Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the Scripps Second Quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, today’s call is being recorded. I will turn the call now over to Ms. Carolyn Micheli, Senior Vice President, Corporate Communications and Investor Relations. Please go ahead..
Thanks, John. Good morning, everyone and thanks for joining us for a discussion of The E.W. Scripps Company’s financial results. You can visit scripps.com for more information and a link to the replay of this call. A reminder that our conference call and webcast include forward-looking statements and actual results may differ.
Factors that may cause them to differ are outlined in our SEC filings. The COVID-19 pandemic enhances the uncertainty of forward-looking statements we make about our operations and financial conditions. Because of this rapidly changing economic climate, we are not issuing third quarter 2020 guidance.
We do not intend to update any forward-looking statements we make today. We will hear this morning from Scripps’ President and CEO, Adam Symson; CFO, Lisa Knutson; Local Media President, Brian Lawlor; and National Media Executive Vice President, Laura Tomlin. Also on the call is Controller and Treasurer, Doug Lyons. Here is Adam..
Good morning, everybody and thanks for joining us. Over the last 3 years, Scripps has articulated a strategy for transformation to create a more durable, higher performing company by improving our short-term financial performance while continuing to build value over a longer term for our shareholders.
Over those years, we have executed quite a few important initiatives in pursuit of this strategy, including initiating an enterprise-wide restructuring and cost-cutting, exiting radio, buying the 4 Katz networks and later launching Court TV, acquiring the digital audio infrastructure and measurement leader, Triton and of course, last year, acquiring 27 high-quality local television stations to more than double the size of our local media portfolio.
All the while, our focus has been on improving the operating performance of our local television business. We met or exceeded guidance for 10 straight quarters before the pandemic hit this spring.
Today, as the fourth largest local broadcaster, our station group is more effective, more efficient and operating with greater strength than it was a year ago.
During last quarter’s earnings call, in the midst of the most sudden and profound business disruption this country has ever seen, we told you that our company would seek opportunity in the chaos to continue our transformation into a stronger company on behalf of our employees and shareholders, and that’s exactly what we’ve been doing.
Most recently, we announced the sale of our podcast leader Stitcher to capture return of more than double our total investment. The sale of Stitcher is an affirmation of our national media strategy and a testament to our ability to create and unlock value through several different paths.
In contrast to our pure-play local broadcast peers, Scripps has taken a dual-pronged approach. We believe in the continued strength and durability of local television.
Simultaneously, we are developing growth businesses that look out over the horizon to the future of the media landscape, where we know we’ll recognize high rates of return on our investments, just as we’ve done in podcasting. This strategy has also positioned us well to navigate the economic crisis.
We came into 2020 with greater TV station durability, alongside diversified revenue streams coming from our national businesses. Our second quarter results, through the depth of the business disruption, illustrate the point.
We held our own with peer performance on Local Media core and successfully renewed 30% of our pay-TV households at rates that we consider an affirmation of our investment thesis. And we turned in National Media results that well outpaced the overall advertising marketplace.
I’d like to highlight Katz, in particular, for its standout performance during this challenging time. In fact, Katz has outperformed our expectations and certainly those of many investors since we bought it nearly 3 years ago. At that time, we saw that consumers were quickly moving to being content-focused and platform-neutral in their TV viewing.
They were pulling together their own custom programming bundles combining cable, over-the-air and over-the-top to create a full viewing experience. Since then, over-the-air viewing has continued to grow side-by-side with over-the-top and subscription video-on-demand, as consumers recognized the value of free, high-quality, linear network television.
In a study last year, Nielsen projected that 21 million U.S. TV households would come to rely on over-the-air within the next 2 years. We continue to believe in the future value-creation opportunity of over-the-air viewing, and Katz’ financial growth supports the confidence.
Remember, their revenue was up more than 30% in last Q4 and Q1 before COVID-19. Even during the pandemic, Katz has continued to outperform the broader advertising marketplace. Despite the tremendous headwinds associated with COVID-19, Katz finished the quarter flat.
That strength is driven largely by its balance of general market and direct response advertising. Many people wrongly dismiss DR as low rate, low-quality ads, but the category has grown and changed tremendously in recent years. Direct Response is a flexible, efficient and measurable way for advertisers to reach their customers.
And in case you haven’t been watching, it now goes well beyond the 1-800 and dot-com calls to action. Big name advertisers, including Procter & Gamble, Johnson & Johnson, Pizza Hut and State Farm now put aside a good portion of their ad dollars for DR. And one industry report estimated DR spending at $12 billion to $18 billion last year.
