Disney’s ESPN Strategy Will Have a Major Impact on Disney Stock

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Sports network ESPN has been something of a double-edged sword for Walt Disney (NYSE:DIS), as well as the owners of Disney stock, for a long time. On a per-subscriber basis, it generates the most revenue in the sector. As a result however, cord cutting has taken the biggest toll on the media giant.

Disney (DIS) Stock Will Be Greatly Impacted by Disney's ESPN Strategy
Disney (DIS) Stock Will Be Greatly Impacted by Disney's ESPN Strategy

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And there’s no sign that the cord-cutting movement is going to slow down anytime soon. In fact, it appears to be accelerating.

That’s a key part of the reason Disney has launched ESPN,  a streaming app that delivers sports programming. It’s also part of the reason Disney now owns the bulk of Hulu, and is planning to launch the entertainment streaming channel dubbed Disney+ in November.

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Of the three, though, it’s the ESPN+ piece of the company’s streaming offering that could prove the toughest for DIS, as it will eventually pit the company against the television providers who are also its de facto partners. It may boil down to a matter of who flinches first.

Fighting an Oversized Headwind

Disney doesn’t provide a detailed revenue breakdown of the components of its “Media Networks” division. (Accounting for about one-third of Disney’s revenue, Media Networks is its largest unit.)  But some estimates suggest ESPN accounts for about 50% of the unit’s top line. A little math work leads to a rough assumption that ESPN makes up 15% of Disney’s total revenue.

Cord cutting has made that piece of Disney’s revenue pie tough to defend, though.

The majority of cable packages include most of Disney’s channels. Nearly all cable providers offer ESPN to their subscribers, though, even if some cable providers leave out a number of the company’s other channels.

As of 2017, cable providers were paying Disney an estimated $7.21 per subscriber per month for ESPN. With ESPN2 and ESPNU, the monthly total rose above $9.00. That’s pretty lucrative for DIS, and that revenue stream has been a key supporter of Disney stock.

That’s why cord-cutting mania has proven so problematic for Disney stock and so worrisome for the owners of DIS stock. As of late last year, ESPN had lost approximately 14 million subscribers in just seven years, and eMarketer anticipates that the number of customers canceling their cable package will grow by another 19.2% this year.

The solution, of course, is to offer those defectors an alternative. Even at a monthly price of $5.00, Disney can collect something from ESPN+ customers who are no longer cable subscribers. Even though $9 per month is way below $5 per month, something is better than nothing.