SF
Six Flags Entertainment Corporation/NEW (FUN)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 seasonally weak results: net revenues $202.06m, net loss $(219.72)m, Adjusted EBITDA loss $(170.79)m, with first-quarter dynamics amplified by calendar/weather and merger-related timing. Management reiterated that Q1 represents ~5.5% of FY attendance and ~6% of FY revenue this year vs the historical ~7% noted in the release .
- Mixed vs consensus: revenue missed ($202.06m vs $232.20m*), but EPS beat (−$2.20 vs −$2.46*) primarily due to a large tax benefit; EBITDA missed consensus (company EBITDA $(217.11)m vs $(126.02)m*), reflecting cost timing, weather, and merger integration costs . Values with asterisks are from S&P Global.
- 2025 outlook maintained: Adjusted EBITDA guidance $1.08–$1.12bn reaffirmed; teams target >3% YoY reduction in operating costs/SG&A (ex-COGS) and plan $475–$500m CapEx in 2025 (similar level in 2026). April-to-date attendance up slightly >1% despite adverse weather; season pass units +6% in the 5 weeks ended May 4 .
- Catalysts into summer: expanded operating calendars (adding higher-value days in Q2/Q3), strong new ride slate, accelerated synergy capture (on track for $120m by YE and pursuing +$60m more by 2026), and potential asset monetizations (Maryland parks closure post-2025 season + excess land near Richmond) support medium-term margin/FCF narrative .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Maintained FY25 guide with cost discipline and synergy progress: “maintaining our full year Adjusted EBITDA guidance” and targeting operating costs/SG&A to be more than 3% lower vs combined 2024 actuals; on track to deliver $120m cost synergies by YE (6 months early) .
- Early Q2 indicators positive despite weather: 5 weeks ended May 4 attendance +~1%, in-park per cap $66.34 (above Q1), season pass units +6%; price/mix actions continuing with Cedar Fair parks pass pricing expected +3–4% through the cycle .
- Strategic portfolio actions and growth levers: closing Maryland parks after 2025 and marketing excess land in Richmond could unlock >$200m gross proceeds to reduce leverage; strong 2025/2026 capital programs (11 of 14 largest properties with new attractions) to drive attendance and in-park spend .
What Went Wrong
- Top-line shortfall and heavier EBITDA loss: revenue +$100m YoY to $202.06m but below consensus; EBITDA loss of $(217.11)m (company EBITDA) exceeded Street expectations, reflecting weather, event timing (Easter/Boysenberry moved into Q2), and integration/severance/COGS alignment charges .
- Weather and timing drag: April attendance was negatively impacted by ~175k lost visits due to cold/wet conditions; Knott’s Boysenberry Festival shifted into Q2, moving high per-capita days and compressing Q1 in-park per caps at legacy Cedar Fair parks .
- Inflation/interest headwinds and higher D&A: net interest expense rose to $87m (+$53m YoY) largely from merger-acquired debt; D&A +$92m YoY on fair-value step-up and methodology change; COGS % higher due to nonrecurring inventory alignment charge .
Financial Results
Notes: Dashes indicate not disclosed in the documents scanned for that period.
Consensus vs Actual (Q1 2025)
- Revenue: $232.20m* (consensus) vs $202.06m (actual)
- EPS (diluted): −$2.46* (consensus) vs −$2.20 (actual)
- EBITDA: −$126.02m* (consensus) vs −$217.11m (company EBITDA) Values with asterisks are retrieved from S&P Global.
KPIs (Q1 2025 and April update)
- Attendance: 2.818m (Q1); 2.8m (five weeks to May 4, +~1% YoY)
- In-park per capita: $65.40 (Q1); $66.34 (five weeks to May 4)
- Out-of-park revenues: $23.9m (Q1)
- Operating days: 393 (Q1)
- Deferred revenues: $374m at Mar 30, 2025 (incl. $152m legacy Six Flags)
- Liquidity: $241m; Net debt ~$5.21bn
Non-GAAP/one-off items (Q1)
- Integration/merger costs $15.6m; other add-backs include severance, Mexican VAT, contract termination, and an inventory alignment charge impacting COGS %; EBITDA recon provided .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO on quarter context and integration: “While our start to 2025 was largely shaped by calendar timing shifts, weather variability, and near-term economic uncertainty… We remain focused on… integrating the combined company, optimizing our cost structure, driving demand by enhancing the guest experience…” .
