Disney's hopes for ESPN rest on one critical investment

Disney reported its 2016 fourth-quarter earnings on Thursday, and the report was not good.

The entertainment giant missed analyst expectations on both revenue ($13.1 billion vs $13.5 billion expected) and earnings ($1.10 per share vs $1.16). The fourth quarter was a gloomy one at the Mouse House: revenue for its media division fell 3%; revenue for cable networks fell 6.8%; and even the divisions that rose only rose modestly, with parks and resorts revenue up 1% thanks to Shanghai Disney, and studio revenue up 2% compared to growth of 40% last quarter. Operating income for the studio segment fell 28% compared to the fourth quarter of 2015.

Disney did say it expects modest growth in 2017, an outlook that was encouraging enough to send the stock back up 3% when the market opened on Friday.

But the big story with this company, as has been the case for a few years now, is ESPN. And the story right now is somewhat grim.

In October, ESPN had its worst month ever, losing 621,000 subscribers, according to Nielsen. ESPN disputes that number but has declined to provide data that refutes it. Nielsen is sticking by its figure. Disney said in its earnings press release that in addition to subscriber losses, ESPN saw “lower advertising and affiliate revenue and higher programming and production costs” in the quarter. It also had “fewer impressions.”

That all sounds bad, bad, bad. But there is a silver lining with ESPN right now, something still under-the-radar to the general public but now extremely important to ESPN: BAM Tech.

BAM Tech is the video streaming company spun out from Major League Baseball Advanced Media (MLBAM, or “BAM”) this summer, when Disney bought a third of the company for $1 billion.

BAM Tech was like a secret within a secret, hidden in a buzzing office above Manhattan’s Chelsea Market, but it’s a secret no longer. The company provides back-end streaming technology for everyone from HBO (for its standalone service, HBO Now) to WWE to the PGA Tour to the NHL to Glenn Beck’s digital network TheBlaze. Dan Rayburn, EVP of StreamingMedia.com, told The Verge, “Their technical chops are the best, bar none… They set the standard.”

BAM Tech powers the largest library of streaming video on demand (SVOD) in the world—bigger than Netflix’s, Hulu’s, and Amazon Prime’s, combined. And now Disney owns 33% of it.

The importance of BAM Tech to Disney and ESPN in the near future cannot be overstated.

CEO Bob Iger said so on Disney’s earnings call on Thursday. “The other thing that ESPN has, which we’ve talked about a lot, is the ability to take product out direct to consumer and that’s why we invested in BAM,” he said. “And we think that gives us a really interesting opportunity to create a new product, it gives us an interesting opportunity to create product that is more user-friendly and, therefore, is likely to gain more consumption.”