Streaming is profitable, the parks just printed record income, and adjusted earnings are compounding double digits — yet DIS trades near 14× forward earnings, in the bottom quarter of its 52-week range. The market is asking one thing: does the streaming-and-parks engine compound faster than linear TV melts — and does a new CEO get the growth re-rating, or the conglomerate discount? Five analyst lenses, three scenarios, four horizons.
Gray line = Disney’s actual price into today ($125 52-week high late ’25 → $92 low mid-’26 → $99.50 now); colored paths = synthesized scenario midpoints forward, probability-weighted (base 45% · bear 30% · bull 25%). Log-linear, mid-year marks. Wall Street 12-month consensus ≈ $130 (range ≈ $95–$164), a “Buy” skew from roughly 30 covering firms.
Those probabilities are a judgment call — so make them yours. Drag to set how likely the bear and bull cases are (base takes the remainder); the blended target below, the dotted line on the chart, and the prob-weighted row of the scenario cards all update live.
The same fundamentals support very different conclusions depending on which framework you trust. Each lens below is a synthesized expert perspective with its own 12-month target.
Streaming crossed into real profit — SVOD operating income +88% to $582M, first double-digit margin quarter — while Hulu-into-Disney+ and the new ESPN direct-to-consumer app build a Netflix-scale bundle. Layer high-single-digit parks growth on top and adjusted EPS compounds low-teens. A profitable streamer plus a record parks engine deserves a growth multiple, not a media discount.
~$10.1B of FY25 free cash flow against a ~$173B cap is a ~5.8% FCF yield, at ~14.5× forward earnings — cheap for a business growing EPS double digits. The $8B buyback retires stock near the lows and the dividend is back. Parks throw off ~$10B of segment operating income a year. Even if streaming only muddles along, the cash math protects the downside.
Linear TV — still a big chunk of profit — is in structural decline, and ESPN’s DTC pivot swaps high-margin affiliate fees for lower-margin streaming dollars. The FCC review of ABC’s licenses is a genuine tail. Parks are cyclical and consumer-sensitive. Strip the tax-boosted GAAP number away and the multiple should keep de-rating.
No competitor can replicate Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar and a century of characters that feed parks, cruises, merchandise and streaming from one flywheel. Pricing power shows up in park per-caps and streaming price hikes that stuck. The Epic Games tie-up and Abu Dhabi park extend the IP. Sum-of-the-parts fair value sits above today; the moat is the catalog, not the quarter.
Two-thirds of profit ultimately rides on the discretionary consumer — park tickets, cruises, ad budgets — into a late-cycle, tariff-clouded backdrop. Overlay leadership transition (Iger → D’Amaro), an activist FCC, and litigation noise, and the range of outcomes widens both ways. Cheap, but the catalysts cut in both directions.
What the sell-side expects over the next year. Bars are sorted low to high; the dashed line is today’s $99.50 — note how every target sits above it.
Sell-side 12-month targets — a selection of the roughly 30 firms covering Disney; the full consensus is ≈ $130, about +31% above today, with a “Buy” skew (~85% Buy/Strong-Buy). Recent moves: JPMorgan and Barclays nudged targets up after the May Q2 beat, Guggenheim raised to $120, and Raymond James trimmed to the low-$110s while keeping Outperform. Even the cautious desks sit above today’s $99.50 — the gap the bull keeps pointing at. Firms, ratings, and targets illustrative and dated to mid-2026.
Synthesized scenario midpoints (mid-year). Returns shown vs. today’s $99.50. These are illustrative frameworks, not predictions with certainty — outcomes hinge on streaming margins, the pace of linear decline, and whether the multiple re-rates.
Where the money actually goes. The bull and bear theses both live in the gap between rising free cash flow and the climbing capex line that funds the parks.
Disney’s cash story in one view: revenue compounds mid-single digits while free cash flow (olive) has roughly doubled since FY2023 — the core of the bull’s “cash machine” thesis, funding an $8B buyback and the dividend. Capex (clay) is inflecting upward as the $60B-over-a-decade parks and cruise build-out ramps — the bear’s worry is that the capex bar keeps climbing and eats into the free cash flow. Total debt (slate) is trending down toward roughly four years of free cash flow. Figures illustrative; FY2026E is an estimate; debt is gross, FCF is the non-GAAP measure.
The price targets aren’t pulled from the air — each is an adjusted-EPS estimate times an exit multiple. Here’s the earnings ladder the scenarios are built on.
Adjusted (non-GAAP) EPS — the clean view; reported GAAP earnings swing on tax items (FY25 GAAP EPS of $6.85 was flattered by a large tax benefit). Gray = reported ($4.97 in FY24, $5.93 in FY25, +19%), olive = estimates that assume double-digit growth easing toward low-teens, consistent with management’s FY26/FY27 guidance. The base case’s ~$11 of FY31 EPS at a ~18× exit multiple ≈ the $200 base-case 5-year target — this is the ladder underneath those prices. Outer years illustrative.
Q2 FY26, year-over-year — read these against a stock in the bottom quarter of its 52-week range.
Every line is green — revenue +7%, segment operating income +4%, adjusted EPS +8%, with streaming profitability compounding far faster off a small base (clay). Yet the stock sits near the bottom of its 52-week range. That gap is the bull’s entire case in one chart: the operating business is improving; the multiple compressed. Streaming operating income shown off a small base; frontier figures illustrative of trend.
The valuation argument compresses into one disagreement: is Disney a re-rating growth story, or a cheap-for-a-reason conglomerate whose legacy media is melting?
Where each risk sits, not just how big it is. The hot upper-right corner — likely and high-impact — is the one that matters; note that Disney’s most serious risks cluster in “possible.”
Cord-cutting keeps eroding a still-large affiliate-and-ad profit pool faster than streaming can backfill it.
Shifting sports to a DTC app swaps premium carriage fees for lower-margin subs; the NFL deal is near-term dilutive.
A politically driven review of ABC’s broadcast licenses escalates into fines, forced divestiture, or lasting reputational damage.
An outright pull of a major broadcast license — low odds, but it would reprice the media segment overnight.
Netflix, Amazon and Apple keep spending; price hikes that fund Disney’s margins could test subscriber elasticity.
The $60B parks build lifts capex and could erode the free cash flow that funds buybacks if returns lag.
A discretionary-spend slowdown hits park attendance, cruise demand and advertising at once.
The Iger-to-D’Amaro handoff adds strategic-direction uncertainty during a pivotal reinvention.
Box-office and franchise results are lumpy; a weak slate dents content licensing and park pull-through.
Hover the dotted terms in the metrics and cards, or scan the desk’s working definitions here.