Shares of Disney tumbled the most in seven months early in the U.S. cash session after the media company missed quarterly revenue expectations and warned that film-studio expenses will drag on the current quarter, particularly costs tied to major releases.
Disney posted uninspiring fourth-quarter revenues, flat at about $22.5 billion and below the Bloomberg consensus estimate of $22.8 billion. Adjusted EPS beat at $1.11 versus the $1.07 expected. The miss sent shares in New York down 8% in the cash session, the largest intraday decline since April 3. The company also warned about softening across its entertainment unit.
Covid lows…
Here’s the snapshot of the fourth quarter earnings:
Revenue: $22.46B (-0.5% y/y, miss vs. $22.83B est.)
Adjusted EPS: $1.11 (beat vs. $1.07 est.)
Entertainment Segment:
Revenue $10.21B (-5.7% y/y)
Op. income $691M (-35% y/y, miss)
Sports Segment:
Experiences (Parks & Cruises) Segment:
Disney+ subs: 131.6M (+3% q/q, beat)
Domestic: 59.3M International: 72.4M
Hulu subs: 64.1M (+15% q/q, beat)
Average Revenue Per User
Disney+: $8.04 (up q/q, beat)
Hulu SVOD: $12.20 (slightly down)
Hulu Live TV: $100.02 (flat)
Disney’s entertainment unit (streaming, film, and TV) faces several challenges:
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Streaming: Q1 operating income forecast at $375M, below what analysts hoped for.
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TV: Lower political ad spending will drag performance
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Major film releases: Marketing and distribution for Zootopia 2 and Avatar: Fire and Ash will reduce Q1 earnings by $400M
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Film releases: Marketing and distribution for ZoSports: Launch of full ESPN streaming helps, but timing of rights payments limits profit growth.otopia 2 and Avatar: Fire and Ash will reduce Q1 earnings by $400.
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Avatar opens December 19, giving Disney minimal revenue inside the quarter.
Disney expects double-digit earnings growth in fiscal 2026, with most of that growth expected to materialize in the second half.
2026 Outlook:
Here is Goldman TMT specialist Peter Callahan’s first take on Disney earnings:
DIS -6% in the pre (back to last weeks’ levels)… stock had run a bit into print and the moving parts in qtr / guide underscore the debate around complexity relative to the “DD EPS” outlook that investors were debating into results (e.g. bottomline line strong, but moving parts on DTC and Parks) … conf call ongoing (started @ 830am) … notables from print / GIR first take
EBIT missed on opex and DIS’ F1Q26 guidance for DTC SVOD EBIT of $375M missed GS/consensus of $514/$523M, which when combined with DIS’ F2026 $24B cash content spending outlook, suggests that DIS may be investing more in DTC in F2026 than we expected.
Experiences EBIT missed and the F2025 10-K disclosures suggest to us that there was weakness in domestic theme parks with F2025 attendance -1% yoy (implies F4Q25 -4% y/y) and per capita spending +5% (implies F4Q25 +3% y/y). As expected, DIS guided to $120M of dry dock expenses in F2026 (incl. $60M in F1Q26) and $160M in preopening expenses in F2026 (incl. $90M in F1Q26). Although we’re encouraged by the reiterated F2026 outlook for Experiences +HSD% y/y, it was below our elevated expectations.
DIS reiterated its DD% EPS growth guidance for F2026 (not including the benefit from the extra week) and for F2027 with all F2026 segment EBIT growth guidance also reiterated (Entertainment DD%, Experiences HSD%, Sports LSD%).
DIS: chart of Disney vs S&P5000 .. stock has been bouncing around / off the lows on a relative basis with bulls arguing the R/R is attractive from low-100s levels (vs bears argue too many moving parts in a complex macro backdrop)
Additional Wall Street reactions:
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Bloomberg Intelligence: Solid Q4 supports 19% FY2025 EPS growth, but guidance looks conservative; sees catalysts ahead, especially improved streaming margins.
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Citi (Buy, PT $145): Revenue “a bit light,” but weakness is mostly from linear TV, the least important business — seen as encouraging.
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Seaport (Buy, PT $130): Revenue miss and outlook suggest content and marketing spend may exceed prior expectations.
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Vital Knowledge: Calls the report “lackluster” with sales shortfall and inline operating income; Q1 looks pressured, but FY26–27 EPS outlook is encouraging.
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KeyBanc: Says the quarter “appears negative,” with soft DTC operating-income guidance and weakness in content raising concerns.
The question remains: how “woke” will Disney remain in the Trump era, where the Overton Window has clearly shifted center-right and parents are increasingly tired of globalist messaging embedded in children’s shows and cartoon content?
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