Quick take
- Revenue: $22.46B, essentially flat y/y and a slight miss.
- GAAP EPS: $0.73 vs. $0.25 a year ago; Adjusted EPS: $1.11 (down 3% y/y, but above most forecasts).
- Total segment operating income (Q4): $3.48B, down 5% y/y.
- Streaming (DTC): Revenue +8%; operating income rose to $352M; Disney+ subscribers 132M, combined Disney+ + Hulu at 196M (+12.4M q/q).
- Parks & Experiences: Record Q4 operating income $1.9B (+$219M y/y).
- Capital returns: Board declared $1.50/share dividend (two installments in 2026) and doubling buyback target to $7B for FY26.
- Outlook: Targets double-digit adjusted EPS growth in FY26 and FY27; aiming for ~10% operating margin in Entertainment DTC SVOD in FY26.
What drove the quarter
Streaming profitability is sticking
Direct-to-Consumer posted $352M in operating income (up $99M y/y) on +8% revenue, despite a tougher comp from Hotstar accounting in the prior year. Subscriber momentum accelerated: Disney+ added 3.8M q/q to 132M, and combined Disney+ + Hulu reached 196M (+12.4M q/q). Management continues to push toward ~10% FY26 DTC SVOD operating margin and reiterated double-digit adjusted EPS growth next year.
Parks & Experiences carried the profit load—again
Experiences delivered record Q4 operating income of $1.9B, with strength across Domestic (+9% to $920M) and International (+25% to $375M) parks, plus cruise. For FY26, Disney flagged pre-opening and dry dock costs at Disney Cruise Line but still expects high-single-digit operating-income growth for Experiences, weighted to the back half.
Entertainment and linear TV remain drags
Entertainment segment operating income fell to $691M in Q4, pressured by a much tougher theatrical comparison (prior year featured Inside Out 2 and Deadpool & Wolverine). Linear Networks operating income declined on lower advertising tied to viewership and softer political ads, while the sale of Star India reduced year-over-year contribution.
Capital returns and guidance: clearer, bigger, sooner
Disney is leaning into shareholder returns: a $1.50/share cash dividend payable in two installments in 2026 and a buyback target doubled to $7B for FY26. Management also guided to double-digit adjusted EPS growth in both FY26 and FY27, alongside $24B content investment across Entertainment and Sports next year.
The overhang: distribution dispute clouds linear outlook
On the call and in press coverage, Disney signaled a potentially prolonged fight with YouTube TV over carriage of its networks. With linear already in structural decline, an extended blackout would weigh on advertising and affiliate fees—one reason DIS is trading lower despite an EPS beat.
Key numbers at a glance
- Revenue: $22.46B (flat)
- GAAP EPS: $0.73; Adjusted EPS: $1.11
- Total segment operating income (Q4): $3.48B (-5%)
- DTC operating income: $352M
- Disney+ subs: 132M; Combined Disney+ + Hulu: 196M (+12.4M q/q)
- Parks & Experiences OI (Q4): $1.9B (record)
- Dividend: $1.50/share in two payments (Jan 15 & Jul 22, 2026)
- Buybacks: Target $7B in FY26
- Outlook: Double-digit adjusted EPS growth in FY26 & FY27; DTC SVOD margin ~10% in FY26.
What it means for investors
Today’s print shows real operating leverage in streaming and durable demand in parks, but also underscores that legacy video remains a headwind—and carriage disputes can sting. The capital-return step-up offers support, while guidance implies confidence that the mix shift (DTC + Experiences) can outrun linear erosion. Still, headline risk around distribution and a softer theatrical slate near-term could keep volatility elevated.
FAQ
Did Disney beat or miss expectations?
Disney beat on EPS (adjusted $1.11) but missed on revenue (about $22.46B), a classic “EPS-beat/revenue-miss” setup that often trades on the topline shortfall and any guidance caveats.
Is streaming now sustainably profitable?
DTC delivered $352M in Q4 operating income and management is targeting ~10% SVOD margin in FY26, suggesting improving sustainability as pricing, ad-tier uptake and cost discipline compound.
Why is the stock down if EPS beat?
Because linear TV weakness persisted and the YouTube TV dispute introduces further uncertainty for advertising and affiliate revenue. Markets tend to discount extended distribution fights.
What about Parks & Experiences momentum?
Q4 was record-setting; FY26 will carry some cruise pre-opening and dry dock costs, but management still guides to high-single-digit OI growth for the year, weighted to H2.
Any shareholder sweeteners?
Yes. Dividend lifted to $1.50/share (two payments in 2026) and buyback target doubled to $7B—both meaningful signals of balance-sheet strength and cash-flow confidence.
Conclusion
Bottom line: Disney’s quarter advances the transformation story—streaming profits are real and parks are resilient—but legacy headwinds and carriage risk remain the swing factors for the stock. If management executes on margin targets and the distribution standoff resolves without major damage, the path to double-digit EPS growth in FY26–27 looks credible.
Disclaimer
This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Investing involves risk, including loss of principal. Do your own research and consider consulting a licensed financial professional before making investment decisions.





