Vail Resorts - Earnings Call - Q1 2021
December 10, 2020
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Good day and welcome to the Vail Resorts Q1 2021 Earnings Call. Today's conference is being recorded. As a reminder to enter the question queue, you may press star one at any time during today's call. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Rob Katz, CEO. Please go ahead, sir.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to our Fiscal 2021 Q1 Earnings Conference Call. Joining me on the call this afternoon is Michael Barkin, our Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, let me remind you that some information provided during this call may include forward-looking statements that are based on certain assumptions and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, as described in our SEC filings, and actual future results may vary materially.
Forward-looking statements in our press releases this afternoon, along with our remarks on this call, are made as of today, December 10, 2020, and we undertake no duty to update them as actual events unfold. Today's remarks include certain non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of these measures are provided in the table included with our press release, which, along with our quarterly report on Form 10-Q, were filed this afternoon with the SEC and are also available on the investor relations section of our website at www.vailresorts.com.
With that said, let's turn to our fiscal 2021 Q1 results. Our results for the Q1 continued to be negatively impacted by COVID-19. In Australia, Hotham and Falls Creek remained closed for the entire quarter, following the issuance of stay-at-home orders by the Victorian government on July 8, 2020, resulting in a significant decline in revenue compared to the prior period.
At Perisher, visitation trends improved relative to July 2020, as available terrain increased, but results continued to be negatively impacted by COVID-19 and related capacity concerns. In North America, our US Resorts experienced improved demand from leisure travelers throughout the quarter relative to the Q4 of fiscal 2020, but summer visitation remained well below historic levels. At Whistler Blackcomb, demand remained significantly below prior year levels, due in part to travel restrictions, with the Canadian border remaining closed the entire quarter to international guests, including guests from the US
We continued to maintain disciplined and rigorous cost controls throughout the quarter to partially mitigate the reduced revenue levels. Resort net revenue for the Q1 declined $132.1 million compared to the prior year, while resort reported EBITDA declined only $18.1 million over the same time period, reflecting cost reductions driven by a combination of reduced seasonal labor and expenses, as well as significant overhead cost saving actions.
Q1 resort net revenue includes the recognition of approximately $15.4 million of lift revenue related to the September 17, 2020, expiration of unredeemed credits offered to 2019-2020 North American pass holders, for which we deferred a total of $120.9 million of revenue from our prior year pass sales and which would have otherwise been recognized during fiscal 2020. We expect to recognize the remainder of the deferred revenue associated with the credit offer as lift revenue primarily during the Q2 and Q3 of fiscal 2021. Turning now to our 2020-2021 North American season pass sales.
As we approach the end of our selling period, season pass sales for the North American ski season increased approximately 20% in units and were flat in sales dollars through December 6, 2020, compared to the prior year period ended December 8, 2019, with sales dollars for this year reduced by the value of the redeemed credits provided to 2019-2020 North American pass holders. Without deducting for the value of the redeemed credits, sales dollars increased approximately 19% compared to the prior year.
Pass sales results are adjusted to eliminate the impact of foreign currency by applying an exchange rate of 78 cents between the Canadian dollar and US dollar in both periods for Whistler Blackcomb pass sales. Pass sales are reduced by the amount of Epic Coverage refund requests processed through December 6, 2020, but do not include any estimated reductions for future Epic Coverage refunds.
We are very pleased with the growth in our season pass program, particularly given the challenging circumstances surrounding the impacts of COVID-19. We expect that the total number of guests on all advanced purchase passes this year will exceed 1.4 million, including all passes for our North American and Australian resorts, demonstrating the significant loyalty of our guest base and the strong demand for our mountain resorts.
Since September, pass sales exceeded our expectations, primarily driven by continued strong demand from destination guests and significant growth in pass sales to guests who were not previously in our database, particularly in lower frequency Epic Day Pass products. For the full pass sale season, we saw very strong unit growth broadly across our destination markets. We also saw solid unit growth in our Utah, Northern California, and Whistler markets, and in Colorado saw comparable performance to last year.
The primary driver of our unit growth was from renewing pass holders, given the credit incentives offered for renewing guests, but we also saw strong growth in new pass holders, with particularly strong growth in pass sales to guests who were not previously in our guest database. We saw strong growth in our Epic Pass and Epic Local Pass products and very strong growth in our Epic Day Pass products, demonstrating both the guest loyalty we have created in our core programs and the success of our long-term strategy to move new and less frequent guests into our pass products.
While we expect that some of our Epic Day Pass growth may be the result of the circumstances surrounding this season, we also believe that the growth from new guests into our pass products this year will accelerate our ability to move guests into advanced commitments into the future.
The success of our total program this year has been supported by the value proposition of our pass products and the steps taken to address the current environment, including our pass holder credits, extended deadlines, the reservation system, new Epic Coverage programs included with the purchase of every pass product for no additional charge, continued data-driven marketing efforts, the inclusion of Peak Resorts in our network, and a second year offering our broader Epic Day Pass products.
