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GM Stock Could Take Off if It Takes a Hint From Disney+

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On the surface, General Motors (NYSE: GM) has little in common with Walt Disney Co (NYSE: DIS).

One makes cars; the other one does entertainment. The two operate in vastly different industries, each with their own set of economics and distinct challenges.

However, both companies found their footing and built their brands in postwar America. More recently, they've faced competition from disruptive upstarts, which has weighed on the stocks, as investors well know.

In Disney's case, investors saw Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) briefly top its market cap last summer. The market for years has favored the leading streamer, even though Disney is much more profitable and has businesses like theme parks that make it more than a video entertainment provider.

For GM, the gap between it and the more disruptive auto companies is even starker. The Chevy maker has had its own market cap eclipsed by Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA), the erratic electric-car maker, for much of the past year, and ridesharing leader Uber could nearly double GM's market value, with its upcoming IPO set to fetch a valuation as high as $100 billion. As is the case with Disney and Netflix, GM is far more profitable than those upstart rivals, but the stock trades at a P/E of just 7, far below the market average of 22.

Investors don't need a crystal ball to see what the market is thinking here. GM and Disney are legacy companies being treated as relics, leaders of a bygone era that will be surpassed by challengers like Netflix, Tesla, and Uber that are growing much faster than the older operators, even though they make much less in profits.

The Disney+ logo
The Disney+ logo

Image source: Disney.

Flipping the script

Disney shares had struggled with this perception for nearly four years. In August 2015, CEO Bob Iger acknowledged that ESPN, one of the company's biggest cash cows, was losing subscribers as more consumers cut the cord. Since that announcement, Disney shares have basically traded sideways. Investors feared the unraveling of its cable empire, the company's most profitable business segment, as viewers switched from cable to streaming services like Netflix.

However, something remarkable happened in the past week. In the span of just a few hours, Disney changed that narrative, giving the stock an unprecedented jolt, and assuring investors that the company was no dinosaur.

The entertainment giant unveiled its long-awaited streaming service, Disney+, capitalizing on its unrivaled library of content, its recent Fox acquisition, and its global brand equity. Disney shares jumped 11.5% on April 12, the day after its evening presentation, reaching an all-time high, and tacked on another 1.5% on April 15. Netflix stock, meanwhile, was running scared, falling 4.5% the day after the news came out.