Source: http://www.epmcom.com/public/The_100_Mi ... vealed.cfmThirty-seven Entertainment/Character properties had retail sales of licensed merchandise of $100 million or more in the U.S. and Canada in 2010, according to THE LICENSING LETTER'S first-ever estimates of sales by property for this sector. Disney Princess, Star Wars, and Winnie The Pooh surpassed the $1 billion mark.
Some of our estimates differ significantly from publicly-reported numbers from the companies that own these properties. This stems from the fact that THE LICENSING LETTER exclusively reports on consumer products that are licensed to third parties for manufacture and distribution, and where the manufacturer is paying a royalty on goods sold.
TLL does not tally sales products created through in-house divisions of the property owners, rather than through licensing agreements with third parties, which are often sold at theme parks or company-owned stores (e.g., Mickey Mouse plush sold as Disney World or Disney Stores); so-called “content licensing” including mobile apps, web entertainment, and home video; or non-retail products such as events, theme park attractions, cruises, and similar. Nor does our tally include “core” merchandise manufactured and sold by the property owner (e.g., Barbie dolls or Transformers toys).
Estimated Retail Sales of Top 10 Licensed Entertainment/Character Properties, U.S. and Canada, 2010
01. Disney Princess (Disney) $1.725 billion
02. Star Wars (Lucasfilm) $1.415 billion
03. Winnie the Pooh (Disney) $1.100 billion
04. Toy Story (Disney/Pixar) $915 million
05. Cars (Disney/Pixar) $810 million
06. Hello Kitty (Sanrio) $750 million
07. Mickey Mouse & Friends (Disney) $725 million
08. Peanuts (Iconix/Peanuts Worldwide) $660 million
09. Sesame Street (Sesame Workshop) $525 million
10. WWE (WWE) $520 million
Source: http://www.forbes.com/sites/jennagoudre ... -products/Trade publication The Licensing Letter today released its second annual list of the best-selling licensed entertainment character merchandise, based on 2011 retail sales in North America.
The list was compiled through surveys and reporting. It includes physical consumer goods like T-shirts, stationery, toys and electronics, but excludes intangible products like mobile apps. It features only licensed products (those that outside manufacturers pay an average royalty of 8.7% of the wholesale cost to produce), and thus does not include merchandise manufactured by the property owner.
Of the licensors on the list, Disney is the clear winner, with seven (now eight with the acquisition of Lucasfilm in 2012) of its properties in the top 20.
Estimated Retail Sales of Top 20 Licensed Entertainment/Character Properties, U.S. and Canada, 2011
01. Disney Princess (Disney) $1.60 billion
02. Star Wars (Disney/Lucasfilm) $1.50 billion
03. Winnie the Pooh (Disney) $1.09 billion
04. Cars (Disney/Pixar) $1.05 billion
05. Hello Kitty (Sanrio) $800 million
06. Mickey Mouse & Friends (Disney) $750 million
07. WWE (WWE) $700 million
08. Toy Story (Disney/Pixar) $685 million
09. Peanuts (Iconix/Peanuts Worldwide) $600 million
10. Sesame Street (Sesame Workshop) $515 million
11. Disney Fairies (Disney) $435 million
12. Thomas the Tank Engine (Hit Entertainment) $390 million
13. Garfield (Paws Inc.) $370 million
14. Dora the Explorer (Nickelodeon) $330 million
15. SpongeBob SquarePants (Nickelodeon) $330 million
16. Spider-Man (Disney/Marvel) $325 million
17. Ben 10 (Cartoon Network) $295 million
18. Angry Birds (Rovio) $250 million
19. Batman (Warner/DC) $245 million
20. Barbie (Mattel) $242 million
If anyone is wondering about Spider-Man, Disney/Marvel now fully own the merchandising rights to the character.
Source: http://a.media.global.go.com/investorre ... p-2011.pdfDuring the fourth quarter of fiscal 2011, the Walt Disney Company completed a two-way transaction to simplify our relationship with Sony Pictures. In this transaction, the Company purchased Sony Pictures participation in Spider-Man merchandising, while at the same time, Sony Pictures purchased from the Company our participation in Spider-Man films. This transaction will allow the Company to control and fully benefit from all Spider-Man merchandising activity, while Sony Pictures will continue to produce and distribute Spider-Man films.








