Why Disney+ beat Apple's streaming announcement

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Apple (AAPL) beat Disney (DIS) to the punch when it first unveiled its streaming service, Apple TV+, in March, but Disney’s streaming service announcement on Thursday generated more excitement on Wall Street — and for good reason.

When it announced Disney+ on Thursday at a company event in Burbank, California, Disney executives hit all the marks they needed to: a look at the service, a competitive price point ($6.99 a month/$69.99 a year), previews of intriguing original content, even profitability forecasts.

"Disney provided the most detailed insights yet into its new subscription-based streaming service (Disney+), with a U.S. launch now set for November 12,” CFRA Research analyst Tuna Amobi wrote in a note on Friday. “We were fairly impressed with a demo of the user interface for the new offering, with an unparalleled array of branded TV/film content."

FILE - In this Thursday, Dec. 10, 2015, file photo, Bob Iger, chairman and CEO of The Walt Disney Company, poses in a conference room before speaking to members of the media about bringing NFL football back to the Los Angeles area, in Burbank, Calif. On Thursday, March 23, 2017, The Walt Disney Co. announced that Iger is getting a one-year contract extension, to July 2, 2019.  (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill, File)
Disney CEO Bob Iger. Source: AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill, File

Apple, in stark contrast, did none of that during its Apple TV+ event in March, trotting out Hollywood celebrities like Oprah and Steven Spielberg but skimping on details like Apple TV+’s pricing and footage of any original content in the pipeline. Apple’s stock dipped 2% the day of the Apple TV+ announcement.

“Today’s presentation will show you where we’re going, but also remind you that we are starting from a position of strength and optimism,” CEO Bob Iger told analysts and media at Disney’s Investors Day on Thursday.

To that end, Disney emphasized its newly combined stable of streaming services and content, including Disney+, ESPN+, and Hulu, as well as the huge trove of shows it now possesses, thanks in part to the $71.3 billion acquisition of 21st Century Fox, which closed in March. That includes hundreds of Disney films, over 20 Pixar films, 40-plus Marvel films, hundreds of National Geographic shows and documentaries, and all the Star Wars films.

Actual footage

The Disney+ user interface. Source: Disney
The Disney+ user interface. Source: Disney

Another area where Apple failed: footage of upcoming content. (There wasn’t any.)

Sure, it was exciting to catch glimpses Hollywood’s elite at Apple’s event, but the tech giant failed to show actual footage — no matter how rough it may be — of upcoming shows like Reese Witherpoon and Jennifer Aniston’s series, “The Morning Show,” or Jason Momoa’s “See.” Likewise, Spielberg, who is developing an anthology series called “Amazing Stories” for Apple TV+, offered nothing but lip service. And the announcement’s star attraction, Oprah, merely emphasized Apple’s vast reach across millions of devices.

There was much more to see in Burbank on Thursday. Lucasfilm, the Disney subsidiary that owns the Star Wars and Indiana Jones franchises, unveiled the first footage from “The Mandalorian,” a series exclusive to Disney+ that takes place in the Star Wars series five years after “Return of the Jedi.”

Jon Favreau arrives at the premiere of "Solo: A Star Wars Story" at El Capitan Theatre on Thursday, May 10, 2018, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)
Jon Favreau on Thursday previewed "The Mandalorian," a new Star Wars TV series for Disney+ that will take place five years after "Return of the Jedi." Source: Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

“We're starting with new characters and new time period,” Iron Man director Jon Favreau explained at the event on Thursday.

Pixar Chief Creative Officer Pete Docter also teased never-before-seen footage from “Monsters at Work,” an upcoming Disney+ series spun off from the 2001 Pixar blockbuster “Monsters, Inc.” And Marvel Studios revealed an original show called “Wanda Vision,” with characters from the Avengers films, including the Scarlet Witch, played by Elizabeth Olsen, and Vision, portrayed by Paul Bettany.

“These shows will be on the same level of quality you’ve grown accustomed to from Marvel Studios with major ramifications on other series and films,” Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige promised at Thursday’s event.

Forecasts

Source: Yahoo Finance
Source: Yahoo Finance

Disney’s ambitions are wide-reaching, to be sure. At Thursday’s event, the company said it wants to invest $1 billion in Disney+ over the next year — significantly less than the $12 billion Netflix (NFLX) spent in 2018 alone, according to Netflix’s fourth-quarter earnings report — to grow its original content during its first year.

Disney promises Disney+ will host over 35 original series, 10 original movies and 7,500 licensed TV episodes during the streaming service’s first year, but that number will grow to 50-plus original shows, 10-plus original movies and 10,000 licensed TV episodes by the fifth year.

Disney also wants to sign up between 60 million and 90 million Disney+ subscribers by 2024 — a substantial number given the increasing number of streaming services out there, including Apple TV+, Netflix and network-specific efforts like CBS All Access. (Netflix alone had over 139 million paying subscribers worldwide, as of January.)

But with a wide range of films, shows and unique properties — and an intriguing slate of original content in the pipeline based on Thursday’s teasers — Disney+ may hit its targets, which includes becoming profitable by 2024, proposed Disney CFO Christine McCarthy.

Disney stock closed at $130.06 per share on Friday — up over 11% since the Disney+ announcement.

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