Activist investor Dan Loeb backs off from asking Disney to sell ESPN
						
		 
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		 [September 12, 2022]  (Reuters) 
		- Billionaire activist investor Daniel Loeb 
		backed off from pushing Walt Disney Co to spin off ESPN, saying he has a 
		"better understanding" of the sports television network's potential for 
		growth. 
		 
		This comes after Disney Chief Executive Bob Chapek reaffirmed the value 
		of ESPN to the media company.  
		 
		"We believe that ESPN is an asset that is well placed within the Walt 
		Disney Company," Chapek told Reuters.  
		 
		The investor said in a tweet on Sunday that he looks forward to seeing 
		ESPN Chairman James Pitaro execute on the growth and innovation plans, 
		"generating considerable synergies as part of" Disney. 
		  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		Loeb, who runs Third Point, in August disclosed a stake of roughly $1 
		billion in Disney and announced plans to push the company to make a 
		string of changes, from spinning off ESPN to buying back shares and 
		adding board members. 
		 
		Chapek confirmed reports that Disney had received numerous inquiries 
		from companies seeking to buy ESPN earlier this year amid rumors that 
		the company was weighing a sale of the cable network. 
		 
		
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			A 3D-printed Disney logo is seen in front of the ESPN+ logo in this 
			illustration taken on July 13, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration 
            
			  
The company has spent the last year laying plans to reignite growth at ESPN, and 
to position it for the future as part of Disney's bundle of streaming service.
 
 
"It's been a great cash flow generator for us, which is, as we ramp up with 
streaming, kind of helps pay the bills," said Chapek. "It's very, very positive 
today, and the most important thing was to always look for the future, right?" 
 
On Loeb's plan to push Disney to add new board members, Chapek defended the 
board, saying it had a broad "range of skillsets" and that the average tenure on 
it was four years. 
 
Third Point, which owns roughly 0.4% stake in Disney, has also proposed that 
Disney accelerate the timetable for buying the remaining stake in streaming 
service Hulu from minority stakeholder Comcast Corp ahead of the planned 2024 
acquisition. 
 
Chapek told Reuters he has been in conversation with Comcast about accelerating 
the timetable for the acquisition. "I would think it would make sense to them 
because it's inevitable," he said.  
 
(Reporting by Anirudh Saligrama and Shivani Tanna in Bengaluru; Editing by 
William Mallard, Bradley Perrett, Diane Craft and Daniel Wallis) 
				 
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