RH
Ryman Hospitality Properties, Inc. (RHP)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 delivered record first‑quarter revenue ($587.3M), net income ($63.0M), and Adjusted EBITDAre ($185.5M), with broad-based strength in both Hospitality and Entertainment; diluted EPS was $1.00 vs $0.67 last year (+49.3% YoY) .
- Results beat Wall Street consensus on EPS ($1.02 vs $0.64 est), revenue ($587.3M vs $548.4M est), and EBITDA ($179.8M EBITDAre vs $167.7M est). Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
- Management affirmed full‑year 2025 ranges for consolidated net income, Adjusted EBITDAre, and AFFO per diluted share/unit, but lowered the midpoint for Hospitality RevPAR and Total RevPAR growth by 100 bps amid near‑term macro/government-driven caution in “in‑the‑year‑for‑the‑year” group bookings .
- Call tone: confident on medium‑term demand and cost controls, cautious near‑term on government-related pullbacks and policy/tariff uncertainty; book of business for 2026–2027 remains strong (rooms up low to mid‑single digits; revenue up 9% and 13% respectively) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Record first‑quarter revenue and profitability; Hospitality revenue up 7.9% YoY to $497.7M; Entertainment revenue up 33.9% YoY to $89.6M; consolidated Adjusted EBITDAre up 15.2% YoY to $185.5M .
- Booking momentum for out‑years: “booked over 363,000 Gross Definite Room Nights for all future years at a record ADR of ~$284,” and strength in 2026–2027 (revenue up 9% and 13%) .
- Management quote: “Our first quarter results exceeded our expectations… Hospitality delivered record first quarter performance… Entertainment delivered record first quarter performance… We have not seen notable indications of macro‑driven consumer softness [in Entertainment]” .
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What Went Wrong
- Near‑term macro/policy uncertainty weighing on “in‑the‑year‑for‑the‑year” group bookings; attrition ticked up; cancellations higher ITYFTY; lower RevPAR outlook midpoint for 2025 by 100 bps .
- Government-related group exposure: cancellations concentrated in government customers; management stress‑tested and expects to remain within EBITDA guidance but sees near‑term pressure .
- Nashville transient softness/new supply: Gaylord Opryland impacted by new supply; management later flagged incremental second‑half transient rate risk in Nashville (not a Q1 issue but relevant to trajectory) .
Financial Results
Headline metrics vs prior year and prior quarter
Consensus vs actual (Q1 2025)
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Segment performance and mix (Q1 2025 vs Q1 2024)
Hospitality KPIs (portfolio)
Balance sheet & liquidity (end of Q1)
- Cash and cash equivalents (unrestricted): $413.9M; total debt: $3.375B; revolvers largely undrawn with $763M available aggregate liquidity .
- Capex YTD: ~$113M; FY25 capex guidance lowered to $350–$450M (from $400–$500M) with flexibility to pace projects .
Guidance Changes
Dividend: Paid $1.15 on April 15, 2025; policy to distribute ≥100% of REIT taxable income annually .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our first quarter results exceeded our expectations, driven by outperformance across both our Hospitality and Entertainment business segments.” – CEO Mark Fioravanti .
- “It’s prudent to modify our full year outlook for hospitality RevPAR and total RevPAR… You’ll note, we’re not lowering our outlook for adjusted EBITDAre or adjusted funds from operation.” – Executive Chairman Colin Reed .
- “We currently have roughly $28 million to $30 million of profit improvement plans already loaded into our forecast … essentially since the first week of January.” – COO Patrick Chaffin .
- “Our ‘Opry 100’ programming is off to a strong start… We have not seen notable indications of macro‑driven consumer softness [in Entertainment].” – CEO Mark Fioravanti .
- Balance sheet/liquidity: $413.9M cash; revolvers undrawn; $763M availability .
Q&A Highlights
- Near‑term demand: April lead volumes for “in‑the‑year‑for‑the‑year” improved from –50% in March to –8% in April; bookings “flattish” in room nights with solid rate .
- Out‑year strength: 2026 and 2027 rooms up low–mid single digits; revenue up 9% and 13%, majority rate .
- Government cancellations: concentrated in government groups; exposure manageable; still within Adjusted EBITDA guidance under stress test .
- Cost actions: $28–$30M profit improvement plans in place since January; wage margin +40 bps; hours/occ –60 bps .
- Tariff strategy: diversified sourcing and accelerated purchasing to land materials within 90 days; limited exposure (steel) for Opryland projects .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025 beats vs S&P Global consensus: EPS $1.02 vs $0.64 est (beat), Revenue $587.3M vs $548.4M est (beat), EBITDAre/EBITDA $179.8M vs $167.7M est (beat). Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Constructive quarter with clear beat on EPS/revenue/EBITDA; strong operating leverage and cost management offset near‑term softness in “in‑the‑year‑for‑the‑year” demand .
- Guidance strategy is conservative on RevPAR, but profit guidance intact—implying margin defense from cost initiatives and the group‑centric model with contractual protections (attrition/cancellation) .
- Booking book durability: out‑years remain robust with rate‑led revenue growth for 2026–2027—supports medium‑term thesis despite near‑term macro noise .
- Watch items: government‑related demand pullback and Nashville transient rate/supply dynamics; management is proactive on fee collection and sales targeting .
- Capital deployment continues with optionality: capex range cut to $350–$450M, with flexibility to re‑pace projects; later quarter added strategic acquisition (JW Marriott Desert Ridge) broadening Western rotation (post‑Q1 development) .
- Liquidity resilient with $1.2B total available liquidity (cash + revolvers); no near‑term maturities following OEG refinancing .
Additional details and sources:
- Q1 2025 press release and 8‑K (financials, segments, KPIs, guidance):
- Earnings call transcript (strategy, macro, bookings, costs, tariffs, government exposure):
- Prior quarter references (Q4 2024; trend/seasonality; holiday softness context):
- Out‑of‑period but relevant capital action (JW Marriott Desert Ridge acquisition announced in May):
*Consensus estimates (EPS, revenue, EBITDA) retrieved from S&P Global.