Katz has been a pioneer in crafting content that complements brand’s direct response strategies through audience targeting. So the 3 levers to Katz’ growth have been high-quality programming, over-the-air audience growth and resilience in the national advertising marketplace.
At Scripps, we are fond of saying that two things can be true at the same time. We are big believers in the opportunities ahead in local broadcast television.
And the success at Katz, for example, underscores Scripps’ view of the way we’ll also create value in the evolving TV landscape, as we capitalize on consumers’ changing media habits and take advantage of diversified revenue streams. Today, I believe our National Media strategy is not fully appreciated by investors.
As we come through the business disruptions and economic fallout from the pandemic, however, I believe it will become even more clear that Scripps has positioned itself well to succeed and to thrive across all of our businesses. Now here is Lisa..
Good morning, everyone. The second quarter unfolded generally as we expected in our Local Media division and even better than we expected in our National Media businesses. Since our last earnings call in early May, we’ve also announced the sale of our podcast industry leader, Stitcher, and the option exercise on WPIX in New York.
In addition, we are currently in a retrans blackout with satellite television provider Dish. I will discuss each of these events in my remarks this morning. Let’s start with our second quarter Local Media results.
All comparisons of the division financial results are on an adjusted combined basis, continuing our treatment of the former Nexstar-Tribune and Cordillera stations, as though we own them in the full period a year ago. You can find our as-reported results in today’s press release.
Local Media core advertising revenue was down 39%, driven by the pandemic-related advertising slowdown. That number is 37%, if you exclude the impact of WPIX and the loss of Yankees and Mets baseball on that station. As we had expected, we see improvement from April to May and from May to June.
We continue to see core ad revenue improve month-to-month through the third quarter. And right now, we expect core advertising to end this quarter, down mid-teens on a year-over-year basis when you factor out the impact of PIX.
Political advertising revenue of $13 million came in higher-than-expected in the second quarter that was driven by strong spending in the presidential race and other key context. Because of the robust pacings and the number of competitive races, we now expect to bring in north of $200 million in political ad revenue this year.
Brian will give more color in a moment on our political advertising outlook. Our retransmission revenue was below expectations due to the unwillingness of Dish to agree to fair and reasonable contract terms, but still up 27% from a year ago.
Our Dish contract expired on February 29, and we continue to provide service at our old rates under the extensions until we went dark on July 25. We expect to receive the new Dish rate retroactively for the extension period.
We did sign a new retrans agreement with a slightly larger distributor that took effect July 1 and now have completed more than 30% of the 40% we are renewing this year. Dish accounts for the final 10%. Local Media expenses decreased 3%, and they came in 10% below second quarter of 2019, when you exclude programming expense.
The division did – had imposed various cost savings initiatives that included merit pay freezes, reductions in capital expenditure and travel and marketing. Segment profit was $32.3 million. Now let’s discuss National Media division results.
Since Stitcher is reported as discontinued operations, the division results no longer include Stitcher for any period. National Media division revenue held up well against the pandemic headwinds in the second quarter.
Our national businesses, particularly, benefited from direct response and OTT advertising, which recovered quickly after an initial decline in the early days of the pandemic. The division delivered total revenue of $81 million, essentially flat from the second quarter of 2019.
Looking ahead, we expect modest growth in National Media division revenue from the third and fourth quarters. National media expenses came in at $70 million, about flat with last year. And National Media segment profit was $10.3 million compared to $12 million in the 2019 quarter.
Our shared services and corporate expenses were $13 million in the second quarter, down about 15% from our pre-COVID expectations. We expect that line to remain consistent for the third quarter. In May, we told you we plan to make about $85 million in proactive expense control and cash management measures this year.
With the sale of Stitcher, we now expect those reductions to total about $75 million this year, about $35 million of savings has been realized year-to-date and another $40 million will come by year end.
This company-wide savings includes lower capital expenditures, a hiring freeze, a freeze on merit pay increases, reductions in executive pay and general expense cuts, including travel and marketing. We made about $4 million in dividend payments in the second quarter. The company’s 2Q loss from continuing operations was $0.22 per share.
Now, I would like to briefly discuss the Stitcher and WPIX sales, which were announced on July 13. You can find more details on those transactions in the press releases and investor call transcript from that day.
After a strategic review that began last year, Scripps entered into an agreement with SiriusXM to sell its podcast industry leader, Stitcher, for $325 million. That price includes $60 million in earn-outs over 2 years. Our full sale price represents a multiple of 4.5x Stitcher’s 2019 revenue.
