WSJ What’s News - Disney Names Its Theme Parks Chief as Bob Iger’s Successor
Episode Date: February 3, 2026P.M. Edition for Feb. 3. Disney has chosen Josh D’Amaro to succeed Bob Iger as its CEO. WSJ entertainment reporter Ben Fritz discusses how the theme parks executive is likely to approach the role an...d how investors are reacting. Plus, the House approved a measure to end the partial government shutdown, but the negotiations over immigration enforcement aren’t over yet. And in Argentina, decades of financial crises mean people have kept a stash of billions of U.S. dollars. We hear from WSJ reporter Samantha Pearson about why Argentina’s President Javier Milei is trying to get citizens to put them in the bank. Alex Ossola hosts. Sign up for the WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Disney names its head of theme parks and cruise ships as the new successor to CEO Bob Eiger.
They've tried to set Josh Romero up for success.
He's going to officially take over from Bob Eager in March,
and Iger will remain on the board until December,
at which point he's supposed to be completely gone.
Plus, Walmart hits a $1 trillion market cap while software stocks sell off.
And the House votes to end the government shutdown.
But for negotiations over immigration enforcement, it's just the start.
It's Tuesday, February 3rd. I'm Alex O'Seuf for the Wall Street Journal. This is the PM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories that move the world today.
Disney has named Josh DeMorrow as its new CEO, putting the man who has been in charge of its theme parks and cruise ships atop America's best-known entertainment brand.
I'm joined now by WSJ Entertainment reporter Ben Fritz. Ben, DeMorrow, has worked.
at Disney for 28 years. He spent most of that time working on theme parks. How does that prepare him for
the CEO role? Well, theme parks have become Disney's most important business. They now, together with
consumer products, which Josh DeMorrow also oversees account for the majority of Disney's profits,
which is a big change. It used to be television. So he now knows very well the most important
business for Disney. Obviously, DeMorrow has less experience in the entertainment side of Disney, the
movies and television. But people who've worked with him said he gets along really well,
the creative talent. And of course, Disney has appointed one of its top entertainment executives
Dana Walden to be president. And she's going to work closely with him. What do we know about
how DeMorrow will approach the CEO role? Has he said much about that?
DeMorrow has not said anything exactly about how he'll do it. But I spoke to a lot of people
who've worked with him over the years. And they say that he is a very, like, strategic,
financial-minded thinker, but he really knows how to get along with anybody who he needs to.
He's got very high charisma. And, you know, that's an important part of leading an entertainment
company, especially an entertainment company that is so well-known to the public. You'll have to be a
public ambassador for Disney just as much as he has to be a leader internally.
Last time, Disney chose a new CEO. It didn't go super well. The company named previous
Parks boss Bob Chapic as its CEO in 2020, only.
only to fire him and bring back Bob Eiger two years later.
Is there a concern that something similar could happen this time?
Look, I think Bob Eager knows that it's a real blight on his resume, how badly it went last time,
and everybody close to the company is determined that it goes smoothly this time.
And so I think you'll see them put a lot of effort into it to do everything they can
to make sure Josh Tomorrow is set up for success and at minimum to let him succeed or fail on his own
and not feel like Bob Eiger is still looking over his shoulder, which is what happens.
to Bob Chapic. There's a lot of pressure on Eiger to do it smoothly this time. And people I know who've
spoken to him say that he understands he can't screw it up again. How have investors responded to
tomorrow being picked? Investors have been very sour on Disney for quite a while. Its stock is down
by nearly half from 2021. And it's been basically stagnant for the past three and a half years
since Bob Eiger returned. They're just really concerned that the transition from linear TV to
digital is just really tough for every media company. And while it's leaning further into parks,
parks, they're very vulnerable to the state of the economy. If there's a recession, people
go to the parks less often. If we have fewer foreign tourists coming, which is actually happening
right now, that can impact the parks. So I say Josh Romero has a lot of work to do to get investors
on board with Disney again. That was WSJ reporter, Ben Fritz. Thanks, Ben. Sure, my pleasure.
In an interview today at the Wall Street Journal's Invest Live Summit after Disney's announcement,
Activist investor Nelson Peltz predicted that history would repeat itself.
Iger needs a reason to stay on.
And if he put the person in charge of entertainment as the CEO,
he wouldn't have an excuse to stay on.
Peltz has a history with Disney and Iger.
He twice tried to force his way onto the board of Disney
and fought with Iger over who would take over the company.
Investors backed Iger and the board.
Peltz's firm Tryon no longer has a stake in Disney.
Disney didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on his remarks.
French authorities have raided the Paris office of the online platform X and called in Elon Musk for a voluntary interview.
It's part of an investigation opened last year into alleged bias in the platform's content algorithm.
The investigation is now also looking at the platform's responsibility for sexualized deep fake images produced by its grok chatbot.
Prosecutors are investigating other potential charges including sharing child pornography and hot.
Holocaust denial, which is illegal in France.
X described the raid as a, quote, abusive act of law enforcement theater and call the French
allegations baseless.
PepsiCo says it'll cut prices by as much as 15% on snacks like Lays and Cheetos after
customers complained about high prices.
The affordability push is just one way Pepsi is trying to improve sales growth.
The strategy follows a December agreement with activist investor Elliott Investment Management
that included a pledge from Pepsi to improve performance.
in its North American food business.
And Walmart has joined the trillion dollar club.
Today, it became the first traditional retailer to hit a trillion dollar market cap.
