ES
E.W. SCRIPPS Co (SSP)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 revenue was $526M, a modest beat vs consensus, while GAAP diluted EPS was a larger loss than expected due to refinancing and restructuring charges; Scripps highlighted “meeting or exceeding Wall Street expectations on nearly every reporting line” and continued leverage reduction .
- Local Media core advertising grew 1.8% YoY despite macro headwinds; Scripps Networks revenue was roughly flat with a 27% margin, aided by 41% connected TV growth .
- Q4 guidance: Local Media revenue down ~30%, Networks revenue down low double digits; full-year cash interest expense guided to $165–$175M, improved from prior quarter .
- Portfolio optimization advanced: two station sales totaling $123M and Gray station swap in review—management called out premium sale multiples and intent to direct proceeds to deleveraging .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Connected TV revenue up 41% YoY; Networks delivered ~flat revenue and a 27% margin with expenses down 7.5% .
- Local Media core advertising up 1.8% despite macro uncertainty, supported by sports rights and sales execution .
- CEO emphasized expense discipline and margin progress: “Networks margins have exceeded our original guidance of 400-600 basis-point improvement for three straight quarters” .
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What Went Wrong
- Consolidated revenue fell 18.6% YoY, primarily due to the non-election comparison; Local Media revenue down 27% YoY with political dropping to $5.1M vs $125.2M last year .
- GAAP EPS loss of $0.55 included $7.6M loss on debt extinguishment, $6.5M financing costs, $1.4M deferred financing write-off, and $2.7M restructuring—adding $0.15 to the loss .
- National ad market pockets of weakness: DR pricing softness (tariff impact), pharma volatility, and upfront softness outside sports; Networks Q4 guide reflects these pressures .
Financial Results
Consolidated Headline Metrics versus Prior Periods and Estimates
Segment Performance
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “We are pleased today to report a third consecutive quarter of meeting or exceeding Wall Street expectations on nearly every reporting line… Expense discipline is an important part of our success story… Networks margins have exceeded our original guidance of 400-600 basis-point improvement for three straight quarters” .
- CFO: Net leverage improved to 4.6x; refinancing locked at 9.875% second-lien notes; revolver paid off ahead of guidance; cash interest now $165–$170M for FY25 .
- Strategic stance: “We will not chase rights we cannot afford, but where we see opportunity to create value, we will be aggressive” (sports rights discipline) .
- Transformation: “We’re leaning hard into technology and AI… Early results are pointing to real value” .
Q&A Highlights
- Portfolio optimization/M&A: Management sees continued buy/sell/swap opportunities and remains committed to maximizing shareholder value; recent station sales achieved ~9x EBITDA multiples (gross) with proceeds earmarked for debt paydown .
- Networks margins sustainability: Confidence in ongoing margin expansion via efficiency and CTV growth despite mixed ad market .
- YouTube TV–Disney dispute: ABC stations dark; limited direct revenue impact; core guide unaffected; affiliate renewals scheduled (CBS end-2025, ABC mid-2026) .
- Macro/advertising: DR pricing weak from tariffs; pharma volatile; advertisers hesitant amid uncertainty; Local core pacing strong vs peers .
- Q4 networks demand: Medicare open enrollment impacted by government shutdown—small piece of pressure; political crowd-out non-repeat .
Estimates Context
Results vs S&P Global Wall Street consensus
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Implications:
- Revenue consistently met/beat consensus, driven by sports and CTV; EBITDA outperformance reflects expense discipline and structural improvements.
- EPS misses in Q2/Q3 were largely due to financing-related charges and restructuring ($0.15 per-share impact in Q3), plus preferred dividend drag (Q3 EPS reduced by $0.18) .
- Estimate revisions likely to reflect stronger CTV/Networks margins and lower cash interest, but near-term EPS will remain sensitive to financing and preferred dividend accounting .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Sports and CTV are proving resilient growth vectors, supporting revenue and margins even in a soft national ad market; expect continued double-digit CTV growth and premium sports CPMs .
- Local core advertising momentum (up 1.8% in Q3; guided +~10% in Q4) differentiates SSP vs peers; catalysts include NHL Lightning rights and reduced political crowd-out comparisons .
- Portfolio optimization (two station sales, Gray swap) and improved cash interest guidance enhance deleveraging capacity; expect proceeds directed to term loan paydown .
- Near-term headwinds: DR pricing pressure (tariffs), pharma volatility, and Medicare open enrollment impact from government shutdown; Networks Q4 revenue down low double digits is already embedded in guide .
- Regulatory reform (duopoly rules, national cap, VMVPD negotiations) remains a medium-term upside scenario for retrans margins and distribution economics .
- EPS is volatile due to financing transactions and preferred dividends; focus on adjusted EBITDA, leverage reduction, and cash interest trajectory for valuation framing .
- Trading: Near-term narrative revolves around Q4 core resilience vs Networks softness; medium-term thesis centers on CTV scale, sports rights discipline, portfolio optimization, and regulatory optionality .