Our deal represents the largest transaction in podcast industry’s history and a return of more than double Scripps investments since it entered podcasting 5 years ago.
Stitcher’s annual losses were in the high teens millions of dollars, so you should see improvement in both National Media division segment profit and in company EBITDA for the previous adjusted reporting periods and going forward. We are filing for Hart-Scott-Rodino clearance this week and expect Stitcher sale to close in the third quarter.
Nexstar Media group informed Scripps in mid-July that it had transferred its option to purchase WPIX, the New York City CW affiliate to Mission Broadcasting. At the same time, we were told that Mission was exercising the option to purchase the station. Our pre-agreed price is $75 million, plus about $5 million in interest.
Pending regulatory approval, the WPIX deal is expected to close by year end. Taking into consideration the gain on each of these sales, our cash tax bill for 2020 is expected to be about $24 million, the majority of which we expect to pay in the fourth quarter. The balance would be due in Q1 of ‘21, depending on when the PIX sale closes.
Separately, we mentioned in May that we expected to receive a $14 million cash refund in the third quarter, that is the result of carry-back claims available with the Cares Act. So we expect to see a net cash outflow of about $10 million this year, assuming all taxes on the gains are paid this year.
And now a few liquidity items to update you on, our current forecast for full year cash interest is about $85 million. The savings reflects the decline in LIBOR and our plan to pay off our revolver. Our full year capital expenditures are estimated to come in at about $30 million. On June 30, our net debt was $1.9 billion and cash totaled $99 million.
Our net leverage at the end of the second quarter was 5.8x per the calculation in our credit agreement. Finally, we were free cash flow-positive in the second quarter and expect to be free cash flow-positive for every quarter of 2020. And now here is Brian..
Arizona, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan and Montana. In Montana, the Senate race has its term-limited governor, Steve Bullock, running against junior senator Steve Daines in what will be one of the closest Senate races in the country.
In addition, the battle for the Senate majority has sparked unprecedented fundraising and spending so early in a political cycle. And with President Trump’s cartels getting shorter, incumbents in Kentucky, Texas and Iowa are now considered a bit more at risk. In the U.S.
House races, pre-book buys from both parties show that packs and campaigns are spending just as we expected. We think our list of 35 competitive seats in Scripps markets should remain stable.
We also have an open toss-up governor’s race in Montana, where we have the top-ranked station in each of Montana’s 5 largest markets, resulting in Scripps capturing a large amount of the political dollars being spent in that state.
Finally, we expect a high percentage of our political advertising revenue to come from issue spending, where fundraising continues to exceed the experts forecast. All in all, a very good presidential election year is unfolding.
Turning to our retransmission revenue line, as Lisa mentioned, we were still booking our old rates with Dish in the second quarter. Then we went dark with Dish in the third quarter, beginning July 25, after 5 months of negotiating on extensions. We were very disappointed to have experienced our first blackout with a pay-TV provider.
As you know, Dish is a veteran of many blackout battles, while Scripps prides itself on getting deals done and, in fact, already has completed several successful negotiations, including 2 large providers this year.
Because of those other deals, however, we are confident in our new market value and the appropriate industry contract terms, and we just can’t agree to nonstandard proposals that would disadvantage us. Scripps retrans household subscriber base declined 2.5% in the most recent reporting period ending March 31.
That’s a step down from the reporting period, which ended December 31, and when they were about flat over the prior quarter. I would like to conclude by building on Adam’s comments about the ongoing strength of the 5 Katz networks, as this business reports to me. They have delivered an impressive 14% revenue growth year-to-date.
That growth has been driven by strong general market and direct response advertising rates. And both the Grit Network and Court TV saw especially strong revenue growth in Q2, driven primarily by DR. We also continue to see strength in audience viewing at the networks.
Viewership at both Bounce and Grit was up 8% over the same time last year due to strong programming, new movie debuts and ongoing pandemic-related increases in TV viewing. At Court TV, we continue to grow that audience as well.
Courts across the country have begun to reopen and just this week, the network is carrying the high-profile Doomsday Trial, preliminary hearings in Idaho. In early May, Court TV carried the historic first live oral arguments from the U.S. Supreme Court.
And as protest continued and the social unrest was heightened, the team saw an opportunity to create an original special, Black and Blue, examining the justice system’s relationship with the black community. The special broadcast across all of the Katz networks on June 22 and viewed by nearly 2 million people.
Distribution continued to expand in Q2, with Court TV now live on YouTube TV and it’s got its own channel on SiriusXM. Katz’ over-the-air coverage has also grown with Bounce, Mystery, Grit and Laff, each reaching 94% to 96% of the U.S. and Court TV now reaching at 91%.
