactics including harshly-worded public attacks against management teams to achieve his demands.
Third Point’s main fund has taken a hit in the first part of the year as it underperformed several rivals. In the first three months of 2022, Mr Loeb sold off chunks of big stakes in tech companies including Microsoft, Dell and fintech group Intuit. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2022