MS
Madison Square Garden Entertainment Corp. (MSGE)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Revenue was $407.4M (+1% YoY) with Adjusted Operating Income (AOI) $164.0M (+2% YoY); diluted EPS was $1.56 vs $2.59 YoY, reflecting seasonality and a tougher comparison on taxes and concert mix .
- The Christmas Spectacular delivered a record season: ~1.1M tickets across 200 shows and >$170M in revenue, with record per-cap spending and the strongest sell-through rate in 25 years; AOI growth for FY25 remains “mid- to high single-digit” and on track .
- Management resumed buybacks ($25M in Q2) and repaid the $55M revolver; net leverage ~3x and $85M remains under authorization, supporting capital returns and de-leveraging .
- Concert bookings pace behind for March/June at The Garden and theaters (near-term headwind), but FY26 bookings are pacing up vs record FY25 Q1, driven by multi-night runs and residencies (medium-term tailwind) .
- Key catalysts: record holiday performance, premium hospitality strength, growing suite economics with MSG Sports, and sponsorship momentum (e.g., Waterloo and Abu Dhabi partnerships) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Record-setting Christmas Spectacular: ~1.1M tickets, 200 performances, >$170M revenue; “average per show revenue increased by a low double-digit percentage” and “record per caps,” underscoring robust demand and pricing execution .
- MSG Sports economics strengthened: arena license fees and other leasing revenue +16% YoY to $29.8M; higher suite license fees increased revenues shared with MSG Sports .
- Balance sheet and capital allocation: revolver fully repaid ($55M); $25M buybacks; net leverage ~3x; quarterly principal payments $4.1M continue—returning capital while deleveraging .
- Quote: “We remain confident in the strength of our business and expect to deliver solid adjusted operating income growth this fiscal year.” — James L. Dolan .
What Went Wrong
- EPS decline YoY: diluted EPS $1.56 vs $2.59 prior year; income tax expense was $49.5M vs $1.1M YoY, pressuring net income despite operating strength .
- Concert mix/headwinds: event-related revenues -$22.5M due to mix shift from promoted to rentals and fewer Garden concerts; SG&A +18% YoY partly from $4.5M executive transition costs .
- Near-term bookings softness: The Garden pacing behind for March/June; theaters behind for March (up for June); earlier cancellations (now normalized) and spring scarcity in arena-level supply remain a headwind for Q3/Q4 .
Financial Results
Consolidated Comparison
Notes:
- Q2 operating and AOI included executive transition costs ($4.5M and $3.1M); excluding these, operating income would have been $143.5M (+4% YoY) and AOI $167.2M (+4% YoY) .
- AOI definition was amended in FY24 to include the non-cash portion of arena license revenues from MSG Sports in all periods .
Revenue Category and Cost Detail
Key drivers:
- Entertainment revenues were “essentially unchanged” YoY in Q2 as lower concert revenue/mix was offset by Christmas Spectacular and higher suite economics shared with MSG Sports .
- F&B revenues +1% YoY in Q2 (more Knicks/Rangers games and two additional Christmas shows), though lower at concerts, primarily at The Garden .
- SG&A rose due to higher compensation/benefits and rent; included $4.5M executive transition costs .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We remain confident in the strength of our business and expect to deliver solid adjusted operating income growth this fiscal year.” — Executive Chairman & CEO James L. Dolan .
- “We remain on track to deliver mid- to high single-digit AOI growth this year… we hosted nearly 2.7M guests at more than 440 events… average per show revenue increased… over $170M total revenue for the Christmas Spectacular.” — Interim CFO Lee Weinberg .
- “Net debt leverage is now approximately 3x… quarterly principal payments are currently $4.1M per quarter… we repurchased $25M… $85M remaining under authorization.” — Ari Danes, SVP IR & Treasury .
- AOI definition includes the non-cash portion of arena license revenues from MSG Sports (amended in FY24), improving comparability across periods .
Q&A Highlights
- Bookings outlook: Garden pacing behind near-term; theaters mixed; FY26 bookings pacing up vs record FY25 Q1, driven by multi-night runs and residencies .
- Dynamic pricing: Earlier, seat-by-seat, week-by-week tactics boosted yields for Christmas Spectacular; pricing still below Broadway, offering continued upside .
- Cancellations: Returned to normal levels after Q1 spike; primary causes were artist health and tour-level demand issues .
- Property tax exemption: MSG’s tax abatement well below peers; repeal would require both NY state legislative houses; MSG is a job creator .
- Capital returns: $25M buyback in Q2; $85M remaining; flexibility to return capital given strong FCF and moderate leverage .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus estimates via S&P Global were unavailable at the time of this analysis due to data access limits, so a vs. estimates comparison is not provided. When available, we default to S&P Global for consensus metrics.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Seasonal strength: Q2 showed robust operational execution with AOI +2% YoY and record holiday performance; underlying operating metrics remain healthy despite concert mix shifts .
- EPS dynamics: Diluted EPS fell YoY due to a materially higher tax expense versus prior year; investors should focus on AOI and operating income trends for core performance .
- Bookings trajectory: Near-term bookings challenges at The Garden (March/June) temper Q3/Q4 visibility, but FY26 early pacing is encouraging—watch for multi-night runs/residency announcements .
- Premium & sponsorship tailwinds: Suites, hospitality renovations, and sponsorship wins (e.g., Waterloo, Abu Dhabi) support revenue quality and mix resilience .
- MSG Sports economics: Higher suite license revenues and more home games boosted shared economics; cash arena license fees locked at ~$44M with 3% annual growth through FY2055 .
- Capital allocation: Active buybacks and revolver repayment demonstrate confidence; ~3x net leverage and $85M repurchase capacity provide optionality for further returns .
- Risk check: Monitor New York property tax exemption debate and potential spring concert supply constraints; expect management to offset via pricing, special events, and diversified bookings .
KPIs (Operational)
Additional Detail: Category Drivers (Q2 2025)
- Entertainment offerings: -$22.5M event-related revenues from concerts due to mix shift and fewer Garden concerts; +$15.1M Christmas Spectacular; +$7.7M suite-license-related revenues shared with MSG Sports .
- Arena license & other leasing: $29.8M (+16% YoY) driven by three more Knicks/Rangers home games and higher other leasing revenues .
- F&B/Merchandise: $59.3M (+1% YoY) supported by more Knicks/Rangers home games and two additional Christmas shows; concerts F&B lower, primarily at The Garden .
- SG&A: $57.2M (+18% YoY), including $4.5M executive transition costs and higher rent .
- Liquidity/Leverage: $55M unrestricted cash; debt ~$618M; revolver fully repaid; buyback of ~682K shares at ~$36.68/share; $85M authorization remaining .
Non-GAAP Adjustments
- AOI excludes D&A, share-based comp, restructuring, merger/spin-off/acquisition costs, cloud amortization, and deferred comp remeasurement; AOI now includes the non-cash portion of arena license revenue from MSG Sports in all periods .
- Q2 AOI and operating income included $3.1M and $4.5M executive transition costs, respectively; excluding these increased AOI/operating income to $167.2M/$143.5M (+4% YoY each) .