A. Lorne Weil
Thank you, operator. Good morning, and thanks, everyone, for joining our second quarter earnings call. With me today, as usual, are CEO, Brooks Pierce; CFO, James Richardson; and VP of Corporate Development, Eric Carrera. Also today, as you may have seen in our press release, we issued, I guess, last night, Investor Relations specialist, Aimee Remey, rejoins us following the 2-year IR assignment with one of the world's leading B2C gaming enterprises. And needless to say, we're thrilled to have Aimee back. We were quite pleased with the quarter in terms of headline numbers. EBITDA of $28.4 million was up 15% over Q2 2024 and well ahead of consensus. EBITDA margins improved from 33% to 35% in the same period. Our primary growth driver was once again the interactive business, which grew EBITDA by nearly 50% in the second quarter year-over-year. Interestingly, only about half -- excuse me, interestingly, about half the growth in EBITDA was contributed by North America, which represented less than 1/3 of interactive EBITDA a year ago. We believe that superior game content and intense focus on the account management were the underlying drivers of the North American performance. At the present time, less than 10% of the population of the United States is in jurisdictions that offer iGaming compared to sports betting, which covers at least 70% of the population. And in those major states that offer both sports betting and iGaming, particularly Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Michigan, iGaming is 4 to 5x larger than sports betting. So despite the remarkable growth that we've been experiencing recently, our feeling is that the Interactive business is still in its infancy. In other part of our digital business, Virtual Sports, there are similarly interesting dynamics at play. While second quarter Virtual Sports EBITDA declined year-to-year, the quarter-to-quarter sequential curve had been steadily flattening. And indeed, in the second quarter, we experienced both revenue and EBITDA increases from the first quarter to the second. In a moment, Brooks will discuss in some detail the range of product and market developmental opportunities taking place in Virtual Sports, but we're cautiously optimistic that the sequential upswing we saw in the second quarter will continue and that by the end of this year, we will once again be seeing quarterly year-over-year growth. This, of course, has a dramatic impact mathematically on our overall company growth rate. Our gaming business had a very strong quarter, both operationally and developmentally. Gaming EBITDA was up 35% year-to-year, driven importantly by William Hill, whose team has done an extraordinary job managing the new machine estate. Perhaps in part aided by the William Hill performance, we were recently awarded a contract to supply 100% of the gaming machines for Jenningsbet, the best performing and largest independent bookmaker chain in the U.K., independent meaning not owned by Flutter, William Hill, Betfred or Entain. This was a very busy and very productive quarter for Inspired in other respects. During the quarter, as mentioned in the press release, we refinanced our credit facility prior to the date in June when the facility would otherwise have gone current. And despite the very choppy credit environment at that time, we were pretty happy with the result. Following the refinancing, we are in the final stages of arranging a swap of the floating rate Sterling facility into fixed rate debt, thereby both lowering our current effective rate and simultaneously capping it as insurance against rates going back up. At the same time, we still have 2 step-down opportunities to lower our spread over the Sterling benchmark as we deleverage with the first anticipated in connection with the expected completion of the Holiday Park sale subject to the customary grace period. In connection with the Holiday Park sale, I can say that we have now reached an agreement in principle with a strategic buyer we have been working with for several months, and we expect to sign the definitive agreement this month and close by the end of October. The combination of cash at closing and ongoing platform and content fees will put us well within our liquidity target, and our cash position will benefit further from having owned the business through the peak cash trading generating period that we're in at the present time. The sale of the business will have a number of important benefits. Our overall company EBITDA margin will approach our target of 40%. Company-wide cash conversion percent will improve significantly, and our mix of business will swing further towards digital with concomitant benefits relating to margins, capital intensity and growth. And with that, I'll hand it over to Brooks.