The safety of our guests, employees, and communities continues to be our top priority. As previously mentioned, we implemented operating procedures that we believe will enable us to operate safely across our 34 North American ski resorts throughout the season, including the implementation of a reservation system for our guests. Currently, the reservation system, which opened to pass holders on November 6, 2020, and lift ticket purchasers on December 8, 2020, continues to have available capacity for almost all days during the core season across our resorts.
The reservation system and our contingency planning around our operations have positioned us to react quickly to the changing circumstances surrounding COVID-19 restrictions across our resort jurisdictions, which we expect will continue throughout the season. Now, I'd like to turn the call over to Michael to further discuss our financial results, liquidity, and fiscal 2021 outlook.
Michael Barkin (Executive VP and CFO)
Thanks, Rob, and good afternoon, everyone. As Rob mentioned, our results for the Q1 were significantly impacted by COVID-19 and the resulting impacts to our Australian and North American mountain resorts. Net loss attributable to Vail Resorts was $153.8 million, or a loss of $3.82 per diluted share for the Q1 of fiscal 2021, compared to a net loss attributable to Vail Resorts of $106.5 million, or a loss of $2.64 per diluted share in the prior year.
Resort reported EBITDA was a loss of $94.8 million in the first fiscal quarter, which compares to resort reported EBITDA loss of $76.7 million in the same period in the prior year, primarily as a result of the negative impacts of COVID-19. Our liquidity position remained strong to mitigate further disruptions from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, with total cash and revolver availability as of November 30, 2020, of approximately $1.2 billion, with $614 million of cash on hand, $419 million of US revolver availability under the Vail Holdings credit agreement, and $169 million of revolver availability under the Whistler credit agreement.
As of October 31, 2020, our net debt was 4.1 times trailing 12 months total reported EBITDA. We continue to expect to have sufficient liquidity to fund operations through at least the 2021-2022 ski season, even in the event of extended resort shutdowns. Now, turning to our outlook for fiscal 2021. Given the uncertainty COVID-19 has created for travel demands, operating restrictions, and the ultimate visitation to and spending at our resorts, the company will not be providing full year guidance for fiscal 2021 at this time.
That said, we are very pleased with the results of our season pass sales and the strong foundation of visitation and revenue that creates heading into the season. Given the challenging dynamics associated with COVID-19, we continue to expect material declines in visitation to our resorts and associated revenue declines in fiscal 2021 relative to our original expectations for fiscal 2020, primarily as a result of expected declines in visitation from non-pass lift ticket purchases due to reduced destination visitation, with more material declines specifically among international guests.
While we expect that mandated capacity limitations will have a negative impact on our visitation during peak periods, we expect the primary driver of visitation declines for the North American ski season to be a result of reduced travel demands. We expect additional negative impacts to visitation in select regions where heightened restrictions exist, including Whistler Blackcomb, given Canadian border closures and domestic travel guidance, and Vermont as a result of the quarantine policy for out-of-state travelers.
We also expect significant negative financial impacts on our ancillary lines of business, materially in excess of the decline in visitation as a result of significant COVID-19 limitations and restrictions, particularly in food and beverage and in ski school. In food and beverage, we have recently reduced capacity at our restaurants and have limited many of our on-mountain restaurants to grab-and-go options. In ski school, we've reduced group sizes and, at many resorts, eliminated full-day and other select lesson types in response to COVID-19 limitations and restrictions.
Since the start of COVID-19, disciplined cost management has been a primary focus, with significant actions taken to date to tightly manage our costs with reduced revenue expectations. We've implemented operating plans that actively manage our expenses while maintaining a high-quality experience for our guests, and we remain confident in our ability to deliver against the cost structure variability previously outlined in our September 2020 earnings release. I'll now turn the call back over to Rob.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Thanks, Michael. We remain committed to reinvesting in our resorts, creating an experience of a lifetime for our guests and generating strong returns for our shareholders. We plan to maintain a disciplined approach to capital investments, keeping our core capital at reduced levels given the continued uncertainty due to COVID-19.
We will announce our complete capital plan for calendar year 2021 in March 2021, but we are pleased to highlight several signature investments planned for the 2021-2022 North American ski season, which were previously deferred from calendar year 2020 as a result of COVID-19 and are subject to regulatory approvals. In Colorado, we plan to move forward with a 250-acre lift-served terrain expansion in the McCoy Park area of Beaver Creek.
The new lift access beginner and intermediate bowl experience is a rare opportunity to expand with highly accessible terrain in one of the most idyllic settings in Colorado and will further differentiate the high-end family-focused experience at Beaver Creek. At Breckenridge, we plan to install a new four-person high-speed lift to serve the popular Peak 7. This additional lift will further enhance the guest experience at the most visited resort in the US and will significantly increase guest access and circulation for the intermediate terrain on Peak 7 and 6.
