Disney's Boardroom Battle: Explained

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Disney, the most iconic of brands, has faced an uncharacteristically rocky few years. It’s been punctuated by a high-profile boardroom battle, but why did it happen in the first place?

The back-and-forth can be traced back to the contrversial tenure of Bob Chapek - who first took over as CEO in late February 2020. What ensued is media history: the disruption caused by the Covid pandemic, a controversial reorganization plan, a highly publicized battle over the release strategy for Marvel's "Black Widow" *and* a damaging backlash over Florida’s so-called ‘don’t say gay' law.

To say this was the beginning of a tumultuous period for Disney would be an understatement.

Fast-forward to August 2022 and shareholder Third Point, a hedge fund run by Billionaire investor Daniel Loeb, disclosed a stake of around a billion dollars in the house of mouse. It was something of a u-turn for the activist investor, after having exited its position months earlier. Third Point wanted changes in the boardroom, for Disney to buy the rest of Hulu and for the company to spin off ESPN. Loeb got his change in the boardroom, but that wasn’t the big story of 2022.

In November, a shock return. Bob Iger was reinstalled at the helm of a business he ran for years with great success. Top of the to-do list: get a handle on costs, and make the company's streaming business profitable. At the time, Disney shares were cratering, and had recently scraped 21 year lows. At the same time, reports swirled that another activist investor with deep pockets was circling the theme park giant.

At the beginning of 2023 it all became official. Nelson Peltz, a billionaire activist and head of Trian Fund Management, wanted to join its board and make some immediate changes. He wanted the focus back on creativity. Disney denied him a seat, saying he lacked the quote “skills and experience” needed, but changes would soon come

In February 2023, Disney, now firmly under Iger’s leadership, announced major job cuts and over 5 billion dollars in cost savings. Peltz laid down his sword, but he wasn’t done for good. The activist reignited the battle in October 2023 saying Disney's shares were undervalued. They were still trading below $100 a piece, and had been for some time. His stake in the company had increased - up to around $3 billion dollars worth of shares - and so had his vigor for battle.

At the beginning of 2024 he made it official - again. Peltz’s Trian Fund Management formally nominated Peltz as well as former Disney CFO Jay Rasulo to the board. Their mission? A successful CEO succession plan and "Netflix-like margins”. But not all activists are taking on the magic kingdom, of course: hedge funds ValueAct Capital and Blackwells Capital have stood behind Iger. So where do we go from here?