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Disney Stock Has a Lot to Prove This Week

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Analysts see Disney's revenue rising just 5% on flat earnings growth in this week's fiscal second-quarter report.

  • Despite a rough three months for its theatrical releases and recent theme park weakness, the profitable turn of its streaming business could result in a bottom-line surprise.

  • With Disney shares down almost 20% since its last financial update, it may not take much to generate a positive market reaction.

Investors aren't expecting to be blown away when Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS) pulls back the curtain to reveal its latest financial results this week. The media giant will announce its fiscal second-quarter numbers on Wednesday morning, hosting an earnings call to discuss its fresh financials an hour before the market opens.

Disney shares have declined 19% since the company's last earnings report three months ago. The stock initially ticked higher after Disney posted better-than-expected results, coming within pennies of hitting a 10-month high the morning of the earnings release. But that rally didn't last. Can it move higher this week -- and this time stick to any initial upticks? Let's size up what Disney and its shareholders are facing heading into this critical update.

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Lie low and stitch

Analysts are holding out for $23.1 billion in revenue, 5% above where Disney landed for fiscal second quarter last year. That matches the 5% top-line growth that Disney investors got out of the House of Mouse back in February, but the real head-turner in that financial update was the bottom line.

Segment operating income rose 31% three months ago, and adjusted earnings soared 44%. Expectations are different now. Analysts see Disney's profit checking in flat with the $1.21 a share it posted a year earlier. This is the first time since Disney's streaming business turned profitable a year ago that the top line is expected to outpace the bottom line. Disney has consistently been cranking out quarterly earnings beats, but it's going to need a big surprise to prevent this from being the first quarter that finds adjusted net margin contracting.

There's no shortage of signs pointing to sluggish revenue growth. Comcast (NASDAQ: CMCSA) already reported its results for the first three months of the year, and it offers a similar portfolio of theme parks, media networks, and theatrical content as Disney. Its theme parks segment experienced a 5% decline in revenue, with a hefty 32% drop in adjusted earnings before interest taxes and depreciation. Its media and studio businesses saw their margins widen on meager 1% to 3% growth, but its ad revenue took a 7% year-over-year hit.