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Top Disney execs including Bob Iger and CEO Bob Chapek take pay cuts as the company risks losing billions in revenue

Apr 2, 2020, 02:43 IST
Jeff Kravitz / Contributor/Getty ImagesBob Iger.
  • Top Disney executives, including Bob Iger and CEO Bob Chapek, are taking pay cuts as the coronavirus pandemic continues to ravage the media giant's stock and impede its operations globally.
  • Iger will forgo his full salary, the company announced on Monday in a memo to employees.
  • Iger's base salary was $3 million last fiscal year, and he made $47.5 million in total compensation.
  • Chapek, who became CEO in February, will take a 50% salary cut.
  • The cost-saving measures will start on April 5 and remain "until we foresee a substantive recovery in our business," Chapek said.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Disney's top executives, including executive chairman Bob Iger and chief executive Bob Chapek, are taking pay cuts as the coronavirus pandemic continues to ravage the media giant's stock and impede its operations globally.

The pay cuts will start on April 5 and remain in place "until we foresee a substantive recovery in our business," Chapek wrote in the memo to Disney employees that was reported by multiple outlets on Monday.

Iger, who has been criticized by Disney heiress Abigail Disney in the past for his "insane" pay, is forgoing his full salary. His base salary was $3 million last fiscal year, and he made $47.5 million in total compensation including stock options and awards and bonuses.

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Chapek, who became CEO in February, will reduce his salary by half.

Other execs will take pay cuts too:

  • Vice president salaries will be reduced by 20%
  • Senior vice president salaries by 25%
  • Executive vice president salaries by 30%

The cost-savings measure comes after Disney lost nearly one-third of its market value in the past month, as the coronavirus pandemic dragged on the stock market as a whole.

Disney is one of media companies hit hardest by the pandemic, which impeded its operations around the world. The company was forced to shutter its theme-park operations globally, including closing its profitable US parks and hotels indefinitely. Its film releases have been delayed, and TV and movie productions have been halted. The loss of live sports has also hamstrung its cable network ESPN.

"The pandemic is also having a devastating impact on the global and US economies, and it's hitting businesses like ours particularly hard," Chapek wrote in the memo, published by Deadline. "In a matter of weeks, we've experienced widespread disruption across our company."

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Disney has said it will continue paying the cast members who work at its domestic parks through April 18.

For more about how the coronavirus pandemic is impacting media, see our coverage on BI Prime:

Do you have a personal experience with the coronavirus you'd like to share? Or a tip on how your town or community is handling the pandemic? Please email covidtips@businessinsider.com and tell us your story.

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