Trung Phan Profile picture
Jul 13, 2021 23 tweets 9 min read Read on X
In less than 2 years, Disney+ notched 104m subscribers and is prob worth $100B+ as a standalone entity.

How did Disney build a Netflix competitor so fast? By acquiring a tech firm spun out from MLB (yes, Major League Baseball) for $2.6B.

Here's the story 🧵 Image
1/ It starts in 2000: the height of Dotcom.

MLB Commissioner Bud Selig wants to consolidate digital rights and create websites for the league's 30 teams.

To make sure the project is "fair" to every team, he creates an independent arm: MLB Baseball Advanced Media (BAM). Image
2/ To fund BAM, Selig asks for a $4m commitment ($1m per year for 4 years) across all 30 teams = $120m.

The first big project -- MLB .com -- is outsourced to a consulting firm. It's a complete disaster.

Lesson learnt: BAM will now create everything in-house. Image
3/ In 2001, Japanese sensation Ichiro Suzuki (the OG Ohtani) joins the Seattle Mariners.

BAM creates an audio streaming product so that Japanese fans can listen to games lives.

They spend millions on the product but it totally flops...getting less than 1k subscribers. Image
4/ With these failures, BAM looks doomed.

Running low on cash, the unit catches a break: MLB gives BAM ticketing rights.

BAM then tells TicketMaster "pay up or no baseball". The ticket giant ends up giving BAM $10m, which it uses on its next bet: streaming video. Image
5/ On August 26th, 2002, the MLB streams its first ever game: New York Yankees vs. Texas Rangers.

This is 3 years before YouTube is launched.

30k people watch at a pathetic speed of 280 kilobits per second (one BAM exec calls is like "watching a flip book"). Image
6/ Even so, fans LOVE it.

For the 2003 season -- 4 years before Netflix streams -- MLB TV debuts and 100k fans pay $80 for access to live stream games.

BAM is now stable and only takes $77m (of the $120m commitment) from team owners before paying a dividend. Image
7/ With a cash cow in place, BAM starts innovating.

It figures out how to handle live audiences at scale, video quality and key issues that every streaming service will eventually face: Image
8/ By mid-2010s, BAM is the fastest and most cost-effective streaming provider.

BAM builds for the WWE ('14), NHL ('15), PGA ('15), Playstation ('15) and HBO Now ('15).

HBO thought it would cost $900m over 3yrs (BAM did it for $50m in 3.5 months). Image
9/ To reach its full potential, MLB spins out BAM as "BAM Tech" in 2015 (sales = $900m, employees = 800+).

Enter Disney: the media conglomerate knows streaming is the future and needs expertise.

In August 2016, it buys 1/3rd of BAM for $1B with the option to buy more. Image
10/ In August 2017, Disney drops another $1.6B ($2.6B total) to own 75% of BAM Tech.

It then announces it will launch streaming for: 1) ESPN (sports network); and 2) its outrageous IP catalogue (Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar, Classics).

BAM Tech becomes Disney Streaming Services. Image
11/ At first, many are critical of the Disney deal.

Former CBS head Les Moonves says "We didn’t buy BAM Tech for a zillion dollars. We [built streaming] internally."

As it turns out, timing is everything: Disney+ launches in November 2019, months before a global pandemic. Image
12/ With the stay-at-home orders in place, Disney+ is among the big COVID media winners.

By March 2021 (1.5 years from launch), Disney's streaming service reaches 100m subs.

A *much* faster pace than Netflix or AMZN Prime, all powered by the artist formerly known as BAM Tech. Image
13/ Today, Disney+ has ~104m subs.

Of course, you can't actually *separate* Disney+ from its parent. But using the same "market cap-per-sub" ratio as Netflix gives Disney+ a standalone value of $119B.

While that is ~35% of Disney's total value... Image
14/ ...it's not an outrageous value guessimate.

Consider this: $DIS is up 55% of the past year, from $212B to $330B. That's a $118B market cap gain even as its parks, cruise and theatre businesses have been mostly shuttered. Image
15/ And lets not forget that -- last fall -- Disney frickin' reorganized the entire company around its direct-to-consumer streaming business. Image
16/ The latest data point.

Disney released the Marvel film "Black Widow" over the weekend. It had the largest COVID-era box office domestic opening in the US: $80m.

The film also came streamed on Disney+...where it pulled in nearly as much money: $60m.