At Keystone, we plan to replace the four-person Peru lift with a six-person high-speed chairlift in order to increase capacity out of a key base area of the resort and improve guest access, circulation, and the experience at one of the top-performing resorts in the US. At Crested Butte, we plan to replace the two-person fixed grip Peachtree chairlift with a new three-person fixed grip lift that services beginner terrain at the base of the resort and will improve uplift capacity.
Additionally, we plan to improve the grading of the terrain serviced by the Peachtree lift to create a more consistent experience for our beginner and ski school guests. At Okemo, we plan to complete a transformational investment, including upgrading the Quantum lift from a four-person to a six-person high-speed chairlift, relocating the existing four-person Quantum lift to replace the Green Ridge three-person fixed grip chairlift. These investments will greatly improve uplift capacity, further enhance the guest experience, and complete our $35 million capital plan for Triple P.
We will also continue to invest in company-wide technology enhancements to support our data-driven approach and corporate infrastructure, which will improve our scalability and efficiency as we work to optimize our processes, business analytics, and cost discipline across the network. In particular, we intend to invest in a number of upgrades to the infrastructure of our guest contact centers and bring a best-in-class approach to how we service our guests through these channels.
Our call centers and chat functionality were not well-suited to handle the more than four-fold increase in call and chat volume we saw over the past six months, which created a challenging experience for our guests. We will also continue to invest in ongoing maintenance capital to support our infrastructure across our resorts. We plan to spend approximately $4 million on integration activities primarily related to Peak Resorts.
In total, we expect our capital plan for calendar 2021 will be approximately $110 to 115 million, excluding one-time items associated with integration, and $11 million of reimbursable investments. Including these one-time items, we expect our total capital plan will be approximately $125 to 130 million. We will continue evaluating our calendar year 2021 capital plan as the season progresses, including potential opportunities to increase the planned level of investments, and we'll be providing further detail and updates in March 2021.
We remain confident in the long-term process of our business model that is built on the loyalty of our guests, the strong lineup of season pass products that provide access to our irreplaceable network of world-class resorts, and the sophisticated data-driven marketing approach we use to communicate with and attract our guests.
Our strong capitalization positions us to continue to invest in our people, our resorts, and the guest experience while remaining flexible to manage through the evolving circumstances caused by COVID-19. I would like to thank all of our employees for their passion, hard work, and commitment to creating a safe, exceptional experience for our guests. While this always lies at the center of our success, it has never been more tested than over the challenges of the past nine months and in what lies ahead for the upcoming season.
I take tremendous pride in our team's full engagement in balancing the new needs and requirements of all our various stakeholders in an ever-changing internal and external environment. While nothing we do is ever perfect and it can always be improved, it's very clear how all of your efforts consistently remain guided by the same core values that have been at the center of our company since its founding. At this time, Michael and I would be happy to answer your questions. Operator, we are now ready for questions.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star one on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please make sure your mute function is turned off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. Again, please press star one to ask a question. We ask that you limit yourself to one initial question and one follow-up. We'll take our first question from Felicia Hendricks with Barclays.
Felicia Hendrix (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Hi, good afternoon, and thanks as always for all the color. The first question I have is on your upside surprise on the season pass sales. As you outlined, the major difference between your original expectation was the destination demand and then the new demand, particularly in the day passes. Just wondering, is there any way to kind of parse through that?
When you gave the guidance for where you thought season pass sales would end up in last quarter, what were you expecting to happen and what was different? I mean, if you just give us more information, I mean, you told us what was different, but if you can kind of parse through that. Then also, I see that you just extended the cutoff date for the pass overall, so why?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
So I guess on the first piece, what I would say is I guess there were two components. One component was the renewal pass holders, and we felt like we were going to—we had pulled forward a lot of renewals and that we were not going to see as many renewals from September through December as we did last year, and that turned out to be true.
I think the second piece was trying to assess the conversion of people who were in our database, either in a lapsed pass or paid ticket last year or lapsed paid ticket, and trying to assess their propensity to buy a pass this year. I'd say we were, again, largely in line with that. I think the hardest thing for us to forecast was people who are not in our guest database at all, so we don't really have any history on them to assess. We do obviously pull new people in every year. Obviously, there was a case to be made that because of lift tickets being more restricted this year, that maybe we would move some of those folks in.
On the other hand, because of COVID-19, these would typically be the lower probability conversion opportunities for the company and so I think we were just conservative about that given the environment we were going into. Ultimately, it was really that group that drove a lot of the upside from our expectations in September that we saw, particularly in the Epic one to three-day products and obviously, that product is only in its second year.
We had high hopes for that product when we launched it to do exactly what it did this year, but again, hard to always tell when something's that new and even harder when you're in the middle of a pandemic. But obviously, we're quite pleased to see that. On the pass deadline, the pass deadline was scheduled to be December 6, and it was kept at December 6.
I think the only thing that we did was we extended for about a week the opportunity for people to pick their Epic Coverage priority reservation days so that we just gave people a little more time to make the selections in terms of how Epic Coverage would work for their situation.