Katz continues to benefit from the growing scale of over-the-air viewing as more and more consumers discover the large amount of free quality programming available there. Now here is Laura..
Thanks, Brian. Good morning, everyone. We were very pleased by the resilience of the Katz and Newsy businesses, as the pandemic took its toll on the U.S. economy during the second quarter.
Ending the quarter with our division’s revenue nearly flat to the year ago quarter, seems remarkable given the headwinds, and we will continue to build back in the second half of this year. Overall, the national advertising marketplace has fared better than other ad markets since early March.
Big brands quickly recast their messages to create relevance, urgency and currency. We saw consumer products, companies and other businesses shift brand messaging to consumers during stay-at-home orders and a bit later in the quarter on social justice messaging around the unrest.
Higher viewership across the 5 Katz networks and Newsy helped us to capitalize on this spending. At Newsy, we saw record viewing levels, as Americans sought information on the coronavirus and the social unrest across the country.
Over-the-top viewership driven by Newsy’s younger demographic, was 60% higher during the prior year quarter and streaming viewers stayed with Newsy as their new source. Newsy has also launched its first week night newscast exclusively on OTT.
The new show in the loop is designed to give a straightforward look at the day’s biggest headlines and a conversational style that is relatable to its digitally savvy audience. Also, Newsy and the Scripps Washington Bureau received more noteworthy national recognition for their joint documentary, A Broken Trust.
The RFK Journalism Grand Prize and the top prize for domestic television was awarded to the project, which examined how centuries of inequities and legal loopholes have left native American women vulnerable to abuse. Our SaaS digital audio business, Triton, also delivered a good revenue performance in Q2.
Triton actually had 11% year-over-year growth, if you factor out the impact of our sale of a noncore piece of its business in Q2 of 2019. Triton’s global sales pipeline began to pick up as we ended Q2, and the company recently announced a series of new deals with international companies.
In the second quarter, Triton expanded its podcast ranker to the U.S. This new measurement product, the podcast report, provides both publishers and advertisers with trustworthy third-party data, allowing them to make informed decisions around advertising, with NPR, NBC News and many big terrestrial radio companies.
A more robust measurement system is much needed, as that industry grows in reach and scale. And speaking of scale and podcasting, one of the reasons we are selling Stitcher is a very positive outlook for podcasting in the larger digital audio space.
We were early to podcasting and watching the new large company entrants helped us see the opportunity to best capitalize on that investment. As Adam has said, we are constantly evaluating the various paths we can take for our businesses value creation.
Regardless of the path, as we were with Stitcher, you can count on us to be disciplined investors in these businesses, focused on fostering growth to achieve the greatest ROI. And now operator, we are ready for questions..
[Operator Instructions] And first to the line of Kyle Evans with Stephens, please go ahead. .
Hi. Thanks for taking my questions. Brian, would you mind – I call it the 2.5% decline on sub count in 2Q, what’s your outlook for the rest of the year? And then I have some follow-up questions..
Hey, Kyle, it’s Brian. As we look out now, we typically see seasonality associated with sub counts that have improved in the fourth quarter. It seems like when football starts, those people are canceling their MVPDs.
Like you, we have seen, just this week, including this morning, some of the MVPDs reporting positive sub counts that would indicate that maybe the next quarter. And again, they work a quarter ahead of us, maybe more positive than what we saw.
So the 2.5% was kind of in line with how we had modeled, and we have – we do look for a little bit of improvement as we move to the back half..
Great. Those Cordillera stations in Montana are looking like a really good acquisition. Congrats on that..
Thank you..
Any other key races that you would point at that could swing that annual number that you guys are floating to the Street?.
No. I really don’t think it’s one race. I mean, as you can see, we are very heavy and 6 competitive Senate races. You talked about Montana. Montana is just going to be huge. All of the cards are falling in place between the Gubernatorial and Senate race there. That will be one of our biggest.
But I think as you look at Michigan, we will be very strong between the Presidential, strong Senate race there, a couple of House races there. We expect Arizona, again, Presidential, McSally Senate race there. It’s a very competitive – the competitive – Gardner Senate race in Colorado as well. So I don’t think it’s one race.
And I think we have enough that if one were to drop out in the last couple of weeks, a few extras have kind of moved our way. If you remember on the last call, we were talking that in the Senate, we were highly contested in 5 of the races, now that’s moved to 6.
