Disney will keep ESPN rather than spinning it off, according to a report from Business Insider citing people familiar with the matter.
The move is one of the first major calls made under new CEO Josh D’Amaro, who took the top role earlier this year.
DIS stock slipped nearly 1% on Tuesday, closing at $101.47.
The Walt Disney Company, DIS
The decision ends what had been a long-running conversation among investors about whether Disney should separate the sports network from its core business.
For years, ESPN faced pressure as cable TV viewership declined. That led many on Wall Street to question whether it would be better off as a standalone company.
Disney pushed back on that idea even as it began reporting ESPN’s financials separately, a move that gave investors more transparency into the unit’s performance.
Now, the company’s position appears clear: ESPN stays, and sports will be a key part of how Disney grows its streaming business.
A source told Business Insider that Disney believes “the presence of ESPN will help its pivot to streaming.” Live sports is one of the few content categories that consistently drives viewer demand and gives platforms pricing power.
Keeping ESPN in-house means Disney can fold live sports into Disney+, Hulu, and any future sports streaming services under one roof.
That kind of bundling gives Disney a competitive edge as the streaming market gets more crowded and customer loyalty becomes harder to hold.
Rather than selling off ESPN or listing it separately, Disney appears to be treating it as a growth lever rather than a liability.
The Business Insider report does make clear that this is not a permanent, locked-in call.
D’Amaro could revisit a spin-off down the road if market conditions shift or if the company’s strategy changes.
For now though, the plan is to keep ESPN where it is and build around it.
On Wall Street, analysts remain positive on DIS stock. Based on 21 analyst ratings, Disney holds a Strong Buy consensus, with 18 of those being Buys.
The average price target sits at $132.11, which implies roughly 30% upside from the current price of $101.47.
The post Disney (DIS) Stock: ESPN Isn’t Going Anywhere — Here’s Why appeared first on CoinCentral.