Felicia Hendrix (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Thanks. Then just can you remind us for Whistler, what percentage of that is of your visitation and/or EBITDA? Then overall, what percentage of your, I guess, visitation is destination versus local?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. We don't break out by resort at this point because of the nature of the Epic Pass being allocated across the entire network. If you look at where Whistler was when we did the deal, roughly about half of their business came from the US or international, so it was about half domestic Canada and about half non-Canadian, and that's about as much as we can provide at this point.
Felicia Hendrix (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Okay, and then just on the overall company, what percentage of your visitation is destination versus local?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. We actually haven't updated that with Peak, so I don't have a new number for you on that. For our destination resorts, we skewed a bit over half on destination versus local in our last numbers that we put out.
Felicia Hendrix (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Okay. Thank you.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Shaun Kelly with Bank of America.
Shaun Kelley (Senior Research Analyst)
Hi. Thanks, everyone. Good afternoon. Rob, just to kind of stick with the first part of the last question, wondering if you could just give us a little bit of color when you talk about this new customer cohort that sort of came into the pass.
I mean, I know you don't know that much about them, but I think you've broken them down a little bit by the type of product. It seems like they were most attracted by the one to three-day product. But are they regional or destination in nature just for that new cohort? Or kind of what are you thinking about how valuable that groupset could be kind of going forward even after the season?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. I would say very much a destination guest. We certainly do know that, and I think coming from a broad array of markets across the country, and I think this is, again, something I think the good news for us was.
Obviously, we had already designed this product, introduced it, put it forward last year, so we had marketing approaches, even though we didn't have their contact information. Obviously, we have other channels that we try and reach people, so we had that out there, and I think it turned out to be exactly the right product for this market right now in that I think a lot of these folks were planning clearly to take a trip.
I don't know whether they were only planning to come for a couple of days or maybe they are planning a potential longer trip but figured they would lock in a couple of these days upfront at an attractive value for them and obviously be able to get into the reservation system early, so they may add days as the season goes on. I think we'll learn all that as the season progresses.
But again, I would say this was when we talked about the Epic Day Pass when we launched it, this was really exactly what we were looking for and I think no doubt that the pandemic, for those people who are committed to coming, clearly this was a product that was an opportunity. I think more broadly, it certainly appears as though for people who are looking to take some kind of trip over the winter and have potential interest in a winter vacation, I just think this being outside, being outdoors into an experience that they may be aware of clearly resonated.
Shaun Kelley (Senior Research Analyst)
Second question would just be, and this one's a little bit more theoretical, but if we fast forward to next year and travel has returned or is kind of by and large normal by next ski season, what are your thoughts around how you think the retention rate could play out? Because this year, obviously, between both the discount of what you saw on the, or the credit, I should say, on what you gave coming out of last season, combined with, I think, the reservation pattern and a variety of other things, it worked really well on your ability to retain existing people.
Do you think this can stay at an elevated level? Have you learned some things about this or would you expect it to mean revert closer to historical levels, and sort of kind of why are you thinking what you're thinking?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. I think it's still probably a little bit early for us to have any kind of final views on this because we're still digesting and analyzing, obviously, the results that ended just a little over a week ago. But what I would say is that I think no doubt that there were the credits clearly helped and I think in particular helped with people who were low-frequency skiers during the COVID year and certainly helped.
I think we accelerated and certainly helped retain, I think, some of our even high-frequency skiers for season products because of the minimum 20% credit. Obviously, it certainly helped that people understood that there was a benefit to getting in early. On the other hand, and it's really important to not overlook this, we are in the middle of a very uncertain travel environment.
So on balance, I think there'd be huge benefit, I think, to us in having a more normal environment that we would be selling into where the focus on all restrictions, understanding the experience, understanding things like Epic Coverage, which typically are nowhere near as important as it was this year. I think all of that would allow us to honestly flex a little bit more in other areas. So how that balances out next year, I think that's certainly a little bit hard to say right now.
But I mean, to me, the most important thing is that in the middle of COVID-19, when I think a lot was at risk, we were able to retain, right, these core customers and actually introduce new people into the program. As you know, having their data, having them as a pass holder once, obviously dramatically improves our ability to market to them and to retain them for the future. So I think, and by the way, the prospects that we brought in, these people who were not in our guest database before, there was no credit for them. Obviously, there was no discount offered to them. They were getting the same product as everybody else.
So I think on balance, we walk away from this feeling very good. Exactly how the math will work out, I think we'll be seeing and we'll have probably more to say about that as we go into next year. But I think we leave this selling season quite positive about where the program is going.
Shaun Kelley (Senior Research Analyst)
Thanks for that. Last thing I would have just be, could you talk a little bit about, there were some headlines out regarding Lake Tahoe this morning, possible kind of stay-at-home orders in California and how that could impact sort of the broader operating activities, but I imagine this is something we're going to have to struggle with possibly around the portfolio given some dense urban towns.
