The company pledged to reduce the loss by $200 million in the most recent quarter, but exceeded that target by cutting losses by about $400m to $1.1b, according to an earnings report on Wednesday.
Disney’s revenue rose 8 per cent to $23.5b in the quarter and net income rose 11 per cent to $1.3b.
Its earnings of 99 cents per share were well ahead of Wall Street expectations of 78 cents, but down from $1.06 a year earlier.
Disney Plus, its flagship streaming service, shed about 2.4m subscribers in the quarter, due largely to its loss of Indian Premier League cricket.
Iger, like his peers at traditional media groups, is looking to emphasise profitability as the main streaming metric instead of subscriber growth.
But its overall number of streaming subscribers — which also includes sites ESPN Plus and Hulu, along with Disney Plus — was roughly flat with the previous quarter at 235m.
Iger is under pressure from activist investor Nelson Peltz, who is seeking a seat on Disney’s board. Disney has asked shareholders to reject Peltz’s push when its shareholders hold their annual meeting on April 3.
Peltz has criticised Disney for eliminating its dividend, a step it took during the coronavirus pandemic. But Iger told investors on Wednesday that he would ask the board to consider restarting the dividend by the end of this year.
Written by: Christopher Grimes in Los Angeles
© Financial Times