So – and then you see things like McConnell and Kentucky, which we are getting in both Lexington and Cincinnati that has become more aggressive. So actually, I don’t think there’s one particular race that puts us at risk. I think we have a lot of coverage across the entire country..
Sticking with political and understanding that 2016 was an anomaly, roughly speaking, what do you think Presidential will account for as a percent of that total?.
It’s usually about 20% in Presidential year. In Q2, it was just over 10%, which was more than 2016 and more than 2012, so we are off to a good start there. But I think when it’s all said and done, when you consider the pack money and all that’s going to influence it, it’ll probably be 20%, maybe a little bit north of 20% of our total political spend..
Great. And then I was under the impression that blackouts were kind of a no no right now per the FCC.
Did I miss something there with regards to your Dish disputes?.
I think in the heat of the pandemic, the FCC had asked all parties to try and avoid blackouts. Again, we are 5 months beyond the deal. We have done extension after extension. And we just couldn’t make a lot of progress and so it seemed like the right thing for our business to do was to step back and trying to approach it a different way..
I understand..
Hey, Kyle, it’s Adam. I would also just remind the call that we were able to get done cooperatively two deals this year already, including an additional one during the depth of the pandemic, in which we felt very, very good about the rates that we achieved. So I think this is a unique circumstance.
And unfortunately, it’s just, sort of, probably par for the course with Dish, given their history..
Yes, clear pattern. One last one for Laura, maybe just an update on Newsy, which channels you are getting your best consumer engagement? And then related to that, kind of what you saw on the CPM or unit pricing rate there, as we troughed in April and kind of how it’s bounced back? Thanks..
Yes. Yes. So really, most of our viewing and revenue continued to be driven by OTT. I was reading an article, I think, yesterday in CTV viewing, during the pandemic, has been up like 80%. So we have been just growing our viewers tremendously on OTT. The demand has been picking back up month-over-month in Q2. Rates, has been strong.
It did take a dip in April, but we continue to see it improve sequentially each month. So we are pretty optimistic about the growth levels that we hope to see in Q3 and Q4..
Would you mind diving down into OTT and talking about maybe engagement channels within....
Sure. Thanks. So a lot of our viewing today – I mean, we are present on almost every OTT platform out there. A significant portion of our viewers today come to us from Roku. Obviously, Amazon is making a big entrance as well, so we are growing there. We have a lot of viewers on Pluto TV as well.
So I would say the majority of those viewers come from Roku, but we have done a great job of making sure that we are distributed on every CTV platform out there..
Great. Thank you. Appreciate it. .
Our next question is from the line of Michael Kupinski with Noble Capital Markets. Please go ahead..
Thank you. Thanks for taking the questions.
I was wondering if you can give us the sequential, I guess, declines in core advertising by month for the quarter and what you saw in July possible?.
Mike, it’s Brian. In April, we were down 48%. May, we were down 43%. In June, we were down 27%. And for July, when you back out the baseball from PIX, again, Mets and Yankees, so it’s a big revenue line, we were down 15%..
Got it. And then regarding I guess for – in the past, I guess, for broadcasters that went dark on MVPDs, they usually had leverage with them – with upcoming sports events that would tend to bring them back to the negotiation table.
And first of all [indiscernible] and secondly, do you think that with the relatively weak sports schedule that maybe these negotiations are dragged out for a while? I mean – I guess, I am asking a way to see what your thoughts are in terms of a resolution and how quickly you might be able to kind of get this resolved?.
Yes. We certainly hope that these doesn’t drag out long, and we are continuing to actively exchange discussion with them. Look, sports is on now, right? I mean, this weekend, we got the PGA Championship. You have got the NHL playoffs. You got the NBA playoffs. That’s all happening right now.
And so I think sports is an important part of the lives of our viewers, and we hope this will continue to understand that. And by the way, the news is pretty darn important right now with everything going on. And so we don’t love the fact that we are not there for our viewers, but we are expecting college football and NFL to start in a month.
And we are a little bit over a month, and we are certainly hopeful that by the time that happens, we are back serving all of our audiences..
I know that there were a lot of skeptics with the Katz acquisition. And obviously, this has proven to be a good acquisition for you as well. In terms of the performance in Q2, and you indicated that Court TV – and of course, Court TV was, I believe, launched in the third quarter of last year. If you can....
Yes, it was launched in May..
Got it. Okay. And so you would kind of expect that it would be pretty strong. How did the other networks on a relative basis? Were they pretty much lumped together in terms of their performance or outside of the growth that you said that you had with Grit and Court TV.
I was just kind of curious in terms of the – how the other networks performed some of your more mature networks versus some of your younger ones?.