You talked about Vermont a little bit, which has, I think, some very confusing policies, so can you just talk a little bit about kind of what you know right now on some of the regional or local operational challenges and kind of how you're exactly contending with this or dealing with it at the resort level just for the season kind of as it comes or based on what you know right now?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Sure, and I would say number one, yes, I do think that we will be having to navigate these ever-changing restrictions and new regulations throughout the portfolio at every resort, with every community, in every locale throughout the season. I do think that right now, certainly a lot of those changes are ones that are making further restrictions right on the kind of activities that people can do and then what we can do at the resort.
But I think we also should assume that there's probably going to be some positive trends too at some point during the season. So we may see some loosening as well, and I know all of our communities and our company are focused on partnering, right, to obviously bring down the case load everywhere. So in the end, I think we'll see kind of both sides of this.
I think from an operational standpoint, no, it's one of the reasons why I said what I said at the end of my remarks about our employees. I think this does put tremendous strain and challenge on the company as a whole and everybody, right, to try and address these. I think the one advantage that I think we have is we went in with a lot of preparation on a lot of fronts. The reservation system, we have a number of central teams that are constantly monitoring everything that's going on and that are heavily engaged with all of these local regulators, local public health, all of that and so we can use that information.
We can obviously also take a kind of best practice approach because we understand we've already seen what's going on in Tahoe. If something like that shows up somewhere else, then we know how to address it. We can immediately put that in place. That's a real advantage, I think, by having a number of resorts and having this central approach that we have because it's central from the standpoint that we can kind of push it out.
But actually, each of these resorts, as they go through whatever new restriction gets enacted, they become really the leader of that for the rest of the company. So I feel like we're well prepared, but there's no doubt that this is going to be operationally a very challenging season ahead.
Shaun Kelley (Senior Research Analyst)
Thank you.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Chris Woronka with Deutsche Bank.
Chris Woronka (Director and Senior Equity Analyst)
Hey. Good afternoon, guys. I wanted to ask about how the mechanics are going to work on the reservation system even if someone can't get a reservation on the day that they want. Does that trigger a refund process or just how does that work?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
So the way the system works, and again, I'm going to, of course, caveat anything on this to the terms and conditions, of course, on the program that are on our website. But in shorthand, what I'd say is, yeah, we had a time period through December 7th where all of our pass holders had the opportunity to go out and get reservations and to the extent that they were not able to get the days that they wanted, they had the opportunity to then get a refund through December 7th.
So to the extent that they did, then that's something that obviously we're going to now review and we'll look at obviously what comes in and make sure that it aligns with all the terms and conditions and then we'll, of course, follow through with the guests on that. Going forward, if they can't make a new reservation that they want, that in and of itself does not create a refund event.
Felicia Hendrix (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Very helpful. Then I realize it's still very early in the season. But as you kind of comb through your databases and where folks are showing up or making reservations, is there any hard data yet to validate the thesis that people are staying closer to home and folks from New York are going to Vermont more so than they're maybe going to Vail? Again, I know it's early and you haven't really hit the peak holidays yet. But is there anything out there to kind of figure out the magnitude of how close to home people are staying?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. I think it's a little. It's definitely too early to make any assessments of that. I do think from some of the reservation data that we're looking at, I think that our destination guests are absolutely looking to potentially travel to the West, and there's no doubt that the biggest numbers of reservations, of course, are in our biggest western resorts, and especially where Whistler is not an option really for many people within the US I think that that, of course, will put more interest, I think, in our Colorado and Utah resorts.
So at the moment, I think we'll see how this plays out. But right now, given the strong momentum that we saw, again, broadly across our destination markets, right, many of our destination markets, most of our destination markets don't have an option for them to ski close to home. So obviously, these are folks who are willing to either get on a plane or drive a longer distance out to our resorts.
Chris Woronka (Director and Senior Equity Analyst)
Okay. Very helpful. Thanks, guys.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Laurent Vasilescu with Exane BNP Paribas.
Laurent Vasilescu (Managing Director)
Oh, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. On the last call, an illustrative example was given that if resort revenues decline 30% for fiscal year 2021, we can expect Resort EVA to be about $400 million. I was just curious, any updated thoughts on that framework as we progress through the fiscal year?
Michael Barkin (Executive VP and CFO)
No. At this time, no updates to it. As I mentioned in our earlier remarks and in the release, I think we've stayed very, very focused on our cost discipline and I think managed to that. I think you can see the results of that in our Q1 results and certainly remain committed to managing through that as we go into the season here, and no changes to the illustrative example that we provided in September.
Laurent Vasilescu (Managing Director)
That's great to hear. Then shifting focus here, does COVID - I'm just curious, does COVID create an opportunity to take share or even potentially acquire some standalone mountains that might not be in good shape, might not have the same balance sheet that you have? Any thoughts on that front?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
I think it's hard to say. I think that'll play out over the upcoming 12 to 18 months. I think we have seen in previous events that are sometimes destabilizing that after things stabilize, that people are sometimes interested in having strategic discussions again. Again, I think usually in the middle of the instability, sometimes tougher to have those discussions. But I think as you come out of the other side, I think that's where there's an opportunity.
