Welcome to our dedicated page for Walt Disney SEC filings (Ticker: DIS), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
The Walt Disney Company SEC filings document operating results, governance actions, capital structure, and material corporate events for its NYSE-listed common stock. Form 8-K filings furnish earnings releases, report executive and board appointments, disclose compensation-related arrangements, and record annual meeting voting results.
Disney’s filings also cover unsecured credit agreements, commercial paper support facilities, registered debt offerings, indenture terms, guarantees by TWDC Enterprises 18 Corp., and related underwriting and legal documents. Proxy materials disclose board elections, executive compensation, shareholder voting matters, and governance practices for the entertainment, sports, and experiences company.
Walt Disney Co filed an initial ownership report for board member Jeffrey E. Williams. This Form 3 identifies Williams as a director of Disney but does not list any specific stock or option holdings and shows no recent buy, sell, or other insider transactions.
The Walt Disney Company put new bank credit lines in place to support its short-term borrowing and general corporate needs. The company entered into an unsecured 364-day credit agreement for up to $5.25 billion, replacing a prior facility of the same size, and a new five-year credit agreement for up to $4 billion, also replacing an existing $4 billion facility.
Both agreements are guaranteed by TWDC Enterprises 18 Corp. and include a financial covenant requiring a minimum Consolidated EBITDA to Consolidated Interest Expense ratio of 3.00 to 1.00 over each four-quarter period. The 364-day facility runs to February 26, 2027, with an option to extend outstanding borrowings to February 26, 2028, while the five-year facility runs to February 27, 2031.
Borrowings can be made in multiple currencies at market benchmarks such as Term SOFR, EURIBOR, TIBOR and SONIA plus a spread tied to Disney’s public debt rating. The agreements contain customary covenants and default provisions and explicitly exclude certain entities, including Hong Kong Disneyland, Shanghai Disney Resort and FuboTV Inc., from representations, covenants and events of default. Disney also amended a separate 2024 five-year facility to add Fubo as an excluded entity.
The Walt Disney Company received a shareholder supplemental soliciting communication urging a vote FOR a proposal requesting an independent review of the company’s disability inclusion and accessibility practices.
The proposal asks for a third‑party assessment focused on legal, financial, and reputational risks to inform board oversight. The shareholder notes the company first sought to exclude the proposal, then withdrew that request and recommended voting against it, and argues limited outcome‑based disclosure accompanies recent policy changes. The proponent permits the company to select the reviewer and scope and does not require adoption of recommendations; the proposal therefore preserves board discretion while seeking additional transparency.
The Walt Disney Company received a shareholder response opposing its no-action request and asking that a proposal on Disability Access Service (DAS) policy impacts be included in Disney's 2026 proxy materials.
The proposal requests a public, Board‑level report assessing business, reputational, legal, and competitive risks arising from Disney’s 2024–2025 DAS policy changes, citing sustained media coverage, social media backlash, petitions, and pending class-action litigation as company-specific risk indicators.
The Walt Disney Company reported that it has exercised its right to terminate without cause the employment of Kristina K. Schake, Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Communications Officer, effective March 19, 2026. She will receive separation benefits under the terms of her previously disclosed employment agreement.
A company press release notes that Schake’s departure will coincide with the end of Bob Iger’s tenure as Chief Executive Officer and highlights her role in major corporate communications initiatives since joining Disney in 2022. Disney plans to announce her successor at a later date.
Chang Amy reported open-market purchase transactions in a Form 4 filing for DIS. The filing lists transactions totaling 916 shares at a weighted average price of $107.85 per share. Following the reported transactions, holdings were 14,720 shares.
The Walt Disney Company entered into an underwriting agreement with Citigroup Global Markets and J.P. Morgan Securities to offer multiple series of senior notes. The company plans to issue $500,000,000 of Floating Rate Notes due 2029, $1,000,000,000 of 3.750% Notes due 2029, $1,500,000,000 of 4.000% Notes due 2031 and $1,000,000,000 of 4.625% Notes due 2036.
The notes will be issued under a 2019 indenture with Citibank, N.A. as trustee and are guaranteed by TWDC Enterprises 18 Corp. They are registered on an existing shelf registration statement, and related underwriting, officer certificates, note forms and legal opinions are filed as exhibits.
The Walt Disney Company is issuing $4.0 billion of senior unsecured notes in four tranches: $500 million floating-rate notes due 2029, $1.0 billion 3.750% notes due 2029, $1.5 billion 4.000% notes due 2031 and $1.0 billion 4.625% notes due 2036, all guaranteed by TWDC Enterprises 18 Corp.
The floating-rate notes pay Compounded SOFR plus 0.47% with quarterly payments, while the fixed-rate notes pay semi-annually. Disney expects net proceeds of about $3,972,755,000 after underwriting discounts and plans to use the funds for general corporate purposes.
The notes rank equally with Disney’s other unsecured, unsubordinated debt but are structurally subordinated to obligations at most subsidiaries. The fixed-rate notes are redeemable at Disney’s option, while the floating-rate notes are not. Investors face interest-rate, liquidity and SOFR benchmark transition risks highlighted in the risk factors.
The Walt Disney Company is offering new senior unsecured notes in a primary debt offering, including both floating rate and fixed rate tranches. The floating rate notes will pay interest based on Compounded SOFR plus a spread, with interest paid quarterly, and will not be redeemable at Disney’s option.
The fixed rate notes will pay a stated annual coupon with semi-annual interest and may be redeemed early at Disney’s option at a make-whole price tied to a U.S. Treasury rate. All notes are senior unsecured obligations of Disney and are fully and unconditionally guaranteed on a senior unsecured basis by its 100%-owned subsidiary TWDC Enterprises 18 Corp.
The notes rank equally with Disney’s other unsecured, unsubordinated debt and are structurally subordinated to liabilities at non-guarantor subsidiaries. Disney expects to receive net proceeds, after underwriting discounts, and intends to use them for general corporate purposes.
The Walt Disney Company is reshaping its leadership, appointing Josh D’Amaro as Chief Executive Officer effective March 18, 2026, while Robert A. Iger becomes Senior Advisor to the Board through December 31, 2026. The Board expects to elect D’Amaro as a director after the 2026 annual meeting.
D’Amaro’s package includes a $2,500,000 base salary, a target annual bonus equal to 250% of salary, and target long‑term incentives of $26,250,000 per year plus a recommended one‑time award of $9,705,000. He is also eligible under the Disney Executive Severance Pay Plan.
Dana Walden becomes President and Chief Creative Officer under a contract running to March 17, 2030, with a $3,750,000 base salary, a 200% target bonus and annual long‑term incentives of $15,750,000 plus a recommended one‑time award of $5,260,000. Disney also approved an Executive Severance Pay Plan providing defined cash, bonus and equity treatment for eligible executives after certain involuntary terminations.