Yes. As I said on the call, Grit had a terrific quarter. Laff performed very well, Bounce also was off just about 10% and the Mystery a little bit over that. But for the quarter, for the Katz networks, they will be about flat with where they were a year ago, considering that pandemic we thought was an outstanding performance on their part..
Got it. Well, congratulations on that. That’s all I have. Thank you..
Our next question is from the line of Dan Kurnos with The Benchmark Company. Please go ahead. .
Thanks. Good morning. Just housekeeping on Dish, I guess, Brian or Lisa. So you ran – your 2Q is at prior rate.
When you get the deal done, you will get what a true-up for the prior 4 months, I guess, or 5 months that you were on extension when the deal gets done?.
That’s correct, Dan. So we won’t get paid for the days that were dark, but we will get a true-up to whatever our final deal is for the 4 months that we we were on extension..
Got it. And I know we have talked about this ad dollars. It’s just strange. They do the deal with Gray. They are still on extension with Hearst. They are dark on Cox. It seems kind of no rhyme, no reason there, especially ahead of political season, but I guess we will see how that kind of resolves itself.
And kind of just – you brought it up, Brian, a second ago, just in terms of expectations around college and NFL – I think you might have mentioned it in the last call, but just remind us kind of what the impact is to revenue for sports and also, if there is any meaningful back-to-school impact or not?.
Yes. I was just looking at this, Dan, yesterday. Football is somewhere in the range of about 5% of our ad revenue. So there is a little bit of risk, but it’s not overly significant. In terms of back-to-school, every state is open. And most states have kids going back-to-school in one capacity or another.
So we have not seen any impact yet on the back-to-school business..
Got it. That’s helpful.
And then just obviously, July pacings are not guidance, but just curious if you could give us color on categories, how they are performing? And then kind of your, sort of, expectations of balance given what you are seeing on political with where pacings are and how crowd out might play a factor in the upcoming quarter?.
I think I mentioned that July was down 15%, significantly better than the 27% decline in June. So every month continues to get sequentially better. We do believe, based on everything we are seeing now that August will be better than July and September will be better than August in terms of year-to-year improvement and just pure dollar growth.
In terms of categories for July, basically, every category improved off of June, which improved off of May, which improved off of April. And so I talked about services being flat in July – in June, and we saw that continue into July improvement in services. And about every other category saw some degree of improvement.
Most are still down year-to-year, but they continue to get closer to flat to up..
Got it. Super helpful. And if I could just sneak one more in, just around kind of – there’s been an issue in the marketplace around messaging.
And I don’t know, Brian, maybe I’m reaching here, but it feels like, and also really even Laura, just with sort of Katz and Newsy, you guys can kind of – even within DR, you can kind of shape almost targeted marketing/messaging in a way that maybe others are facing challenges with around content.
So I don’t know if you’re actually seeing some influx into some of those channels or not, could be a bit of a stretch, but just figured I would ask?.
Yes. Actually, hey Dan, it’s Adam. I think the very nature, for example, of our networks business gives us access to different demographic niches. And I think that gives brands and agencies and opportunity to inherently shape their messages differently.
Obviously, we’ve got different demographics with Laff and with Bounce, certainly with our focus on younger audiences at Newsy and even Grit. And I think that does benefit us with DR and DR placement, as well as even the way general market agencies and brands place their business..
Got it. That’s really helpful.
Sorry, Lisa, what’s the do you know what the WPIX baseball impact is in Q3?.
Hey Dan, it’s about $18 million..
Sorry, Lisa, that was Q2. The $18 million was Q2. I don’t have Q3 broken out. We can get back to you on that..
Yes. Sorry about that..
Okay, no worries. We will take it offline but that’s helpful color anyway thanks for all the responses guys. I appreciate it..
Our next question is from the line of Steven Cahall with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead..
Thanks.
Maybe first this morning, could you talk about what net retrans has been trending and maybe what kind of reverse compensation expense growth you expect from big four for this year?.
Steven, it’s Lisa. Obviously, we’re in the midst of the Dish blackout. So really until we resolve that, we are not really commenting on – or giving guidance on net retrans..
Okay. Maybe then, Lisa, another one, I think the cash balance dropped sequentially by about $100 million, but it also looks like the debt was maybe down by a similar amount.
So just wondering if I had that right, that you took some debt out? And could you quantify the divestiture cash that you’ll realize net of tax from the two divestitures?.
