Wall Street ain't getting paid their dividends *NOW*.I keep seeing people state (as though it were fact) that Disney's streaming model is not viable. But my understanding it that the plan all along was to:
Now, of course, the landscape has changed. Investors are antsy, the stock is down, consumers aren't loyal, the economy is uncertain, etc. etc. So Iger comes back and is going to try to get to profitability more quickly. It sounds like he's going to:
- Spend like crazy with no concern for profitability until fiscal 2024
- Put every piece of content on Disney+ in order to...
- Build a huge subscriber base (which they did)
- Track user data in order to get the insights they need to
- Produce (or purchase) content that resonates with various user bases
- Connect content to products and services
- Print money
Currently, Disney+ costs $11/mo. or $7/mo. w/ads. And according to reports, Disney+ has something like 175M subscribers. Doesn't that come out to something like $2B/month? (Yes, I know some people don't pay full price, but it seems like the targeted ads should to bring in big money.)
- Cut costs (plenty of opportunity to do this!)
- Sell ads (ad-supported tier), and
- Connect to products and services more quickly/aggressively
Disney will still need to address subscriber retention and find the balance between quality and quantity, but how is this not a viable business model? What am I missing?
Wait two more years for profitability? That's a suckers' game for... investors.