BrianLo
Well-Known Member
They will never deliver the 10% mandate at this rate.
There’s an 187% gross tonnage increase in the Disney Cruise line fleet by next December you are overlooking.
They will never deliver the 10% mandate at this rate.
He put cruise and parks in the same basket so that statement would be true, if each segment was held to the mandate it would show how the parks have stagnated. Fulfills his vision that parks are a mature business but keeps the investors happy by comingling the revenue. I never said Bob is not smart and knows how to manipulate the bottom line he wouldn't have lasted this long if he didn't.There’s an 87% gross tonnage increase in the Disney Cruise line fleet by next December you are overlooking.
He put cruise and parks in the same basket so that statement would be true, if each segment was held to the mandate it would show how the parks have stagnated. Fulfills his vision that parks are a mature business but keeps the investors happy by comingling the revenue. I never said Bob is not smart and knows how to manipulate the bottom line he wouldn't have lasted this long if he didn't.
I just finished listening to a summary of the call and it’s pretty impressive numbers across the board, as a Disney fan I hate that their nickel and diming is resulting in increased guest spending and great numbers, it’ll just encourage them to continue to raise prices, while offering less, and adding new micro-transactions wherever they can.
I was genuinely hoping for them to report attendance was down so they’d have no choice but to bring back more entertainment, more perks, better service, etc. No chance of that with these results.
Good news for the investors, bad news for park fans.
Nothing but a few crickets chirping. Disney will be fine. Can be better though .Awfully quiet around here for a Fiscal Year report...
Don’t know of any impacts to Shanghai/Hong Kong offhand, but I wonder if the Paris Olympics had a negative impact on that resort and was part of why the international numbers were down for the Quarter.I honestly was expecting international to pick up domestic slack, but it is the other way around. Epic seems to really just be impacting Universal likely in both a major downside (today) and major upside way (next year).
I would have thought HKDL was still enjoying a bit of a bump from the opening of World of Frozen and the shift back to a 7-day week.Don’t know of any impacts to Shanghai/Hong Kong offhand, but I wonder if the Paris Olympics had a negative impact on that resort and was part of why the international numbers were down for the Quarter.
This is my thought as well. USO will be the loser when all the dust settles.The current data really makes me wonder if Epic would have any negative impact on Disney whatsoever.
I still theorize the biggest loser will be Universal Studios Florida - that park needs love.
I love AK. It might be my favorite park to just walk around and enjoy. It is however, if I needed to cut a park out of a trip, generally the one I would.Which I can’t understand anyone ever skipping AK. It’s the most stunning, best themed park in North America. I’d skip DHS any day.
But I guess it goes to show, people are motivated by rides more than anything else.
I wonder how the Olympics impacted the Paris summer. Did that suck in a lot of your tourism attendees and did it serve a a barrier to international people who might have booked trip to park but just generally stayed away due to rises in prices and craziness due to the demand for Olympics.I would have thought HKDL was still enjoying a bit of a bump from the opening of World of Frozen and the shift back to a 7-day week.
Paris, on the other hand, seems to have had a very quiet summer which would make sense in terms of accounting for at least a significant amount of the decline for international parks. In general, the resort is kind of in an odd place at the moment with the Studios and Disney Village under significant construction as they crawl toward a 2026(!) opening of the expansions to 'Disney Adventure World' ( ).
I love AK too and could spend a full day there.Which I can’t understand anyone ever skipping AK. It’s the most stunning, best themed park in North America. I’d skip DHS any day.
But I guess it goes to show, people are motivated by rides more than anything else.
Occupancy numbers mean nothing when you shutter large portions of your resort hotels.Yeah. Historically Disney has typically been between 80-90%
Just going back off the last 20+ years of annual reports there’s only one instance where they were at a reported 90% hotel occupancy.
2003 - 77%
2004 - 78%
2005 - 83%
2006 - 87%
2007 - 89%
2008 - 89%
2009 - 87%
2010 - 82%
2011 - 82%
2012 - 81%
2013 - 79%
2014 - 83%
2015 - 87%
2016 - 89%
2017 - 88%
2018 - 88%
2019 - 90%
2020 - 43%
2021 - 42%
2022 - 82%
2023 - 85%
2024 - 85%
Good thing those are still counted among the available cash room nights as part of their calculation for occupancy %.Occupancy numbers mean nothing when you shutter large portions of your resort hotels.
So does temporarily out of service mean entire sections of Coronado, PO, AKL, Pop, AOA that never reopened post pandemic?Good thing those are still counted among the available cash room nights as part of their calculation for occupancy %.
“Available hotel room nights include rooms temporarily taken out of service.”
You can go with whatever you want to. Just pointing out how Disney reports it and their data.So does temporarily out of service mean entire sections of Coronado, PO, AKL, Pop, AOA that never reopened post pandemic?
Or is it a room that is out for a day because the shower doesn't work?
I'm betting that it's the latter.
The available room nights includes DVC resorts. The occupancy rate in the report does not differentiate cash room, its counts it as the whole domestically and internationally.You can go with whatever you want to. Just pointing out how Disney reports it and their data.
Fiscal 2019 which had 90% occupancy had 10,030,000 available cash room nights
Fiscal 2024 had 10,193,000 cash room nights.
The addition was Riviera resort and there were additional DVC conversions which any rooms booked by DVC aren’t counted towards cash room nights.
Available hotel room nights are defined as the total number of room nights that are available at our hotels and at DVC properties located at our theme parks and resorts that are not utilized by DVC members.The available room nights includes DVC resorts. The occupancy rate in the report does not differentiate cash room, its counts it as the whole domestically and internationally.
You keep saying this but it’s not nearly as extensive as you seem to think.Occupancy numbers mean nothing when you shutter large portions of your resort hotels.
You keep saying this but it’s not nearly as extensive as you seem to think.
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