Peltz, citing changes at Disney, ends push for set on board

FILE - People visit Magic Kingdom Park at Walt Disney World Resort in Lake Buena Vista, Florida, on April 18, 2022. The Walt Disney Co. announced Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023, that they would be making several changes at its domestic theme parks in order to improve public perception of its business. (AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey, File)

Activist investor Nelson Peltz has called off a proxy fight with Disney one day after newly returned CEO Bob Iger announced a major restructuring of the company that includes thousands of job cuts.

Peltz phoned into CNBC on Thursday to say that his firm, Trian Fund Management, got everything it wanted with the changes imposed by Iger.

鈥淲e will be watching, we will be rooting, and the proxy fight is over," Peltz said.

Peltz last month announced that he would seek a seat on the board of the entertainment company, citing a failed succession after Iger departed about two years ago and named Bob Chapek as his replacement. Peltz cited 鈥渙ver-the-top鈥 compensation for executives and other issues.

Disney on Wednesday said that it would cut about 7,000 jobs as part of an ambitious companywide cost-savings plan and 鈥渟trategic reorganization."

The job cuts amount to about 3% of the entertainment giant鈥檚 global workforce and were unveiled after Disney reported quarterly results that topped Wall Street鈥檚 forecasts.

That was apparently good enough for Peltz, who launched a fight for a board seat even after Chapek was ousted and Iger returned.

The company, which owns Star Wars, Marvel and Pixar, said this week that it will focus more on its core brands and franchises, Iger said.

The executive also announced changes to how executives will operate Disney鈥檚 various divisions. Specifically, creative executives will now be responsible for determining what movies, TV series or other content to produce, as well as the marketing and distribution.

Shares of Disney, based in Burbank, California, rose 2% Thursday.

Iger had handpicked Chapek as his successor, whose two-year tenure was marked by clashes, missteps and a weakening financial performance. Iger's return to Disney and ousting of Chapek came just a couple of weeks after Disney鈥檚 fell well short of Wall Street expectations on both profit and revenue, a rarity.

While Disney's theme parks business has been performing well, many visitors over the past two years have been highly critical of increased prices and other moves that the company made, including the end of the Magical Express bus service from the airport in Orlando, Florida to Walt Disney World resorts, the implementation of the Genie planning and ride reservation system and its theme park reservation system.

香港六合彩挂牌资料. All rights reserved.