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Walt Disney Company (DIS) - Stock Report

Recherche informative — ne constitue pas un conseil en investissement.Avertissement complet

Recherche informative — ne constitue pas un conseil en investissement. Générée en partie par IA et peut contenir des erreurs ; ce n'est pas une recommandation personnalisée, une sollicitation ni une offre. ReasyPort n'est pas une entreprise d'investissement agréée ou réglementée. Les données de marché peuvent être différées ou inexactes. Le capital est à risque et les performances passées ne préjugent pas des résultats futurs — faites vos propres recherches et consultez un conseiller agréé.

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DIS

Walt Disney Company

ReasyPort View: Demanding — Streaming And Parks Cash Proof Required

Summary

Disney is a high-quality IP monetization system, not a broken business, but the $103.89 market price at the 18 June 2026 close sits above the full DCF range: selected fair value $79.79, upside marker $95.76 and downside marker $63.97. The price is about 30% above the selected case and about 8% above the upside marker, so this is a price-discipline conclusion rather than a short thesis: the multiples (~13x segment operating income, ~5.6% free-cash-flow yield) are not extreme, but the price already capitalizes durable streaming margin, healthier parks cash conversion and disciplined buybacks before those proofs have compounded through a full cycle.

Latest Proof Snapshot

Fiscal Q2 2026 gave investors better evidence than the stale FY2025-only snapshot: revenue rose 7% to $25.168 bn, income before taxes rose 9% to $3.367 bn, and total segment operating income rose 4% to $4.603 bn. Reported diluted EPS fell to $1.27 from $1.81, while adjusted EPS rose 8% to $1.57; the adjusted bridge includes Q2 FY2026 EPS-adjustment items rather than recurring segment cash.

Latest Proof Snapshot (cont.)

Management guided to fiscal 2026 adjusted EPS growth of about 12% excluding the 53rd week and about 16% including it, at least $8 bn of repurchases, Q3 total segment operating income of about $5.3 bn and double-digit fiscal 2027 adjusted EPS growth excluding the 53rd-week lap. Entertainment SVOD operating income increased to $582 m from $310 m and reached a 10.6% margin, while Experiences revenue and operating income set fiscal second-quarter records at $9.487 bn and $2.615 bn.

Key Macro Issue

The quarter is encouraging, but it should not be annualized mechanically because part of the SVOD rebound comes from a small prior-year profit base and six-month total segment operating income remained down 3%. Cash is mixed: Q2 company-reported free cash flow improved to $4.941 bn, but first-half company-reported free cash flow of $2.663 bn fell short of $6.837 bn of dividends and repurchases. The key macro issue is not consumer spending or sports-rights inflation in isolation, but whether guest spending, advertising yield and ESPN monetization pass through into retained post-capex free cash flow: if they do, Disney can grow into a higher cash base; if they do not, the same brand strength can coexist with tighter coverage and a demanding valuation.

Business Overview

What The Company Actually Does

Disney is a global intellectual-property monetization system. Entertainment creates and acquires film, episodic and general entertainment franchises; Sports packages live rights and ESPN's direct-to-consumer product; Experiences converts the same brands into parks, resorts, cruises and consumer-products economics. The value stack is not a simple media catalog: content builds awareness, ESPN monetizes scarce live sports attention, and Experiences turns affinity into physical spend and licensing revenue.

How The Business Is Organized

The three segments have different economic jobs. Entertainment is the transition engine because Disney+ and Hulu must replace part of the cash contribution that legacy linear networks lose to cord-cutting. Sports is the premium attention engine, but rights fees and product launches absorb cash before the ESPN direct-to-consumer model can show its mature margin. Experiences is the cash-and-capex engine, using parks, resorts, cruise ships and consumer products to monetize IP with physical capacity constraints and high guest-spend sensitivity.

What Management Appears To Be Prioritizing

Management is trying to raise returns without starving the franchise. The operating focus is streaming profitability, ESPN's direct-to-consumer migration, parks capacity, cruise expansion and disciplined marketing spend. The capital-allocation test is whether those priorities lift post-capex cash while repurchases occur above the full valuation range.

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