MS
Madison Square Garden Sports Corp. (MSGS)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 FY2025 revenue was $424.2M, down 1% YoY, with operating income $32.3M (-59% YoY) and adjusted operating income (AOI) $36.9M (-58% YoY), reflecting robust per‑game demand offset by higher league revenue sharing, luxury tax, and reduced local media rights fees .
- Revenue modestly missed Wall Street consensus ($427.4M*), while EPS delivered a significant miss: diluted EPS was -$0.59 versus +$1.48 consensus*; higher operating costs and a net tax expense drove the swing to a net loss .
- Management highlighted continued strength in sponsorships, suites, ticket yield and per‑game revenues; however, RSN headwinds intensified after proposed amendments to local media rights (Knicks -28%, Rangers -18%) to support MSG Networks’ debt restructuring .
- Near‑term catalysts include Knicks playoff participation and strong renewal demand launched for 2025‑26, while medium‑term drivers will include national media rights step‑ups and ongoing RSN restructuring outcomes .
Values retrieved from S&P Global*
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Per‑game revenues across tickets, sponsorships and premium hospitality remained strong, with average per‑game results exceeding the prior year; “continued robust demand” supported growth despite two fewer home games at The Garden .
- Sponsorship and signage +$8.9M YoY and suite revenues +$3.4M YoY in Q3, driven by higher net sales and premium hospitality initiatives; new partnerships (e.g., Experience Abu Dhabi patch, Lenovo/Motorola) and renewals (Verizon, Benjamin Moore) support momentum .
- Management quote: “Our third quarter results reflect growth in per‑game revenues driven by continued robust demand for the Knicks and Rangers… we remain as confident as ever in the value of owning marquee professional sports franchises.” — James L. Dolan, CEO .
What Went Wrong
- Local media rights fees decreased $18.6M YoY due to proposed amendments to MSG Networks agreements effective Jan 1, 2025, eliminating escalators and shortening expirations; RSN pressures remain a structural headwind .
- Direct operating expenses rose +16% YoY (+$43.3M), primarily from higher net provisions for league revenue sharing and NBA luxury tax (+$33.8M), and higher team personnel compensation (+$14.7M); this compressed AOI despite stable top‑line .
- Q3 diluted EPS of -$0.59 versus +$1.57 LY reflects higher operating costs and net tax expense; net income swung to -$14.2M from +$37.9M YoY .
Financial Results
Quarterly progression vs estimates
Values retrieved from S&P Global*
YoY comparison
Category drivers (YoY deltas)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our third quarter results reflect growth in per‑game revenues… we remain as confident as ever in the value of owning marquee professional sports franchises.” — James L. Dolan .
- “We believe our business is poised to deliver revenue growth across all in‑arena categories in fiscal 2026” — Victoria Mink (CFO) .
- “Those amendments included 28% and 18% reductions in annual rights fees payable to the Knicks and Rangers… elimination of annual rights fee escalators” — Jamaal Lesane/Company disclosure .
- Liquidity context: “A $1 reduction in revenue doesn’t translate into a $1 reduction in cash flow… strong liquidity… over $100M cash; revolvers in place” — Victoria Mink .
Q&A Highlights
- Local media rights/RSN risk and distribution alternatives: Management is assessing best path forward, prioritizing shareholder value and local fan connection; no specifics on alternative distribution yet .
- Liquidity planning amid potential RSN disruptions: Not one‑for‑one cash impact; strong cash and revolver capacity; potential need for waivers if MSG Networks bankruptcy .
- Sponsorship trajectory: Premium inventory (jersey patch), multiyear partner renewals and new deals expected to support growth .
- Ticket pricing philosophy: Annual and long‑term view; opportunistic pricing on packages and individual/group tickets to maximize long‑term value .
Estimates Context
- Revenue: Actual $424.2M slightly below consensus $427.4M* (miss of ~$3.2M); per‑game strength was offset by RSN fee reductions and fewer home games .
- EPS: Actual -$0.59 vs consensus +$1.48* — a significant miss driven by higher league revenue sharing, luxury tax, team personnel costs, and net tax expense .
- Coverage breadth: 5 revenue estimates; 4 EPS estimates for Q3 FY2025*.
Values retrieved from S&P Global*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Despite resilient per‑game demand, cost inflation tied to league revenue sharing, NBA luxury tax, and team personnel expenses materially compressed profitability; watch AOI trajectory into FYQ4/FY26 .
- RSN restructuring is a clear overhang: reduced local media rights revenue (-$18.6M YoY in Q3) and contract changes will weigh on near‑term earnings; monitor definitive documentation by June 27, 2025 .
- Sponsorship and premium hospitality are outperforming and should continue to offset some RSN pressure; suite and signage strength is a key pillar of in‑arena growth .
- Liquidity and cash flow buffers mitigate RSN downside risk (lower revenue sharing and taxes on reduced media rights); balance sheet shows adequate flexibility .
- Medium‑term tailwinds from NBA national media rights step‑ups begin next season; combined with strong ticket renewals and pricing, top‑line should benefit in FY2026 .
- Narrative driver: The magnitude of the EPS miss versus consensus is likely to focus investor attention on cost discipline and RSN resolution; any clarity or upside on media distribution could be a stock catalyst .
- Focus for the next quarter: Knicks playoff revenue cadence, sponsorship sell‑through, and any update on MSG Networks definitive agreements and fee timing .