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Disney Faces Long-Weekend Risk With Yields, Streaming, and NYSE Shutdown
23 May 2026
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Disney Faces Long-Weekend Risk With Yields, Streaming, and NYSE Shutdown

NEW YORK, May 23, 2026, 16:05 (EDT)

Walt Disney shares went into the long U.S. market break with just a slight weekly rise. Traders will have to wait until Tuesday to react to the Memorial Day “Star Wars” release, a new inflation number and consumer data. The New York Stock Exchange will stay closed through the long weekend, reopening after Memorial Day on Tuesday. New York Stock Exchange

Disney (DIS.N) shares finished Friday at $103.00, off 0.56% for the day. The stock moved in a range from $102.98 to $104.50. On the week, Disney inched up about 0.3% from last Friday’s $102.72 close. It was a quiet week for Disney, even as the S&P 500 kept rallying.

Disney’s stock is not just reacting to single earnings beats or films anymore. Investors are looking at streaming profit, park spending and a better film lineup and asking if that’s enough as people confront higher prices and borrowing costs.

Disney reported fiscal second-quarter revenue up 7% to $25.2 billion and total segment operating income up 4% to $4.6 billion. Adjusted EPS climbed to $1.57 from $1.45. The company is aiming for at least $8 billion in share buybacks in fiscal 2026. Management said demand at its U.S. parks and resorts is healthy, though it gave a warning about macroeconomic uncertainty for consumers.

Lucasfilm’s weekend driver is “The Mandalorian and Grogu.” The film, the first “Star Wars” release to hit theaters in seven years, opened Friday. Analysts put their forecast for U.S. and Canadian ticket sales at $75 million to $100 million over the holiday stretch. Jeff Bock, senior box-office analyst at Exhibitor Relations, told Reuters the core question is if Star Wars is still “essential” for moviegoers. Bock said an $85 million domestic total by Monday would count as a win, taking into account the movie’s $165 million production budget. Reuters

Disney’s quarter won’t swing on a strong opening alone. Still, it would support the idea that Disney can keep pushing its main franchises through theaters, Disney+, parks and licensing. A soft showing would be harder to defend after Disney spent years keeping Star Wars off the big screen.

S&P 500 is up over 9% this year and has logged eight weekly gains in a row, Reuters said Friday, but investors are back to watching inflation and bond yields. “The macro environment is starting to take more center stage,” said Ameriprise’s Anthony Saglimbene. Jim Baird at Plante Moran Financial Advisors said “inflation concerns continue to flare.” When bond yields move up fast, stocks can come under pressure. Reuters

PCE inflation data lands Thursday, the Fed’s go-to gauge. A higher print could mean rates stay up, raising the risk for Disney as consumers pull back on extras like travel, cruises, movies and streaming.

Peers are included in the mix. Warner Bros Discovery’s streaming arm came in with higher-than-forecast revenue growth this month, with HBO Max growing in international markets. Reuters said that if Paramount and Warner merge, the group would have more than 220 million streaming customers, which would put more weight behind them against Netflix and Disney.

Comcast is the top rival for the parks business right now. Its Universal Epic Universe park launched in Florida last year following a roughly $7 billion spend. Back then, MoffettNathanson’s Craig Moffett said it might “siphon off at least some of the demand” from Disney World. Reuters

Disney has some risk here. If “The Mandalorian and Grogu” underperforms, inflation stays high, and retailers report softer shoppers next week, the stock might give back gains from its second-quarter results. Parks still require a lot of capital to keep up, sports rights costs aren’t falling, and higher yields mean investors may get tired of waiting for long-term ideas to work.

With U.S. equity markets shut on Monday, Disney won’t get its first trading reaction to the holiday weekend until Tuesday. Investors will be looking at early box office numbers, some read on consumer turnout, and watching the calendar with two days until the PCE report.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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