Disney Digging DreamWorks?

brisem

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Disney Digging DreamWorks?
By Rick Aristotle Munarriz (TMF Edible)
March 21, 2005

Is Disney (NYSE: DIS), soon to be dissed by Pixar (Nasdaq: PIXR), looking to make a play for DreamWorks Animation (NYSE: DWA) on the rebound? A Business Week column is suggesting as much, but -- sorry -- I just don't see that happening.

First, let's go over why the proposed pairing is even possible. As skeptical as I am of a deal coming to fruition, there is some sound logic behind the thought process. Disney CEO Michael Eisner and DreamWorks Animation chief Jeffrey Katzenberg are sworn enemies. After Katzenberg helped revive Disney's animation studio through the 1990s, he figured he would be the logical choice to be promoted to president at Disney after Frank Wells passed away. Eisner chose his friend Michael Ovitz instead. It was perhaps the most critical mistake during Eisner's tenure. Ovitz leapt from the company a year later with a gaudy golden parachute, while Katzenberg left and made Disney pay dearly by teaming up with David Geffen and Steven Spielberg to form DreamWorks SKG.

How big a mistake was this on Eisner's part? While folks love to point to the tens of millions that the company had to shell out to Ovitz as he fled and Katzenberg as he sued, I prefer to point to DreamWorks Animation's $4.2 billion market cap. That's what the market thinks a studio headed by Katzenberg is worth, and that's what Disney gave up the day Eisner failed to promote Katzenberg.

Now that Eisner -- or, as Katzenberg would say, Lord Farquaad -- will be relinquishing the throne, a host of possibilities opens up. Old flames die hard. Deep down, Katzenberg may still covet the presidency at the family entertainment giant, and incoming chieftain Bob Iger could hand him that title if a favorable deal were struck. It certainly helps that Iger and Katzenberg are friends.

But DreamWorks won't go cheap. After a stellar year with Shark Tale scoring well at the box office while Shrek 2 DVDs sold briskly, making it the highest-grossing domestic animated feature film of all time, the company is trading at roughly 10 times trailing earnings. Profits are likely to dip until Shrek 3 is released, but you still have to think that DreamWorks won't sell itself for anything less than $6 billion -- and even more if Madagascar becomes another winning franchise come May.

Besides, Disney has its own reasons to wait, beyond the fact that it will be months before Iger is officially named CEO. Disney has struck deals with two smaller computer-animation studios, and with November's release of Chicken Little, we will know how it's holding up on its own without Pixar or DreamWorks.

Now that Fox (NYSE: FOX) has fared so well with Robots this month, one can't even argue that acquiring DreamWorks -- or even Pixar -- would help Disney control theatrical animation again. Those days are over. There are too many skilled studios toiling away in the art of art these days.

Iger will need to take bold steps to set himself apart from Eisner's mold while repairing the many frayed relationships that Eisner will be leaving behind. Acquiring DreamWorks Animation would certainly help to accomplish that, but can Disney afford a buyout? I don't think so. Can a collaborative deal be struck? That is also unlikely. Both DreamWorks Animation and Pixar are successful and established, so it's not as if they need Disney's mentoring. The box office indicates that if any mentoring is required, it would be the other way around.

That's why Iger's first move should be reversing one of Eisner's last ones. Eisner all but dismantled Disney's in-house animation studio. Yet DreamWorks Animation and Pixar combine for nearly $10 billion in market cap these days, so there's money to be made if you do it right. That means a commitment to rebuilding the only brand that used to matter in feature animation. Iger will need to act quickly on that front. Focus on crafting original inked films that will become instant classics before the company's brainless wave of direct-to-video sequels dries up that last diluted drop of integrity that Disney once had by the bucketful.
 

MKCP 1985

Well-Known Member
Interesting. If this happened, the definition for "hostile takeover" would have to be re-written to accomodate this scenario, don't you think?
brisem said:
Now that Eisner -- or, as Katzenberg would say, Lord Farquaad . . .
I am probably the last person on Earth who got this joke. Katzenberg calls Eisner "Farquaad" does he? Or did they modify the spelling of what he really calls Eisner and come up with Farquaad? :lookaroun That Shrek design team is a naughty bunch! :zipit:
 

brisem

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
An interesting point if this does happen--What happens to Universal's Shrek's Ride? Since Shrek would be a Disney Property.
 

CTXRover

Well-Known Member
Doubt it will happen. I have more confidence in a Pixar renewal than a Dreamworks buyout. Seems like imaginative thinking on the author's part. Brings up a lot of interesting ideas and possibilities (good and bad), but I don't see this happening (but I've yet to see Iger in action yet...so who knows, right?)
 

Shaman

Well-Known Member
I don't think it will happen...but heck...stranger things have happened...

It would be intresting though.
 

DarkMeasures

New Member
I am sure it can happen but Katzenburg and Iger have been waiting to become CEO of Disney for a long time and I am sure there will be fighting there.

But I would rather have Disney buy out Pixar and see Steve Jobs as Disney''s CEO.

I just hope that Iger does a good job for now.
 

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