I think for us, we certainly, when we look back historically, we were able to do a lot of things both internally and externally on the strategic side coming out of the 2008, 2009 recession, and I think we're very focused on positioning the company to be able to make the most of whatever opportunities are out there and certainly, our capital, liquidity, and access to that capital is, yeah, it has been a strength, maybe it's a more differentiated strength right now. So leveraging that to make sure that we can, we don't miss anything over the next 12 months, I think is critical.
Laurent Vasilescu (Managing Director)
Very helpful. Lastly, I know this is a little over a year out, but Beijing will be hosting the Winter Games and I believe Whistler is a sizable market for the Chinese consumer. How are you positioning yourself to leverage the games to attract more visitations from Asia, whether that's with your mountains in North America or maybe Australia and maybe some of the partnerships you have in Japan?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. I think it's one of the primary reasons why, among many, that Whistler was such an attractive acquisition opportunity because we knew that long-term they had such a good connection, the best connection, I think, in North America with the Asian market that we felt like that was an opportunity for us to really lead the way. I think at the resort level, there are many things that the resort has done on many fronts, whether it's around language or food or relationships with travel providers and wholesalers in China to continue to drive that business.
Of course, we're a little bit on hiatus and pause during COVID and some of the travel restrictions. But I think once COVID is behind us, that's something we're absolutely going to re-energize all of those efforts, and yes, I think an opportunity both through the partnerships and ultimately potentially through acquisition in Japan is critical.
I think, saying, yes, there's a real opportunity, and they've seen that already in Australia. So again, I think the Chinese ski market is one of the maybe best, right, biggest global opportunity in the entire ski industry and all the moves that we make for the company strategically are oriented around making sure that we can get benefit from that trend.
Laurent Vasilescu (Managing Director)
Very helpful. Thank you very much.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Thanks.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Patrick Scholes with Truist.
Patrick Scholes (Managing Director and Senior Analyst)
Hi. Good afternoon, everyone. Question for you. I see that Eagle County is in the orange designation for COVID in Colorado, and Summit County is in the red designation. Has the governor told you what would happen if those move to the highest level, purple? Would that impact the ability to run your lifts? Thank you.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. I mean, no. We obviously were in communication at both the local county and state level on an ongoing basis, high-frequency dialogue. But other than what is out there in the regulations that are posted, no, we don't have additional information and it isn't just, it's obviously decisions that would be made at both the state level and at the county level. So both of those would ultimately be critical players in terms of whatever decisions are made if we move beyond that.
What I can say is I think obviously both Summit County, Colorado, and Eagle County are working very intensely to bring down the caseload and to get to a decreasing slope and I know that Eagle County is very focused, as we are, on keeping them in orange for right now. Whether that's possible, we'll see and I know Summit County is looking, obviously, to hopefully move from red to orange. So again, a lot of work going on on every level. But exactly what the outcome will be or what their regulations would be if they move to purple at this point, yeah, not 100% clear.
Patrick Scholes (Managing Director and Senior Analyst)
Okay. Thank you for the color on that. That's it.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from David Katz of Jefferies.
David Katz (Managing Director)
Hi. Afternoon, everyone. Congrats on the results.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Thanks.
David Katz (Managing Director)
I've had a number of discussions of late around certain areas where there's an unusually high, right, and not at all surprising, number of people either buying or renting homes in areas like near your largest mountains, and presumably, over the long term, that population growth, right, if it remains permanent, is helpful, but I'd love to hear just a bit more thought about what happens in the near term and then longer term what you may be seeing along those same lines about people moving there and any evident impact on what you've published in results so far.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. I think certainly we would agree. I think we're seeing very strong demand, right, for resort properties and a lot of transactions. In many ways, probably the strongest demand we've seen since 2008 or 2007. I think, yeah, people are looking for opportunities to be closely outside of many of the big cities because of COVID.
How that shifts as hopefully we put COVID behind us soon enough, I'm not sure. But I would say this. I think the work-from-home trend, right, using video technology and other technologies so that people can work remotely, it would seem like that trend is clearly going to continue in some level. I think that's probably going to be true on some level for schooling, particularly maybe higher education.
So to the extent that people are able to put themselves in vacation spots on a more balanced way throughout the year and not just clustered into these peak times, I mean, that would be a huge benefit to, I think, the resort industry and obviously to our company because we still obviously do struggle to move people out of peak times and into off-peak times.
To the extent that they're not as tied down to their job or potential school and can do things remotely, then obviously that would, whether it's to buy real estate or it's just that people will travel in a more even way throughout the season, I think that could represent a major opportunity coming out of the COVID dynamic to the entire vacation industry, but particularly for our company.
David Katz (Managing Director)
Thank you. With respect to the very near term, and apologies for the short-term question, which may bear some unknowns, should we find ourselves 30, 60 days down the road and there are circumstances where the mountain is open, but for whatever reason, a person can't fulfill, right?
