Disney plans to cut 7,000 jobs and reward shareholders
Feb 09, 2023
California [US], February 9 Disney said it would cut 7,000 jobs from its global workforce, part of a multibillion-dollar cost-cutting initiative aimed at streamlining the company's operations in a period of media industry turmoil, CNN Business reported.
Disney had about 220,000 workers as of October 1, of which approximately 166,000 were employed in the US. A cut of 7,000 jobs represents about 3 per cent of its global workforce.
"While this is necessary to address the challenges we're facing today, I do not make this decision lightly," said CEO Bob Iger, who returned to lead the company in November when the board fired Bob Chapek as the company's leader. "I have enormous respect and appreciation for the talent and dedication of our employees worldwide, and I'm mindful of the personal impact of these changes."
Iger also took steps to reward shareholders, while Disney employees will feel pain from the job cut announcement, CNN Business report said, adding that the company had suspended its dividend payments during the pandemic. Iger announced it expects that to return.
"Now that the pandemic impacts to our business are largely behind us, we intend to ask the board to approve the reinstatement of a dividend by the end of the calendar year," he said. "Our cost-cutting initiatives will make this possible. And while initially, it will be a modest dividend, we hope to build upon it over time."
The job cuts come as part of a cost-cutting effort also announced Wednesday. According to CNN Business, Iger said the company is aiming for USD 5.5 billion of cost savings across the company, with USD 2.5 billion of that coming from annual savings in "non-content" operations. Content operations refer to business units such as movies and television shows.
According to CNN Business, the company said 50 per cent of the cost savings would come from marketing expenses, 30 per cent from labour savings and 20 per cent of the cost savings would come from less spending on technology, procurement and other expenses. Since Disney is a major advertiser, a USD 1 billion reduction in annual marketing expenditures signals more difficulties ahead for other media, as well as tech companies.
The sweeping job cuts were announced by Iger after the company released better-than-expected financial results for the fourth quarter of 2022. According to CNN Business, Disney revenue in the quarter rose 8 per cent to USD 23.5 billion, edging past estimates of USD 23.4 billion from analysts surveyed by Refinitiv.
Earnings per share, while slightly lower than a year ago, shot past forecasts, coming in at 99 cents excluding special items. That's down from the USD 1.06 per share it earned on that basis a year earlier, but far better than the forecast of 78 cents a share, according to CNN Business.