Its stock has surged in recent months as investors are enthusiastic about the growth of its online business
and Walmart spending on automation and AI to improve its efficiency.
Doug McMillan, who stepped down as Walmart CEO on Saturday, talked about the company's e-commerce
push in groceries in a recent interview with the journal.
We thought in the United States,
we could win food e-commerce. We had great food close to people, and people were saying,
well, you're not going to put bananas in a brown box and ship them through FedEx. So how would you even
do e-commerce food? But we knew there was a way to do this that would leverage the stores
and would involve last mile delivery. Walmart shares finished the day up 2.9 percent with a market
cap of $1.02 trillion. Elsewhere in markets, it was mostly a down day. The NASDAQ led the losses in
the major indexes and closed down one.
1.4%. Markets reporter Hannah Aaron Lang says it's another tech-led sell-off today.
There was some news from Anthropic that its artificial intelligence tools can now automate high-stakes legal tasks, including contract reviews, compliance workflows.
That has really amplified concerns that were already floating around among investors about software companies, concerns that artificial intelligence tools will eventually make a lot of software redundant or obsolete.
software and data services stocks, S&P Global, Equifax, the credit reporting company, Intuit, which is the name behind TurboTax, those all got hit pretty hard today.
Those declines also included fund managers that bet heavily on software companies.
That's names like Blue Owl Capital, which dropped roughly 10%.
Coming up, why Argentina's president wants citizens to take their secret stashes of U.S. dollars to the bank.
That's after the break.
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In Washington, former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reached a deal to appear for depositions in the House investigation into Jeffrey Epstein.
The interviews are scheduled for later this month.
The deal stopped a looming contempt of Congress vote against the Clintons,
which could have allowed lawmakers to refer the matter to prosecutors or seek enforcement through the courts.
The Clintons have said they had no personal knowledge of Epstein's criminal activities.
Their lawyers have said the House subpoenas don't have a legitimate legislative purpose.
And the House passed a bill to end the partial government shutdown.
The House voted 217 to 214 on the $1.2 trillion funding package,
and President Trump signed it into law this afternoon.
Lawmakers are now set to negotiate over possible new restrictions on immigration agents that Democrats have demanded.
In international news, tensions have escalated in the Persian Gulf.
The U.S. shot down an Iranian drone aimed at the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln.
And hours later, armed Iranian gunboats threatened to board and seize a U.S. flag tanker.
A U.S. destroyer escorted the ship to safety.
The provocative moves come at a sensitive moment.
The U.S. and Iran are exchanging threats even as they explore a diplomatic solution to their recent conflict.
A meeting between senior officials from the two countries has been scheduled for Friday in Turkey.
Argentine President Javier Millet has a problem.
He has a fan in President Trump and is working to win over global investors.
But now he's trying to convince Argentines scarred by decades of economic crises to stop hoarding their U.S. dollars.
And they've got a lot of them.
more than $250 billion stashed at home and in offshore accounts and safe deposit boxes.
That's about six times the reserves of the country's central bank.
I'm joined now by WSJ reporter, Samantha, Piersen.
Samantha, why does Miele want to get these dollars back in banks?
So since Malae took over in December 2023, he's basically been trying to fix Argentina's economy,
and that's a big job.
He's been trying to stabilize the currency, bring down inflation, and basically gain
credibility. But one big thing that he wants, obviously, is growth. It eases the pain of the austerity
measures that he's been passing. The banks kind of have their hands tied at the moment in terms of
how many loans they can give out to businesses, how much export credit they can extend,
which is obviously very important for Argentina. Argentina is a big exporter of commodities.
You know, there's a quarter of a trillion dollars sitting in people's homes, in safe deposit boxes,
basically not in use in the formal economy.
So if the banks can get some of these US dollars back in-house,
they can then lend more out.
And that helps businesses, expand, that helps exporters,
have more kind of liquidity,
and that all, in theory, generates growth.
And that's good for the economy and good for Malay.
One big problem here, of course,
is that Argentines are extremely skeptical of banks
due to many years, in fact decades of economic crises.
So hoarding cash is like kind of a national pastime.
Where do people hide their cash?
Is it like all under mattresses?
The only place that I think people don't hide money is under the mattress
because that's, I think, the first place that burglars would look.
But we had so many crazy examples.
We had people burying money in their garden.
They hide them in the ceiling, in the walls and special compartments in wardrobes.
We met one guy who hid it in an unused washing machine,
another person who hid it in an oven that wasn't being used.
and everyone's kind of proud of their little hiding place.
So one risk in hoarding money like this besides forgetting where it is
is that digging it up for these families can actually come with risks
because the government can prosecute them for unpaid taxes.
How is Millay encouraging people to do it anyway?
Precisely, that's the problem, right?
So what Millay has been trying to do,
and which other governments have also tried to do,
is holding these kind of tax amnesty.
So he'll say, you can bring $70,000 and we won't ask any questions.
So you can bring that into the banks, and then you can use it to buy whatever you want.
The problem is that previous governments have done the same thing.
And then try to go after the people that had just declared all this cash and assets.
So people are very, very nervous about believing in these amnesties.
But I think the important point is that people are starting to believe a little bit more in Malay
because of what he's trying to achieve in the economy.
That was WSJ reporter, Samantha Pearson.
Thanks, Samantha.
Thank you.
And that's what's news for this Tuesday afternoon.
Today's show is produced by Pierre Bienname with supervising producer Tali Arbel.
I'm Alex Ocelo for The Wall Street Journal.
We'll be back with a new show tomorrow morning.
Thanks for listening.