- CFO on Q1 non-indicative nature: “First quarter performance tracks closer to ~5.5% of full year attendance and ~6% of full year revenues… fewer operating days and the shift of Boysenberry Festival were the biggest drivers of Q1 declines” .
- Cost actions: “We now expect current year operating cost and expenses to be more than 3% lower than combined 2024 actuals… once this initiative is completed, we will have reduced our full-time headcount by more than 10%” .
- April update: “Attendance… up a little more than 1%… In-park per capita… $66.34… Season pass… unit sales up 6%” .
- Portfolio moves: “Plans to close our Maryland parks after the 2025 season… expected to be cash flow accretive… reduce leverage and modestly improve EBITDA margin” .
Q&A Highlights
- Attendance/operating days: Q2 adds ~36 operating days; focus on higher-margin days to lift attendance beyond the ~2% implied by Q1 mix; Boysenberry effects to be fully lapped by mid-May .
- Guidance conviction: Despite softer April weather, long-lead indicators (passes, groups, resorts) and cost actions underpin guidance; e-commerce units +1% YTD with mid-single-digit price increase .
- Cost structure: 2025 operating costs/SG&A (ex-COGS) “down >3%” inclusive of inflation; severance/integration excluded from that target .
- Asset monetization: Land proceeds for DC-area property and Richmond could exceed “a couple hundred million dollars”; timeline 12–18 months .
- Pricing discipline: Dynamic pricing with a “floor”; not leaning into discounting; seek “comfortably crowded” parks to extend length of stay and upsell .
Estimates Context
- Revenue missed consensus: $202.06m vs $232.20m*, reflecting weather and event timing shifts (Easter and Knott’s Boysenberry into Q2) that deferred higher per-capita days .
- EPS beat: −$2.20 vs −$2.46*, aided by a larger tax benefit ($186.8m) tied to merger-related windup and other discrete items; operationally, the quarter was loss-making as usual for Q1 .
- EBITDA miss: company EBITDA $(217.11)m vs $(126.02)m*, reflecting cost timing (preopening maintenance, advertising), weather, and nonrecurring COGS alignment charge . Values with asterisks are retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Narrative intact into peak season: Maintaining $1.08–$1.12bn FY25 Adjusted EBITDA with improving April KPIs supports a second/third-quarter-driven setup; operating-day mix shift should help attendance conversion .
- Cost-down and synergy execution are near-term offsets: >3% OpEx/SG&A reduction (ex-COGS) and $120m synergy run-rate by YE create downside protection; additional $60m identified for 2026 boosts margin trajectory .
- Capital and portfolio optionality: $475–$500m 2025 CapEx (similar 2026) concentrated in marquee parks; asset monetizations (> $200m potential) and flexible ~30% discretionary CapEx bucket provide deleveraging and cash preservation levers .
- Short-term trading implications: Expect near-term volatility tied to weather headlines and monthly attendance updates; positive catalysts include June/July pass momentum, successful openings of new rides, and any asset-sale progress .
- Medium-term thesis: Attendance normalization at legacy Six Flags parks, per-capita uplift via food & beverage and premium experiences, disciplined pricing, and tech/ticketing integration underpin multi-year margin/FCF expansion .
Appendix: Additional Details
- Other press releases (Q2 window): Only item found was an administrative tax form notice (“2024 Schedule K-3… Now Available”), not operationally material .
- April five-week detail: Net revenues ~$192m; legacy Six Flags $97m, legacy Cedar Fair $95m; attendance 2.8m; in-park per cap $66.34 .
Sourcing/Citations:
- Q1 2025 8-K and press release:
- Q1 2025 earnings call transcripts:
- Q4 2024 8-K and PR:
- Q4 2024 call:
- Q3 2024 call:
Estimates disclaimer: Asterisked values are retrieved from S&P Global.