Charles Carey
Analyst · Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead
Okay. All right. Thanks, Brian. We're proud of the way that Formula 1, our teams, and our partners have managed through this year. We have three key priorities to execute once the virus hit us in March: First, to keep our fans engaged with a championship season and other initiatives that maintain the momentum we built coming into 2020 and to do so safely. Second, while mitigating the financial impact from the virus this year, prioritize strong long-term relationships with our commercial partners. And third, enhance the long-term growth of the sport by completing agreements and regulatory changes to strengthen the competition and action on the track. The governance of the sport and the business model for the teams in Formula 1. While we still have four races to go, we believe we're well on our way to achieving our goals. Executing the race schedule safely has been challenging, and our success to date is attributed to the partnership of everybody at Formula 1, the FIA, and our teams. Most do not realize the complexity involved in delivering the Formula 1 2020 competition, which require about 2,500 personnel at the track. In 2020, we will ultimately raise in 12 countries. Traveling for many locations requiring us to navigate constantly changing regulations on both ends. With the 17 race schedule beginning in early July, we met our goal of 15 to 18 race calendar. Building this schedule was a bit of a jigsaw puzzle as 13 of our originally planned 22 race locations canceled. We took this as an opportunity to create special interest for fans by adding races where we had not raised in years, if at all. We feel very good about the fan reaction to our season to date. While many sports have struggled with viewership, this year, our viewership is up modestly over last year. To achieve these results in a season with Mercedes dominance in Ferrari struggles, while so many other sports have seen steep declines is a solid achievement. Our digital growth has been even more dramatic. Formula 1 is the fastest-growing sports league in terms of followers across Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube, with a 17% growth rate between March and September. Formula 1 also saw the highest year-on-year growth for social engagement with growth of 70%, which is more than 3x higher than its closest competitor. We've had some special moments capped by Lewis Hamilton, becoming a sports lifetime leader in wins with his 92nd victory in Portugal and subsequently winning his 93rd in Emilia, surpassing the previous record of 91 set by Michael Schumacher. Congratulations to Mercedes, setting new boundaries by becoming the only constructor to ever win 7 consecutive constructors titles after Lewis Hamilton's win in Emilia. The Eifel Grand Prix at the Nurburgring, mark a return to the podium for Daniel Ricciardo in Renault. A return he submitted with another podium in Emilia. At this race, for the first time in our history, we partner with YouTube to stream the entire weekend for fans across selected European markets. We look forward to continuing our unique partnership with YouTube as another way to engage our fans. In September, we raced twice in Italy, which produced some outstanding racing. There were multiple red flags and a multi-car collision on a restart in Tuscany, only 12 cars finished and Alexander Albon got its first podium. Mons have produced one of those thrilling races in years and gave us a snapshot of the future with the youngest podium so far, with Pierre Gasly securing his made in win, and he was joined in the podium by Carlos Sainz and Lance Stroll. We have to see more of these unpredictable outcomes with the 2022 regulations. The Paddock has been a flurry of activity with driver changes. 4-time champion, Sebastian Vettel didn't indeed find a seat with racing point. We'll see if other driver secure receipts, such as Sergio Perez and Nico Hulkenberg. Nico doesn't even have a permanent seat this season, yet has scored 10 points. There's heavy speculation about the new driver lineup from Haas. And Netflix has been capturing the drama as they film Season 3 of Drive to Survive. Continuing on the topic of engagement, the 2021 season of our F1 Esports Series presented by Aramco got underway in October with Alfa Romeo claiming the top spot. We're in the middle of a second event right now with racers competing for an industry-leading $750,000 price spot. We've continued to see tremendous growth with Esports is over 237,000 participants attempted to qualify this year. We will have 8 live broadcast, double last year, which will be streamed online via F1's official channels on Facebook, YouTube, Twitch, as well as broadcast by international TV partners. With regards to our 2020 results, we recognized early on this was going to be an unprecedented and uniquely challenging year financially. The most significant impact was on our promotion revenues. There's only 2 of our 13 events to date have had fans, and those were capped at less than half capacity. And only in Portugal, we'll be able to offer a limited Paddock Club. There are significant impacts on sponsor revenues this year as some cancel locations have material local sponsors, the fewer number of races reduced title sponsors and general inventory, and the lack of hospitality precluded some elements of sponsor benefits. The virus also made the completion of new sponsorship agreements more difficult. Our television revenue saw the lowest percentage impact among our 3 primary revenue categories, however, was still significant. We've reached revised agreements with all but a couple of our material commercial partners for 2020. We approached these agreements with a spirit of partnership. In almost all cases, we could have taken a much firmer position if we simply enforced our contracts as written. Of where we believe it best to approach these discussions with a sense of fairness to maintain our momentum. On the cost side, we aggressively reduced costs where possible. Some of our operating costs like freight and travel were naturally reduced with the revised calendar. Other discretionary costs were largely eliminated. On the operating cost level, we implemented furloughs, freezes, and cuts, and expected discretionary compensation. Our price fund expense to the teams is contractual and will increase as a percent of revenues. All in all, the financial impact this year is significant, but manageable by both us and the teams and positions us well as we go forward. Our third priority was to implement key initiatives for the long-term growth and health of sport. We achieved much more than most expected. Key elements include a cost cap on team expenditures to improve competition and the business model for both existing and potential new teams, new technical and sporting regulations for 2022 that will improve action on the track for fans, a five-year agreement with teams to better balance price fund distribution and provide improved stability in an enhanced sense of partnership, streamline governance structure to better grow and improve the support, advanced initiatives on both diversity and sustainability, strengthened our balance sheet to provide both stability and the ability to be opportunistic during this period of continuing uncertainty. We still have much to do and a current focus as our engine. We need to address the costs and performance of the current engine, and we continue to define the path forward for our next engine, which will be a centerpiece for our sustainability goals. We expect to announce the 2021 calendar soon, which will look much like our original 2020 calendar, the March start, early December finish, and a record-setting number of races, including Saudi Arabia, as Greg mentioned. We're planning for events with fans that provide an experience close to normal and expect our games to be honored. In the television area, we have one material market to finalize and are otherwise well positioned for next year. Likewise, in our sponsorship category, we're finalizing our last renewal and actively engaged in a number of new sponsor opportunities. If the virus does not preempt plans, we expect 2021 will be pretty close to the 2021 we would have originally planned 12 months ago. We'd continued growth in 2019 and the previously expected growth in 2020. That being said, what is obviously not predictable is the virus. But I do believe more strongly than ever is that the world will, in due concrete the virus. And when it does, that live unique global events like Formula 1 will be more popular than ever as people look to the shared experience of sports and our array of partners will have a greater-than-ever need to reengage with fans and consumers. In closing, I want to highlight what I believe is our most important achievement in 2020. The appointment of Stefano Domenicali, as he new CEO of Formula 1 effective January 1. Stefano combines a rich experience and expertise in Formula 1 with the commercial knowledge of leading one of the world's iconic brands, Lamborghini, during the past 6 years. It is respected throughout the Motorsport and commercial world and will hit the ground running. With that, I'll turn it back to Greg.