Euro Disney S.C.A. is a wholly owned subsidiary of The Walt Disney Company responsible for Disneyland Paris in Marne-la-Vallée, France.
Disneyland Paris comprises Disneyland Park, Walt Disney Studios Park, Disney Village, and seven on-site Disney Hotels. Val d'Europe is a new residential and shopping development. Another seven hotels/residences have been built not far from the two Disney theme parks on land held under Euro Disney SCA's lease, including properties from companies such as Holiday Inn, Kyriad, MyTravel and Radisson Hotels.
The Resort is a result of an agreement signed on 24 March 1987 between The Walt Disney Company and the French Authorities for the development of a new tourist destination, and construction began within a year. Since opening on 12 April 1992, the Resort has created more than 30,000 jobs (both directly and indirectly) in the region to the east of Paris. Today it is the number one tourist destination in Europe with 16 million visits recorded for Financial Year 2012.
Video Euro Disney S.C.A.
History
1980s
In May 1985 Disney Productions indicated that they would build a European Disneyland park with a location expected to be selected by September. A letter of intent was signed on 15 December 1985 by CEO Michael Eisner and then French Prime Minister Laurent Fabius in regards to building the theme park at Marne-la-Vallée, France on 4400 acres. The theme park plans were approved by the Île-de-France regional council on 11 July 1986. The Walt Disney Company appointed Robert Fitzpatrick as Euro Disneyland president on 12 March 1987. On 24 March 1987 Euro Disney signed an agreement with the French government. Construction on Euro Disney Resort began in August 1988. In February 1989 Euro Disney SCA licensed The Walt Disney Company's intellectual property for the French theme park. Euro Disney went public by trading on the Paris Stock Exchange on 8 October at US$14 a share with 42.9 million shares sold.
1990s
In 1990 The Disney Company issued US$2.25 billion in convertible bonds through Merrill Lynch to fund building Euro Disneyland . with an additional US$770 million in bonds offered by Euro Disney in October. The second international Disney theme park, Euro Disneyland, opens as part of Euro Disney Resort in Marne-la-Vallée, France on 12 April 1992, with five theme lands: Adventureland, Discoveryland, Fantasyland, Frontierland, and Main Street plus Festival Disney resort area.
2000s
In 2005 Euro Disney delisted from the London Stock Exchange
2010s
In 2013, Virginie Calmels became the chairman of Euro Disney's supervisory board.
In 2015 the company was restructured with a $1.3Bn recapitalisation, The Walt Disney company injected EUR420 Million and converted EUR600 Million of debt into capital. The restructuring also came with a 9-to-1 rights issue, hoping to raise EUR351 Million
In 2017 The Walt Disney Company offered an informal takeover of Euro Disney SCA, buying 9% of the company from Kingdom Holding and an open offer of 2 Euro per share for the remaining stock. This brought The Walt Disney Company's total ownership to 85.7%. The Walt Disney company will also invest an additional 1.5 Billion Euro to strengthen the company.
On 13 June 2017, The Walt Disney Company announced the offer was successful and they hold over the 95%, Euro Disney S.C.A was delisted on 20 June, falling entirely under Walt Disney Parks, Experiences and Consumer Products for the first time in its 25-year history, making the Walt Disney Company the sole owners of the Disneyland Paris property
Maps Euro Disney S.C.A.
Administration
- President Disney Parks Western Region - Catherine Powell
- Senior vice president, Commercial - Grégoire Champetier
- Senior vice president, Operations & COO - Daniel Delcourt
- Senior vice president, Experience & Product Synergy & Integration - Francesca Romana Gianesin
References
- Retrieved from Polsson, Ken. "Chronology of the Walt Disney Company". Chronology of the Walt Disney Company. Ken Polsson. Retrieved 5 May 2015.
External links
- Euro Disney SCA official site: English version
- Disneyland Paris official site
- Val d'Europe official site
Source of article : Wikipedia