Global Times

Disney charms China

Shanghai park expected to break even in 2017 fiscal year

- By Deng Xiaoci and Zhang Hongpei

Shanghai Disneyland has successful­ly made inroads into the Chinese market as the theme park has received 11 million visitors in the one year since it opened.

Analysts have cited the joint venture as an example of cultural exchange between China and the US, but urged Chinese firms to learn from the US company in a bid to boost China’s soft power.

The Shanghai park is on track to becoming the world’s most profitable Disney theme parks on the back of strong first year operations in the Chinese mainland, exceeding expectatio­ns.

The estimated $ 5.5 billion resort is a joint venture between Disney and Shanghai Shendi Group, a State- owned enterprise that owns 57 percent of the resort. Disney said 4 million people visited the park in its first four months of operations, the Hollywood Reporter reported Friday.

“More than 11 million guests have already visited, and

we look forward to welcoming many more,” according to Disney CEO Bob Iger on Friday, the report said.

Disney said the resort’s first- year performanc­e “exceeded [ our] expectatio­ns, from theme park attendance to guest satisfacti­on.”

Disney CFO Christine McCarthy was quoted as saying by the report that “The financial results for the park’s first full quarter of operations were ahead of our expectatio­ns. As we look to fiscal 2017, we expect Shanghai Disney Resort to be very close to breaking even for the year.”

“Based on its financial performanc­e, Shanghai Disney could recoup its investment in the next 10 years,” Chen Shaofeng, deputy dean of the Institute for Cultural Industries at Peking University, told the Global Times in an earlier interview.

China’s Dalian Wanda Group Chairman Wang Jianlin’s prediction became the focus of media and public discussion. Wang said on the eve of the resort’s opening in June 2016 that Wanda, China’s leading commercial property developer, which also has theme park interests, will make Disney unprofitab­le in China over the next 10 to 20 years, because Disneyland’s pricing is too high, and Disney merchandis­e lacks more creativity, according to media reports.

“Wang’s comments are self- con- ceit and he is applying Wanda’s park business model to Shanghai Disneyland, but neglected other factors which Chinese customers embrace,” Song Ding, an industry analyst from the China Developmen­t Institute, told the Global Times on Sunday.

Beyond the obvious revenue sources from tickets, in- park transporta­tion and catering, there are many other revenue sources, including merchandis­e and intellectu­al property rights, Song said.

For example, the worldwide promotiona­l tour for Disney’s latest film from the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise included a stop at Shanghai Disneyland in May, which was attended by the film’s stars Johnny Depp and Orlando Bloom, and coincided with the resort’s 10 millionth guest, Bloomberg reported.

The success of Shanghai Disneyland is not surprising, since the company enjoys worldwide brand recognitio­n, Zhang Yiwu, a cultural scholar at Peking University, said.

“Disney’s foray into the Chinese mainland is based on extensive research, and they picked Shanghai where its petty bourgeois culture is obvious,” Song said, noting the high prices connote a status symbol.

Data reported by the Shanghaiba­sed news portal xinmin. cn shows the TRON Lightcycle Power Run as the most popular ride, one of Disney’s fastest rollercoas­ter rides ever, which was first launched at the Shanghai park.

The theme park is a downstream product of the company’s mature industry chain, led by its movies, like the Marvel franchises, Zhang said.

In May, the Walt Disney Company announced an increase in quarterly earnings from parks and resorts for its second fiscal quarter by 9 percent to $ 4.3 billion, and an increase in segment operating income of 20 percent to $ 750 million.

Zhang said he predicts Disneyland will become even more popular in China as the country further relaxes its family planning policy, and the middle class appetite for entertainm­ent and leisure grows. Zhang also said China should allow more flexibilit­y in cultural works to improve the country’s storytelli­ng skills.

In November 2016, Disney broke ground on a new Toy Story Land, which will be the park’s seventh and the “first of several planned expansions in Shanghai,” Iger said.

Toy Story Land, based on the hit Toy Story animation franchise, is expected to open in 2018 as part of Disney’s efforts to add more capacity.

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