Jesse Grant/Getty Images for Disney
- Disney has all the means to become the "world's leading content company," writes Steven Cahall, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets.
- The company could spend $30 billion annually on video-streaming content, far outspending Netflix, which plans to spend $8 billion on content this year.
- You can view Disney's current stock price here.
Move over Netflix. Disney is poised to dominate as "arguably the world's leading content company," an RBC Capital Markets analyst says.
With the 21st Century Fox deal awaiting regulatory approval, the tie-up, which includes video-streaming service Hulu, could result in Disney spending roughly $30 billion annually on content, RBC's Steven Cahall estimates. This will put the company "in a league of its own," he said.
By comparison, Netflix plans to spend anywhere from $8 billion on new and original content in 2018, in addition to marketing.
"We conclude that DIS remains among the best in the biz, with a valuable opportunity to match NFLX in streaming, and benefits from the FOXA deal and Hulu," Cahall wrote in a note to investors.
Disney also has the advantage of using its unparalleled customer engagement, as well as its theme parks and cruises, to draw an organic and global audience.
Cahall estimated that the number of subscribers the entertainment company could bring in just from families going on Disney-themed vacations is around 50 million unique households. Moreover, the fan bases of Star Wars and Marvel, composed of adults and children alike, is not factored into that estimate, suggesting Disney could have a much wider subscriber audience.
Aside from Disney's mass appeal to families, Hulu also offers a way onto the screens of a more adult-centric audience. Hulu already has more than 17 million subscribers and Disney could spend $15 billion annually to add to the platform's content offerings and attract a growing audience, Cahall adds.
"The potential scale of DIS DTC [direct-to-consumer] + Hulu is the real deal," Cahall said.
For every 1 million subscribers, Netflix gets $1.3 billion in market cap, Cahall calculates. At this ratio, a couple million Disney and Hulu subscribers would result in a potential 20% upside to the current share price.
Cahall boosted Disney's price target to $135 per share, roughly 30% above its current share level.
Disney's stock was trading at $104.93 per share on Monday. It was down 6.16% for the year.