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Seaport Entertainment Group Inc. (SEG)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 delivered a narrower loss and an EPS beat versus S&P Global consensus, but revenue missed due to lower Tin Building performance and reduced concert count; GAAP diluted EPS was ($2.61) vs consensus ($0.76), a beat of $0.19, while revenue was $45.05M vs consensus $46.90M, a miss of ~$1.85M (consensus values marked with asterisks; see Estimates Context).
- Management increased the agreed sale price for 250 Water Street to $152.0M with deposit at $7.5M and extended the outside closing date to December 15, 2025, expected to improve cash burn by >$7M post-close through debt repayment and carrying cost elimination .
- Operational highlights included record event-driven performance (Macy’s 4th of July produced the single highest revenue day), strong Rooftop at Pier 17 sell-through (86%), and successful NYC Wine & Food Festival hosting (~35,000 visitors), offset by softness at certain legacy venues and the Tin Building .
- Balance sheet remains strong with $116.8M in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash, net debt negative at ($15.4M), and no meaningful maturities until Q3 2029; 40% fixed at 4.9%, 60% floating at 8.8% effective with swap .
- Near-term focus: flow-through over top-line growth in Q4, leasing/programming momentum (Flanker Kitchen + Hidden Boot Saloon at Pier 17), Tin Building strategy update next call, and monetization/optimization of key assets (Nike termination income recognition through Q1 2027; ESPN rent ceases) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “Single highest grossing revenue day in SEG’s history” driven by Macy’s 4th of July Fireworks celebration and multi-venue buyouts, showcasing the district’s marquee-event capability .
- Rooftop at Pier 17: Q3 hosted 35 concerts with 22 near sell-outs; sell-through rate 86% and premium upsell initiatives (Patron Patio, Liberty Club) increased spend and enhanced guest experience .
- NYC Wine & Food Festival drew ~35,000 visitors; partnership with Chef Jean‑Georges highlighted SEG’s hospitality platform and drove awareness for the Seaport .
What Went Wrong
- Hospitality segment softness at Tin Building and certain legacy standalone restaurants pressured revenue; consolidated hospitality revenue declined year-over-year on a pro forma basis despite Long Club/Dutano strength .
- Entertainment revenue declined 5% YoY due to seven fewer concerts versus prior year; segment-adjusted EBITDA down 51% YoY given timing shifts and higher sponsorship fulfillment costs .
- Landlord segment incurred ~$6M non-cash charges (loss on 250 Water Street “held for sale” and Rooftop winter structure write-off), depressing reported results; excluding these, landlord segment-adjusted EBITDA improved 76% YoY .
Financial Results
Headline metrics vs prior periods and consensus
Actual vs S&P Global consensus (Q3 2025)
Consensus values retrieved from S&P Global*
Segment revenue and Segment Adjusted EBITDA
Note: Segment revenue totals include intercompany eliminations; consolidated revenue per statements is $45.05M . Intercompany eliminations: $3.04M (Hosp), ($0.13M) (Ent), ($2.76M) (Landlord), ($0.17M) (Other) .
Selected KPIs and balance sheet
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We are increasingly optimistic about our prospects for 2026 as multiple new concepts prepare to open at the Seaport and our long-term vision for the Company continues to take shape.” — CEO Matt Partridge .
- “We have now completed a number of technology initiatives, including fully centralizing our point-of-sale and procurement systems... enabling us to better optimize performance and margins across the portfolio.” — CEO Matt Partridge .
- “The Macy’s 4th of July Fireworks Celebration… helped drive the single highest grossing revenue day in SEG’s history.” — CEO Matt Partridge .
- “Once completed [250 Water Street sale], we estimate the sale will positively improve historical cash burn by more than $7 million… through repayment of the land loan and other carrying costs.” — CEO Matt Partridge .
Q&A Highlights
- Path to profitability: Levers include accelerating rent commencement by opening tenants (roughly ~100k sq ft including Nike space back in 2027), filling remaining vacancy, and driving G&A efficiencies; velocity of openings expected back half of next year, aim to have key concepts open before Meow Wolf .
- Event strategy as catalyst: Large-scale events (Macy’s, WFF) pull new visitors, act as marketing flywheel, and support partner success via foot traffic and dwell time; ongoing efforts to bring back and expand marquee events .
- Tin Building: No 2026 guidance yet; restructuring brought team in-house and moved to license agreements to reduce external management fees; full plan to be outlined next call .
- Capex outlook: Q4 2025 somewhat light (Meow Wolf landlord work, Willett’s, Quirk); ~$50M committed across announced projects with spend mid-to-back half 2026 .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus for Q3 2025: Revenue $46.90M*, Primary EPS ($0.76)*; SEG delivered $45.05M revenue and ($2.61) GAAP diluted EPS; EPS beat by $0.19 and revenue missed by ~$1.85M .
- Non-GAAP adjusted EPS improved to ($0.57), down ~$3.97 YoY; consolidated segment-adjusted EBITDA improved 76% YoY excluding non-recurring items (250 Water Street “held for sale” loss, winter structure write-off, prior-year hospitality reimbursement) .
- Implication: Street may reduce revenue expectations for near-term quarters given focus on flow-through, Tin Building repositioning, and ESPN rent cessation, while raising confidence in loss-narrowing due to cost discipline, event monetization, and lease/termination income cadence .
Consensus values retrieved from S&P Global*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Event-led operating model is proving out: marquee events and premium upsells drive high incremental margin days; expect continued narrative strength around the Rooftop and district programming .
- Leasing/programming pipeline (>110k sq ft) and 250 Water Street monetization are catalysts for improved cash burn and path toward break-even in 2026, pending execution .
- Near-term tilt toward profitability over top-line growth: management explicitly guiding to Q4 F&B growth moderation to prioritize flow-through .
- Segment dynamics: Entertainment resilient but show count timing matters; Tin Building and legacy venues are the key drag — watch for the strategic plan next call .
- Balance sheet strength and negative net debt provide flexibility to reinvest and absorb timing variances; no material maturities before Q3 2029 .
- Rental mix shift (ESPN exit, Nike termination income recognition) changes landlord revenue profile; monitor rent commencement and private event activity as offsets .
- Trading lens: EPS beat versus consensus, revenue miss, plus sale-price increase at 250 Water Street and strong event KPIs create a mixed headline — stock likely reacts to confidence in 2026 setup versus near-term top-line variability .