Barron’s: Apple Computer could buyout Disney

“Barron’s on Saturday said it’s possible that Apple could make a bid to buyout Disney after CEO Steve Jobs becomes the legendary entertainment firm’s largest shareholder.
Jobs, who is the CEO of computer animation business Pixar as well as Apple , will own 7% of Disney after that firm’s agreement to acquire the maker of movies like Toy Story and Finding Nemo,” Greg Morcroft reports for MarketWatch.

“‘I think he has an open option,’ Barron’s quoted analyst Christopher Whalen, a New York-based managing director of Institutional Risk Analytics. ‘Disney is badly undervalued right now. Jobs might get an opportunity to take it out,'” Morcroft reports.

Full article here.

Advertisements:
MacBook Pro. The first Mac notebook built upon Intel Core Duo with iLife ’06, Front Row and built-in iSight. Starting at $1999. Free shipping.
iMac. Twice as amazing — Intel Core Duo, iLife ’06, Front Row media experience, Apple Remote, built-in iSight. Starting at $1299. Free shipping.
iMac and MacBook Pro owners: Apple USB Modem. Easily connect to the Internet using dial-up service. Only $49.
iPod Radio Remote. Listen to FM radio on your iPod and control everything with a convenient wired remote. Just $49.
iPod. 15,000 songs. 25,000 photos. 150 hours of video. The new iPod. 30GB and 60GB models start at just $299. Free shipping.
Connect iPod to your television set with the iPod AV Cable. Just $19.

Cringely wouldn’t be surprised to see Apple+Disney+Pixar+others as single huge company in 5 years – January 27, 2006
Steve Jobs’ arrival at the Magic Kingdom could have more thrills than trip to Disneyland – January 27, 2006
Report: Disney buys Pixar for approx. $7 billion, Steve Jobs to become Disney’s largest shareholder – January 23, 2006

37 Comments

  1. If Microshaft can get away with what it’s gotten away with then there is no reason Apple shouldn’t buy out Adobe. That’s it’s cornerstone market and to control that means there is no chance Adobe can try and pull any crap.

    Overall there is no real reason other than synergy and making a better product if Apple was in charge. Adobe’s CS suite has become one big mess of bloatware.

  2. A normal executive might do just that. Everyone knows executives that oversee mergers like this walk away filthy rich regardless of the outcome down the road.
    Steve J (I believe) is different. Not that he isn’t interested in money, but if it doesn’t fit his plan he won’t support it.

    And if you do it his way you still make a boatload of money, just not as much in the short term.

  3. Oh, dear God. I read this a few days ago, scoffed at it, and then prayed it would never show up on MDN.
    This is ridiculous, just like the other stuff you’ve been linking to recently.

    Come on MDN, I’m almost disappointed enough to stop reading. I thought this site was where Mac NEWS came first, not where a slew of meaningless rumors by people who are the reporter equivalent of bums in cardboard boxes is neatly distributed to a group of users craving the real Mac/Apple scoop.
    So please, PLEASE stop linking to this crap and get back on track, reporting the news and some of the rumors on some other Apple blogs, but I’m getting sick of having to filter through what to read and what not to read.
    God, if it floats your boat that much, create MacDailyRumors. But this is far from “news”.

    MDN magic word: “method”, meaning that MDN needs to change their method of reporting news to Mac users.

  4. The basis for this article is highly flawed and I’m even more surprised people actually bought into it. Apple doesn’t have the means to “buy” Disney out, Disney is a much bigger company….the other way around would be a far more realistic outcome if anybody was really buying anybody.

Reader Feedback

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.