Yes. So you are correct in terms of the pay-down of the revolver, so you saw that. In terms of the net proceeds, so on the $265 million cash proceeds that we expect to get from Stitcher sale, we have about $55 million of tax on that. That doesn’t include whether or not we make the earn-out.
And then on PIX, as you know, I mentioned $75 million, plus about $5 million of interest, which will have about $4 million in tax on that..
Great. And then maybe just switching gears to National Media. So it looks like that with the removal of Stitcher it might have pushed the margin up maybe a couple of percentage points like from Q1 to Q2 and so with that guidance for modest growth in the back half of the year.
Should we expect margins to continue to expand at National Media?.
Yes, it’s oh, go ahead, Laura..
Yes. I was just going to say, we certainly expect modest growth on the revenue line. And I would say from a margin perspective, we’ll continue to see improvement there over the back half of the year, probably looking more at the year-to-date margin increase year-over-year from improvement standpoint..
And then just – okay, great. And then just the last one on political, so it seems like an upgrade of the political guide, I think you and your peers are all very bullish for great reason.
When do you feel like you will have the visibility on that revenue to really know that you’re going to meet or exceed that guidance? Is it by August because of September sales? Or is it really kind of on November 10?.
Steven, I got to tell you, I mean, I feel really good about the guidance we’re putting out now. We’ve got a lot of it already on the books.
There’s been a much higher percentage of prebook dollars for the fall than we have ever seen in the past, as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, President Trump already has laid in millions and millions of dollars, there’s some press reports this week that Biden is about to do the same. We think that’s coming in the next week potentially.
In many of our contested races and states, we’re already seeing prebook dollars. We are well on our way to the number we have estimated. So I think that something is going to have to dramatically change for us to feel like that guidance we put out, we’re not going to be able to achieve..
Okay, that’s great color thank you..
Our next question is from the line of John Janedis with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead..
Hi, good morning. Thank you. Maybe I’ll stick with the case theme for a second.
And I wanted to ask, as you look at the networks in their current format and format at five, is there more room to expand the portfolio? And then maybe can you talk more broadly about the DR category understanding the dynamics? How do you think about the longer-term growth in DR relative to the more traditional linear ad business? And then maybe quickly as a follow-up on auto is the reach here that it stays negative? Or is there enough pent-up demand where it could actually tick up? I think you mentioned the aftermarket is good, but curious as to what you’re seeing on the other side?.
Hey, John, it’s Adam. I will take the first questions on Katz and DR, and then I will pass it to Brian on some commentary on auto. Look, we always assessed opportunities for us to expand the business. I think we are very, very happy with the performance of Katz right now.
And so there’s nothing to say that a little bit further down the road as we see additional opportunity for distribution to expand, open up that we couldn’t look for additional options to open another beachhead in over-the-air broadcasting. I think that’s always an opportunity. With respect to DR, DR used to be the lowest rate.
And frankly, today, we see DR and hybrid DR, which involves the use of ratings to help establish the currency, as continuing to grow rate. And during this down period, we’ve actually seen DR and hybrid DR rates that have, in some cases, displaced low general market advertising. So we really focus on maximizing yield.
The strength we have in DR has helped the Katz networks and Newsy to maximize our overall yield. We don’t really care whether it’s a DR spot or a general market spot, we want the highest rate possible for that spot.
And having that strength in DR has given us that – I think that nice cushion to create that ability to manage yield better, I think, than otherwise.
Brian, you want to talk about auto?.
Yes. Let me just expand on that for one second, if I can. Based on the increases in viewing that we’re seeing as a result of pandemic, the general – the DR clients are getting a really good response. And when they get a really good response, meet the week, they’re willing to book more inventory at higher unit rates.
And so as Adam said, in many cases, we are seeing DR rates that actually rival or surpass general market rates. And keep in mind that on a DR rate, we don’t have to post to a Nielsen rating. And so there’s actually a really rich business for us in direct response, as a result of the success we’re having and the fact that we don’t have to post.
Shifting over to just automotive. I think automotive is going to continue to be challenged this year just because of the lack of inventory. I think demand is very high. I think as vehicles, finally, get back out of the production facilities, get distributed through the country, I think there’s a waiting list of people who will be gobbling those up.
So I do think that there’s going to be a lot of momentum. And therefore, I think there’ll be a lot of advertising as people are trying to – the dealers are trying to let people know when inventory is hitting their lots. But I’m not sure if they can get enough inventory to push the category positive.
Now we may see as we get to the end of the year, as new brands coming out next year, the Ford Bronco and others and you may see some branding that begins to lay the foundation for next year, expecting that next year will be very strong and a rebound year.
