Wednesday, October 11, 2023

Report: Hedge Fund Wants Several Seats On Disney Board


Activist investor Nelson Peltz is planning a new board challenge at Walt Disney less than 10 months after the home of Mickey Mouse laid out plans that addressed his criticism.

Reuters reports with Disney's stock price down 30% since then, the 82-year-old billionaire investor is now expected to ask the company for "multiple" board seats, including one for himself, a person familiar with the matter said on Monday.

Peltz's Trian Fund Management owns roughly $2.5 billion, or more than 30 million shares, in Disney, making it one of the entertainment giant's largest investors, said the person, who declined to be identified because the discussions are private.

The Wall Street Journal was first to report Peltz's push for board seats.

New York-based Trian has increased its ownership five-fold since the end of the second quarter when a regulatory filing showed it owning 6.4 million Disney shares.

Trian had pushed for one board seat for Peltz in January, but ended its proxy fight in early February, saying that Peltz would be watching and cheering Disney from the sidelines, after Disney chief Bob Iger laid out plans to fix the company. Disney had rejected Peltz as a possible board member.

Disney has undergone a period of transformation, restructuring the company and streamlining operations to make the business more cost effective. It is on track to exceed the $5 billion in cost savings it promised investors.

The Burbank, California-based entertainment conglomerate has improved the financial performance of its streaming business, which is losing money but on track to turn a profit by the end of fiscal 2024. Disney also is working to improve the quality of its films, focusing on franchises and major releases, whose profits it seeks to maximize by distributing movies both in theaters and in the home.

Iger also has said the company is evaluating options with regard to its television business, as traditional cable and satellite distributors continue to lose subscribers. In addition, Disney is laying plans to make its flagship ESPN sports network available via streaming at some point in the future.

Disney said it would double its investment in its theme parks over the next decade, spending $60 billion as it develops new experiences based on its "Avatar," "Frozen," "Coco" and "Black Panther" film franchises.

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