LG
LIONS GATE ENTERTAINMENT CORP /CN/ (LGF-A)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 FY2025 was a rebound quarter: revenue $970.5M, operating income $35.8M, adjusted OIBDA $144.2M, and adjusted diluted EPS $0.28; GAAP diluted EPS improved to $(0.09) from $(0.68) in Q2, driven by stronger Studio performance and record library monetization .
- Studio momentum: TV Production revenue +63% YoY to $404.6M and segment profit $60.9M; Motion Picture segment profit $83.6M despite tough comps; media networks saw sequential OTT subscriber growth (+170K) though segment profit fell YoY on higher content amortization .
- Management reiterated FY2025 guidance: Lionsgate Studios adjusted OIBDA $300–$320M; Starz North America adjusted OIBDA ~$200M; separation timing updated to a mid–late April shareholder meeting with financing commitments in place (Studio $800M ABL; Starz $300M TLA + $150M revolver) .
- Strategic catalyst: extension of exclusive Pay-One deal with Starz through 2028 plus a new post-Starz pay deal with Amazon Prime Video, expected to “significantly increase” pay window contribution; library TTM revenue hit a record $954M (+22% YoY) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Studio adjusted OIBDA rose 45% YoY to $112.0M; TV Production revenue +63% YoY to $404.6M with segment profit $60.9M, reflecting episodic deliveries and library licensing; Motion Picture maintained profitability on mid-budget films .
- Record library monetization: trailing 12-month revenue reached $954M (+22% YoY); CEO: “record performance from our library … converting a number of midbudget films to profitability … STARZ returning to domestic OTT subscriber growth on a sequential basis” .
- Separation readiness and distribution wins: confirmed financing structures; extended Starz Pay-One through 2028 and added an Amazon post-Starz pay deal; management expects “significantly increase the contribution from our pay television window” .
What Went Wrong
- Media Networks segment profit fell to $24.9M from $85.5M YoY on higher content amortization; North American revenue was roughly flat YoY as OTT growth offset linear pressure .
- Motion Picture revenue and segment profit declined vs. prior year’s Q3 due to exceptionally strong comps (Hunger Games: Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes; Saw X) .
- Cash generation and leverage: net cash used in operations of $(118.9)M; consolidated leverage ~6.5x; Studio net debt expected around $1.65B at separation (about 5.5x), indicating the need for sustained deleveraging into FY2026 .
Financial Results
Segment breakdown
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO Jon Feltheimer: “Our businesses performed well in a challenging environment … record performance from our library … Motion Picture Group converting a number of midbudget films to profitability … Television Group shepherding an extensive portfolio … STARZ returning to domestic OTT subscriber growth on a sequential basis.”
- On distribution: “The combination of [Starz Pay-One extension] and [Amazon deal] will significantly increase the contribution from our pay television window.”
- CFO James Barge: “For the quarter, revenue was $971M, adjusted OIBDA $144M, operating income $36M; reported EPS a loss of $0.09, adjusted EPS a profit of $0.28; net cash flow used in operating activities was $119M; adjusted free cash flow positive $13M. We are reiterating our fiscal 2025 outlook: Studios $300–$320M adjusted OIBDA; Starz North America ~$200M.”
- Starz CEO Jeffrey Hirsch on Amazon/Starz windows: “Getting [Lionsgate titles] earlier … creating space to bring in another partner … really helps everybody overall … impactful for us as we separate.”
Q&A Highlights
- Q4 cadence and Studio trajectory: Management expects a “very strong fourth quarter” driven by carryover from midsize films, TV deliveries (Ghost, The Rookie, Acapulco, Hunting Wives, Spartacus, Yellowjackets), OTT growth, and price increases; Studio leverage to improve as TTM performance rises and FCF strengthens .
- Separation timing: SEC comments and the need to update financials to Dec 31 push separation to immediately after a mid–late April shareholder meeting; financing ready to fund at separation .
- Pay window economics: Clarified Amazon will take four calendar 2025 films with flexibility for others; full slate for 2026–2028; expected margin uplift but no numeric disclosure .
- Ancillary monetization strategy: Location-based entertainment (John Wick Experience), stage plays (Hunger Games, Dirty Dancing, La La Land), AAA video game for John Wick; licensing upfront plus optional equity (up to ~50%), potential EBITDA contribution soon .
- Cost discipline: Focus on smarter production spending, tax incentives (e.g., New Jersey), and back-end participation for talent; Borderlands learning on execution, aligning screenplay/talent/budget to risk-reward .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q3 FY2025 EPS and revenue was unavailable due to missing CIQ mapping for LGF-A; therefore, we cannot provide a beat/miss vs consensus for this quarter. Values retrieved from S&P Global could not be accessed due to a mapping error.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Studio recovery is real: adjusted OIBDA rose 45% YoY to $112M with TV Production strength and mid-budget film profitability; expect strong Q4 cadence into FY2026 slate .
- OTT stabilization is a positive inflection: NA OTT subs +170K sequential to 12.57M; bundling strategy (Prime Video, VIZIO, YouTube TV) should reduce churn and marketing intensity over time .
- Window economics improving: Starz Pay-One extension and Amazon post-Starz deal likely support margin and cash flow from theatrical slate in 2026–2028; a clear near/mid-term catalyst set .
- Record library monetization ($954M TTM, +22% YoY) continues to underpin cash generation across cycles; management emphasizing innovative windowing and new buyers .
- Separation path de-risked: financing commitments in place; timeline clarified to post mid–late April meeting; expect Studio leverage ~5.5x at separation and deleveraging thereafter .
- Watch Media Networks profitability: segment profit compressed to $24.9M on higher content amortization; near-term mix shift and pay window contribution plus bundling could mitigate .
- Near-term trading lens: catalysts include separation execution, Q4 strength, window deal disclosures, and OTT momentum; risks include linear declines, content amortization drag, and execution on fiscal ’26 slate .