They may have missed a reservation opportunity or made one and they can't fulfill, right, or can't get to the mountain. I assume that there's some latitude within the program as it's laid out. What I'm essentially getting at is the prospect that whether we would have any credits rolling into next season as well, potentially.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. I think at this point, our view is that we tried our very best to make our coverage comprehensive and to address many of the most likely scenarios throughout the season. Yeah, we're hopeful that that will provide support for our guests. No doubt, like in any year, it won't be a perfect solution and it won't necessarily solve everybody's problem.
But right now, obviously, we feel like it's a strong program that I think will be available to people when they need it and I also think that in the end, we're going to have obviously, it's a long season. We're just at the very beginning. I think a lot of our pass products, all of our pass products, are basically available throughout the season. So that really gives people multiple opportunities to potentially take a trip. So I think that also helps in that we're not just talking about one situation. So at this point, I think that we feel good about where we are on that front.
David Katz (Managing Director)
Got it. Thank you very much. Congrats.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Paul Golding with Macquarie Capital.
Paul Golding (Senior Payments and Lifestyle Analyst)
Great. Thanks so much for taking my question. So I was wondering if there was anything from the database that you could share around how many or what proportion of single-day lift ticket customers traded up into Epic. Just trying to understand to what extent maybe, if you have any color on this, the dynamic route that you were talking about earlier of maybe fear of not being able to get that priority without the pass contributed to tailwind for you in tearing people up into the pass network.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. I think at this point, again, a little too early in our process to have all those insights perfectly dialed. So I don't think I wouldn't comment on exactly the specific on it. But I guess I would say just seeing the dynamic with people who are not in the database, right, at all, and seeing the strength we have there, I'm sure that the urgency in terms of getting a priority ticket was important to them.
Now, that said, I'd also say that a lot of these folks came in towards the end. Not every one of them has made their reservation. So I also have no doubt that part of this was the value proposition, a big part. So it's important to remember that last year, obviously, when we didn't have COVID, Epic Day Pass was a very strong performer for us because of the value that it offered. So I think we're seeing that again now. No doubt helped somewhat, and I have no doubt that these are folks who, in the absence of buying a pass, would have been obviously our most likely lift ticket customers.
But yeah, I don't have any additional information at this point to share on kind of the exact conversions for each guest type because there actually are quite a lot of them and quite a lot of dynamics, both by product type, for this year's product type, the last year for geography, and all those different points. So that's one of the things we'll obviously spend quite a bit of time on before we go into next year.
Paul Golding (Senior Payments and Lifestyle Analyst)
Got it. Then just a follow-on to that around the database. As you were going into the end of the selling season, is there any info you can give on volumes or integration progress of any Peak database uniques that you were able to carry over successfully and that you've been able to retarget or anything around essentially what the like-for-like there is as far as you being able to integrate more uniques into your own process?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
I can't really share specifics on that, but what I would say is I think we're still very good about this first year, right, with having Peak fully in the program and feel good about our results in the Northeast, I think, especially given some of the restrictions that are in Vermont, and we feel like we've had a good first year with Peak, a good first year with the database.
I think what we've seen with other acquisitions is that often we see an acceleration in the second and third year because the data that we're getting, a lot of the history is that it's tougher for us to fully integrate than when we generated ourselves and have kind of plugged ourselves and all that, so I think that's an opportunity for us as we go forward, but yeah, feel good about that first year with Peak.
Paul Golding (Senior Payments and Lifestyle Analyst)
Great. Thanks so much.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Thanks.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Alex Maroccia with Berenberg.
Alex Maroccia (VP of Equity Research)
Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. Just one last question. Still waiting.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Alex, we're actually having a bit of a hard time hearing you. You're breaking up a little bit.
Alex Maroccia (VP of Equity Research)
Is it any better now?
Operator (participant)
Yeah.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
That is. Thank you.
Alex Maroccia (VP of Equity Research)
Yeah. No problem. Last quarter, you were still waiting on 75,000 or so online forms to process. So you can get a sense of how many people were going to downgrade their passes and deal with some other random issues. Can you give us a sense of how many ended up downgrading and just in general what you're seeing across the portfolio?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. What I would say is that I think on the forms piece, we were able to convert quite a few of those folks into a pass product, but not everyone. I think there were a number of people who were whatever they were interested in wasn't or their form or whatever they were requesting wasn't something that we could ultimately fulfill.
Wouldn't doubt that some people maybe decided not to proceed. But actually, I think in total, the forms were a nice contributor to our numbers, but it wasn't the total that we announced in September, which isn't a huge surprise to us. I think on the downgrade, no, I don't think downgrading was a material driver this year.
I think the effective pass price or the difference between units and revenue was much more impacted by the fact that we had a lot of new people coming into very low-frequency products and that brought down the kind of average yield. But it wasn't necessarily that we saw a huge downgrade issue.
