Disney shares edged higher in premarket trading on Tuesday as investors turned their attention away from headline earnings and toward a question that has increasingly dominated sentiment around the stock: who will succeed Bob Iger as chief executive.
The media giant’s shares were up 0.14% as of 7:05 a.m. ET, a muted rebound after the stock fell 7% on Monday. That sell-off came even as Disney reported solid quarterly results, highlighted by its Experiences division — which includes theme parks, resorts, and cruise operations — surpassing $10 billion in revenue for the first time in a single quarter.
Overall, Disney posted quarterly revenue of about $26 billion, up 5% year on year and ahead of Wall Street expectations of $25.7 billion. The numbers underscored the continued resilience of its parks-led businesses at a time when streaming profitability and legacy media assets remain under pressure.
Still, the market reaction made clear that earnings strength alone is no longer the decisive factor for Disney’s valuation.
Succession uncertainty weighs on sentiment
At the center of investor unease is the unresolved leadership transition. Disney’s board is meeting this week and is expected to vote on Iger’s successor, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke to CNBC on condition of anonymity. The decision would mark the second attempt to engineer an orderly handover from Iger, one of the most influential executives in the company’s history.
Iger first stepped down in 2020 after a 15-year run, handing the reins to Bob Chapek. That transition unraveled within two years amid internal tensions, strategic missteps, and declining morale, culminating in Chapek’s abrupt dismissal in late 2022 and Iger’s return.
That episode continues to loom large over Disney’s governance story. Analysts at Jefferies described the “impending leadership transition” as an “overhang on shares,” even as reports suggest a resolution is close. Bank of America analysts echoed that view, saying succession uncertainty has weighed on the stock in recent weeks.
Iger himself offered an unusually candid assessment on Monday’s earnings call, acknowledging that “trying to preserve the status quo was a mistake” when Chapek was appointed. He said that when he returned, there was “a tremendous amount that needed fixing,” from strategy and culture to cost discipline.
A stronger hand — but lingering questions
Iger struck a more optimistic tone about the state of the company he will leave behind, saying his successor would be “handed … a good hand in terms of the strength of the company,” alongside opportunities for growth and the need to keep evolving in a rapidly changing media landscape.
That comment reflects the paradox facing Disney investors. On one side, the company’s Experiences division has become a reliable earnings engine, providing cash flow stability and offsetting volatility in streaming and advertising. The division’s scale and profitability have elevated its strategic importance, making leadership continuity there especially critical.
On the other side, Disney is still navigating structural shifts in how audiences consume content, how streaming platforms are monetized, and how to balance creative ambition with financial discipline — challenges that will define the next CEO’s tenure.
Who could take the helm?
Among the leading internal candidates is Josh D’Amaro, chair of Disney Experiences, who has been widely credited with driving growth and operational discipline across parks and resorts. Industry insiders and Disney sources have previously told CNBC that D’Amaro is a top contender, particularly given the division’s growing contribution to earnings.
Dana Walden, Disney’s co-chair of Entertainment, is also seen as a serious candidate, bringing deep experience in television and content strategy at a time when Disney is reassessing its entertainment portfolio.
Bank of America analysts noted that, given the Experiences division’s outsized role in Disney’s profit base, appointing D’Amaro would likely be “well received by the investment community,” a signal that investors may favour operational certainty over broader strategic experimentation.
For now, Disney’s financial performance is doing its job: revenue is growing, parks are thriving, and expectations are exceeded. Yet the market’s restrained response suggests that investors are less focused on what Disney earned last quarter and more concerned with what comes next.
Until the board delivers clarity on succession and convinces investors that this transition will avoid the pitfalls of the last one, Disney shares may continue to trade with a leadership discount, even as the underlying business shows signs of renewed strength.







