"Disney revenue in the quarter rose 8% to $23.5 billion, edging past estimates of $23.4 billion"
Good to see the trickle down economy at work again.
Good to see the trickle down economy at work again.
"Disney revenue in the quarter rose 8% to $23.5 billion, edging past estimates of $23.4 billion"
Good to see the trickle down economy at work again.
It depends on the company. I had a considerable number of un-exercised options in Hispanic Broadcasting when it was merged with Univision in 2002. Since Univision was a closely held private corporation, those of us with options (the general managers with a certain period of tenure, and four top corporate executives) were required to exercise all that were vested.The way for employees to share in the trickle down economy is to own stock in their own company. That's what I did.
It depends on the company.
Activist investor Nelson Peltz said this morning that he’s ending his proxy fight againt Disney after CEO Bob Iger announced sweeping restructuring and cost cutting plans yesterday alongside the company’s latest quarterly earnings.
Peltz had amassed a stake of about $1 billion worth of stock and was seeking a seat on Disney’s board at the annual meeting in early April, lobbying heavily in recent weeks to get shareholders’ vote in opposition to the company, which was already running a full slate of directors. He set up a dedicate website, Restore The Magic, that detailed what he saw as the company’s failings. But a string of announcements from Iger yesterday, from slashing billions of dollars in costs to restoring the dividend and creating a new corporate structure all boosted Disney stock and neutralized Peltz, addressing many of his concerns.
If you are talking about the "Return of Iger" in Cinemascope and Dolby, the low was $78 in December and it is $112 today. That is more like 50%, not double. And the cause was industry wide, not related to Iger:We're talking about Disney. So DIS has almost doubled in value since Iger took over. You can bet Iger owns shares of DIS,
But, using 2008 as an example or going back to the even better one of "Friday the 13th" in 1989 which nearly nobody even came close to predicting, there are events that are not predictable. In nearly all the more recent ones since WW II, most investors and investment advisors have thought that we had a "sell off" and that things would snap back quickly.Kenny Rogers said it best: "You got to know when to hold em, know when to fold em."