Alex Maroccia (VP of Equity Research)
Okay. Understood. Thank you.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Ryan Sundby with William Blair.
Ryan Sundby (Research Analyst)
Yeah. Hey. Thanks for taking my question. I guess just to follow up on Paul's question a couple back there. When you look at the 20% increase in pass units for the year, as you look at that shape of growth here for the year, did that pace change at all during the final couple of weeks as we started to see COVID cases rise throughout the country?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
No. I mean, so we did not see any kind of impact broadly on the program. I think that we definitely saw better strength outside the Northeast than inside the Northeast, I think, at the end. But whether that has something to do I mean, obviously, we still saw very good growth in the Northeast. So whether that was just timing or whether that was because of restrictions, I don't know. But we did not see any material decline or change in trajectory as we went into the final deadline that we had at all, and certainly nothing that we would attribute to what we're seeing with COVID.
Now, that said, I think in terms of ultimate visitation to the resorts from either pass holders or paid ticket holders, it's still our belief that we will see a material impact there while these COVID restrictions are in place. But again, I guess that's to be seen.
Ryan Sundby (Research Analyst)
That's super helpful. Then, Rob, just were there any key learnings or anything that surprised you in Australia that you can carry over here to the US as you start the season for this year?
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
I think a few key learnings were, one, be prepared as best as you can. Obviously, this is such a unique environment that it's really tough to be prepared on everything and to try and forecast everything that could happen. But I think it felt like one learning was, yeah, the better we could get on systems, the better we could get to operate through whatever environment was thrown at us was critical. I think we also saw in Australia that there was still demand.
Even in the middle of the pandemic there, there was still demand to come to the resort. There was still demand for passes. I think that gave us confidence that if we gave people the right time, if we, again, leaned on our credit approach as a coverage, something that we introduced in Australia too, that ultimately those things would really help the business.
Then I think insight. We took a lot of insight from all kinds of things from Australia and resorts that I think really helped us plan. So there are a lot of data points that we took from especially comparison that we used, whether it was on pass sales, whether it was on who was going to show up, who wasn't, whether it was on how to do food service, whether it was how to do ski school. So I think all of that gave us an advantage.
By the same token, we opened Keystone as our first resort and I think all 34 of our resorts in North America were immediately getting learnings from Keystone when Breckenridge opened, immediately getting learnings from Breckenridge. So I think our Mountain Ops team is doing a terrific job of really using this as, yeah, who can we learn from what? So that's, again, a very positive idea for us as we try and navigate the tough environment.
Ryan Sundby (Research Analyst)
Great. Yeah. Sounds like a big advantage there. Thanks for the time.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. Sure.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Felicia Hendricks with Barclays.
Felicia Hendrix (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Hi. Thanks. I didn't get to wish you guys a happy Hanukkah, so I wanted to get back into queue. No.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Happy Hanukkah to you too, Felicia.
Felicia Hendrix (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Thank you. No, I actually did have a substantive follow-up. Look, I know it's really early in the season, so you might not have that much data, but I was just wondering, given all the restrictions, we hear certain anecdotal things, so just wondering if you could talk about your satisfaction scores so far to the extent there are any.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Oh, with guests? Yeah. I think it's definitely too early. Tough to comment on it. I think we'd say, but anecdotally, I think there are a lot of people, one, who are thrilled to be outside the Mountain Ops to be skiing, people who are just looking at this as a great opportunity for them, their family, their friends to be together. I mean, again, anecdotally, a lot of the people who I know, talk to over time, I mean, these are obviously people who are more accustomed to skiing.
But everybody still wants to come out or go to whatever resort they can go to. So I think having had limited options over a long period of time, I think people feel like this is one that they want them and their family to still pursue. There's definitely chatter about mask wearing. We are doing our very best to have very strict compliance with face covering. But obviously, just like everybody else, that's going to probably remain as a challenge over the whole season. But I think we now have the most alignment we've ever had with all of our local community partners in terms of, yeah, it's clear that these are things we have to do.
I think people also understand that we can't, that there are certain things we can't deliver and I think they get that. I think one of the things we mentioned in the release, and we're going to talk about a little bit more, is that we have a lot of people with questions that are calling our call center, trying to talk to our reservation agents, things like that. We've been overwhelmed and really don't have the infrastructure to fully support that.
I think that's been probably the biggest challenge on the guest service side that we've seen and one that we're obviously going to address and fix and just couldn't do that in time for this fall. But I would say, broadly speaking, we feel really good about where we sit, given, again, the environment that we're dealing with.
Felicia Hendrix (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Great. Thank you.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Yeah. Thanks.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. This concludes today's question and answer session. I would like to turn it back to management for closing remarks.
Rob Katz (Chairperson and CEO)
Thank you, operator. This concludes our fiscal 2021 Q1 earnings call. Thanks to everyone who joined us today. Please feel free to contact me or Michael directly should you have any further questions. Thank you for your time this afternoon, and goodbye.
Operator (participant)
This concludes today's call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.