Thank you BAM Tech. Image
17/ If you enjoyed that, follow @TrungTPhan for other business breakdowns and some really dumb memes:
19/ Other thoughts:

◻️ Between 2009-19, Disney spent $80B on content (Marvel, LucasFilms/StarWars, Fox). BAM Tech at a fraction of spend ($2.6B) was the streaming unlock.
◻️ Can BAM Tech be in the same ballpark as FB/Instagram ($1B) and Google/YouTube ($1.6B) for value creation? Image
20/ If you prefer Disney parks to streaming, check this LOL.
21/ Worth adding here the subscriber boost from Disney's acquisition of Fox (which includes Hotstar, an major Indian streaming asset).

Having said that: Disney+ was in the works 2 years before the Fox deal.

22/ Lastly, I deserve to get roasted for underselling Disney's existing IP that BAM Tech took to streaming:

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More from @TrungTPhan

Feb 4
Norway discovered off-shore oil in 1969. It launched its sovereign wealth fund with $300m in 1996.

It’s since grown 6,000x to $1.8T or $327,000 per Norwegian (5.5m people).

The fund owns 1.5% of all global equities but, most impressively, had a UX designer put a real-time fund value tracker on its website landing page.
Norway’s SWF roughly is 65% equity, 25% bond, 10% real estate/infra (all global).

Unsurprisingly, its largest holding is Apple ($47B, or 1.4% of the entire company).

On a related note, here is my deep dive podcast on Steve Jobs and making of the iPhone: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/caf…
Norway spared no expense on its SWF website. Look at that carousel!
Read 4 tweets
Feb 4
never forget that episode of “Nathan For You” when he launched a fire detector product and tried to avoid import tariffs by turning it into a music device
One company that has been very good at navigating international food tariffs/regulations is Trader Joe’s. Built its dairy and wine businesses by finding workarounds.

I explain in this deep dive podcast on Trader Joe’s business history and strategy: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/caf…
Nathan’s “Blues” Smoke Detector Instrument lololol:

— “concert quality”
— “pre-tuned to F-sharp”
— “9 battery lets you jam for hours” Image
Read 4 tweets
Jan 29
wow, found a rare interview of a DeepSeek co-founder talking about his first AI startup exit a few years ago
Jian Yang is my 2nd fave Asian founder who created a food-related product.

The 1st is David Tran, who built Sriracha (great on hot dogs) into a $1B brand using $20k of gold bars he snuck out of Vietnam in milk cans.

I tell the full story in this podcast: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/caf…
sold for $15m, what’s your excuse anon? Image
Read 4 tweets
Jan 17
Bookmarked a bunch of great David Lynch posts in past 24 hours (RIP to a legend):

1/ Martin Scorsese Tribute Image
Read 23 tweets
Sep 19, 2024
PayPal’s bland logo redesign was inevitable
Image
If you are the person that did the un-aligned letters for the previous eBay logo, please contact the research app team. We are huge fans of how un-aligned the “e” is with the “y”.Bearly.AI
This article offers up reasons for popularity of simple font logos (mostly Sans Serif):

— Easier to standardize ads across mediums
— Improves readability (especially on mobile)
— The “brand” matters more than the logo velvetshark.com/why-do-brands-…
Read 4 tweets
Sep 1, 2024
Berkshire Hathaway board member Chris Davis once asked Charlie Munger why Costco didn’t drop the membership card.

Let anyone shop and raise prices by 2% (still great value), thus making up for lost membership fees (and more).

Munger said the card is important filter:

▫️“Think about who you’re keeping out [with a membership card]. Think about the cohort that won’t give you their license and their ID and get their picture taken.

Or they aren’t organized enough to do it, or they can’t do the math to realize [the value]…that cohort will have a 100% of your shoplifters and a 100% of your thieves. Now, it’ll also have most of your small tickets.

And that cohort relative to the US population will probably be shrinking as a % of GDP relative to the people that can do the math [on Costco’s value].”▫️

I have a membership but have been guffing on the math for a few years tbh. They keep telling me to upgrade from Gold to Business but I’m too lazy (even if the 2-3% Cash Back on Business pays back after a few trips).

This is a long way of saying Costco’s membership price hike effective today — its first in 7 years — is annoying but when I decide to do the math in a few months, it’ll be worth it.

***

Chris Davis’ remarks from this episode of The Knowledge Project: open.spotify.com/episode/6fJYHF…Image
Anyway, here is something I wrote about Costco’s $9B+ clothing business my affinity for Kirkland-branded socks and Puma gym shirts. readtrung.com/p/costcos-9b-c…
Two notes:

▫️Meant “Executive” (not “Business”) membership
▫️Chris Davis was doing a pure thought experiment. Costco membership obvi high margin (on~$5B a year) and accounts for majority of Costco profits. Retail margin is tiny on ~$230B of annual sales (Costco would need like another $150B+ from letting anyone shop to make up membership profits)Image
Image
Read 5 tweets

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