Disney (DIS) secured a $9.25B credit facility; Experiences generated $10.006B quarterly revenue; streaming hit 196M subscribers with income up 72%; free cash flow fell to −$2.278B; stock down 9.43% YTD vs S&P 500 up 0.47%.
Parks chief Josh D’Amaro takes over as CEO from Bob Iger amid strong Experiences and streaming performance but collapsing free cash flow.
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Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS) is at an inflection point. With Bob Iger stepping aside and parks chief Josh D’Amaro set to take the helm, combined with a $9.25 billion credit facility secured on March 3, 2026, investors face a genuine fork in the road. Here is what each side of the argument looks like for long-term holders.
The Disney Experiences segment just delivered record quarterly revenue of $10.006 billion, and D’Amaro built that machine. The segment generated $9.99 billion in full-year operating income for FY2025, making it the company’s most profitable division. A CEO whose fingerprints are all over that result is not a liability.
Streaming is finally working. Disney+ and Hulu combined reached an estimated 196 million subscribers, and SVOD operating income jumped 72% to $450 million in Q1 FY2026 with an 8.4% margin. Management is guiding toward a 10% SVOD operating margin for the full year, with a spring 2026 content slate anchored by The Mandalorian & Grogu and The Devil Wears Prada 2 providing real subscriber retention fuel.
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Valuation looks compelling. The consensus target sits at $130.30 against a current price near $103, and 26 of 31 analysts rate the stock a Buy or Strong Buy. At a trailing P/E of roughly 15x, Disney trades at a meaningful discount to its historical multiples. The $9.25 billion credit deal signals institutional lenders see a stable balance sheet, and management has committed to $7 billion in share repurchases in FY2026 alongside double-digit adjusted EPS growth guidance for both FY2026 and FY2027.
Free cash flow tells a different story. In Q1 FY2026, operating cash flow collapsed 77% to $735 million and free cash flow turned deeply negative at −$2.278 billion. Management attributed the swing largely to accelerated tax payments tied to California wildfire disaster relief, but capital expenditures are also climbing, rising 22% year over year to $3.013 billion in the quarter alone. With $9 billion in capex planned for the full year, cash generation will need to recover sharply.
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‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source finance.yahoo.com ’