I’m just not sure if either of the two remaining quarters, especially with the displacement that we actually move to positive on auto..
Got it.
Brian, maybe one quickly on DR, just to backfill what you had said, are you seeing also a broadening in the number of those advertisers? Meaning, are there more DR players today than, say, 6 or 12 months ago?.
I don’t know about 6 to 12 months ago, but I think you would be shocked to see what a broad advertiser base really represents DR. Adam mentioned 4 or 5 big clients in his earlier comments, but it’s a pretty long list and it has been far more stable during the pandemic, which speaks to its durability than we saw in the local markets..
Thank you very much..
Our next question is from Craig Huber with Huber Research Partners. Please go ahead..
Thank you A few questions, if I could. Brian, you mentioned football, as college and NFL being 5% of your ad revenue.
What is total sports in the typical year of your ad revenue? We’ll start there, please?.
It’s about 10%, Craig..
What is news right now?.
Well, news typically is in the 40% to 45% range, but we actually have seen that moved to close to 50% in the last couple of months. Part of that has to do with the lack of sports, but part of it has to do with the increased audience, and therefore, demand on the news inventory..
And then you talked about strong ratings a few minutes ago, Brian.
Can you just quantify that for which however you’d like to? And I’m also curious, once we get through this virus, what are your sort of thoughts or about how much of the extra audience you could hopefully hold on to?.
Yes. Look, I think it’s been an interesting 4 or 5 months now. We saw the surge in COVID-19 viewing and that really drove audiences anywhere from 15% to 50% up. It began to settle down a little bit. And then we saw, as a result of the protests another increased level of interest now with all of the political narrative that’s happening.
There’s a high level of interest. There really is so much going on. So we continue to see especially in the early evening and late news, a real spike in news viewership. The morning has been disrupted a little bit as a result of changing lifestyles with less people commuting to work. The 6:00 to 7:00 a has rebound a little bit.
The 4:30 to 6:00 a continues to be down. But also as a result of that, people are staying up a little later because they are not getting up as early. And so we have seen a bump in the late news. So that has remained consistent.
It’s double-digit growth on a percentage basis across the country, and it would appear much of the country is going to continue to operate with this kind of lifestyle through the rest of this year. And so we’re going to continue to take advantage of that..
And Brian, in your advertising comments, I just want to expand a little bit further. In some of the states that you’re in where the virus cases have picked up significantly, things have gotten tighter from a government control standpoint, if you will.
Have you seen any significant changes in the ad revenue trends? Or is it too hard to parse that apart in some of the select states in your mind?.
The – we really haven’t seen much change. I mean, clearly, states, Florida, Texas, other places continue to see spikes. We’re not seeing a meaningful change in those states versus many of the others. Business is open everywhere. Car dealers are open. Furniture stores are open. Malls are open.
Clearly, how each of them operates with their social distancing precautions is different. But even in Florida and Texas and other places, we’re not seeing a material change or meaningfully lower ad numbers than we are seeing in the states that are more open for business..
And Brian, I wanted to ask you a cost question, if I could. Your other expenses category looked like it was down about 22%, 23% year-over-year in the quarter, roughly $12 million.
What drove that, please? Especially in the quarter, that lower number?.
Yes, we shut down everything we possibly could. So typically in there, you have our facilities, towers, repairs, supplies. We have a lot less people in our buildings. And so we’re repairing less things. We have less of a need for supplies. And then you think of travel and entertainment. Travel has basically been halted across the division.
Entertainment has ceased for the last couple of months. We did freeze pay increases for all of our employees this year. So that had an impact in our employee cost line. But I think once this started, we made a commitment to our employees that we were going to stand by them, and we have, and we are incredibly proud of that.
But we were also going to be fiscally responsible through this period, and we locked down every expense we possibly could..
Okay. Appreciate that. Let me ask you a big-picture question, if I could squeeze this in, Brian, we have talked about this in the past. Over-the-air, what percent of household viewership in your markets, or you-want-to-just talk about the entire U.S. do you think that represents right now? So I’m very optimistic about that, that’s why I’m asking..
Yes. I mean I can Craig, it’s Adam, I can tell you that the latest Nielsen survey showed, if I were to look at our markets, some of our markets can be as high as 28% considered over-the-air homes. It can be – the average right now, I think, in the latest survey from Nielsen, was around 16% or 17%, for the nationwide..
That’s great, thank you very much guys..
Thank you. There are no further questions in queue. I will turn it back to the company for any closing comments..
Thank you, John. Thanks to everyone for joining us today. Have a good day..
Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude your conference for today. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect..