It was a prescient statement. Just six months later, Disney would announce the acquisition of Lucasfilm for $4.05 billion, bringing Star Wars into the fold. The seeds for the modern Disney empire were sown in the fertile ground of that record-breaking spring. Disclaimer: This article is a retrospective analysis based on historical financial disclosures and press releases from The Walt Disney Company dated May 8, 2012.
However, the Interactive division (video games) remained a pain point, reporting an operating loss of $36 million—an improvement over the $88 million loss in Q2 2011, but still a drag on the bottom line. Following the results, Disney raised its earnings guidance for the full fiscal year 2012, citing confidence in the long theatrical run of The Avengers and the upcoming release of Brave (Pixar) and The Odd Life of Timothy Green . may 8, 2012 the walt disney company investor relations news
BURBANK, Calif. – May 8, 2012 – The Walt Disney Company today released its second-quarter financial results for fiscal 2012, delivering a performance that exceeded Wall Street expectations and sent a clear signal to investors: the magic was not only back but operating at record capacity. It was a prescient statement
As Bob Iger concluded the call that day: "We are in a creative golden age. The combination of our brands—Pixar, Marvel, Lucasfilm (not yet acquired), and Disney Animation—gives us an unrivaled arsenal of storytelling for the next decade." Disclaimer: This article is a retrospective analysis based
The primary catalyst? Marvel’s The Avengers , which had been released globally just four days prior to the earnings call (on May 4, 2012). At the time of the report, the film had already shattered opening weekend records, grossing over $640 million worldwide in less than a week.
CFO Jay Rasulo emphasized the company's commitment to capital returns, noting that Disney had already repurchased $1.6 billion of its own stock in the first half of the fiscal year. Disney shares (DIS) rose 2.3% in after-hours trading following the release, pushing the stock toward a 52-week high. Analysts at Goldman Sachs and Barclays immediately upgraded their price targets, arguing that the studio's volatility had been mitigated by the Marvel acquisition. Looking Back: The Significance of May 8, 2012 In retrospect, the May 8, 2012 investor call was a watershed moment. It marked the exact moment Wall Street realized that Disney’s $4 billion purchase of Marvel in 2009 was not merely a toy deal—it was a cinematic goldmine.
"I think 'The Avengers' is a perfect example of how we’ve managed the Marvel brand," Iger told analysts. "By integrating them into our global distribution and marketing machine while preserving the creative spirit that made them great, we have unlocked staggering value."