Disney enjoyed a magical day on Wall Street Tuesday with its shares trading at $90 — the highest in more than 16 years.
The stock ended the day at $90.09, up 12 cents, a 52-week high. It nearly broke the $90 mark on Monday, closing at $89.97.
It was up another 16 cents in after-hours trading at $90.16.
Analysts currently recommend Disney's stock with a moderate buy, although Jeffries analyst John Janedis predicted in June that the company's shares will break $100. "We think Disney is still at the early stages of a multi-year run where all segments will post solid growth," he said at the time.
Others also were optimistic.
Argus raised its price target from $96 to $101 last week. JPMorgan Chase & Co. raised its price from $90 to $100, earlier in the month. And Nomura was more cautious, with a price target of $97, up from $95.
The last time Disney's stock traded at this level was the 1990s, but stock splits brought it back down to the $34.50 range in 1998, after hitting $106.
Disney's third quarter, which wrapped June 30, marked the best three months in the company's history, with profits rising 22% to $2.2 billion on a 8% gain in revenue of $12.46 billion.
The gains came as the studio is firing on all cylinders with "Frozen" earning $1.3 billion at the box office, Marvel's "Captain America: The Winter Soldier" and "Guardians of the Galaxy" performing strongly this summer and "Maleficent" also scoring big worldwide.
During the period, all of the company's divisions -- cable, broadcast, theme parks, consumer products and interactive -- saw considerable gains. But analysts have their eye on what's coming next year: a slate of high-profile tentpoles like "The Avengers" sequel "Age of Ultron," the potential launch of the "Ant-Man" franchise, and a new "Star Wars."
A focus on franchises and tentpoles boosted revenue at the studio 14% to $1.8 billion during the company's third quarter that doubled profits to $411 million.
Overall, Disney's stock is up 18% since January.
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