Greg Maffei
Analyst · Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Your line is open
Thank you, Courtnee, and good morning to all of you. Today speaking on the call we will also have Formula One's President and CEO, Stefano Domenicali; and Liberty's Chief Accounting and Principal Financial Officer, Brian Wendling. This quarter, no surprise, we're going to start with the Braves. World Champions for the first time since 1995. As Hank Aaron said, “In playing ball, and in life, a person occasionally gets the opportunity to do something great. When that time comes, only two things matter: being prepared to seize the moment and having the courage to take your best swing.” Clearly the Brave did that and I want to thank Ted Turner for reminding us of that quote. So congrats to our tremendous players for their performance to Braves' lifer, Smith whom all the players have such a well-deserved admiration; to Alex Anthopoulos with its excellent mid-season trades; and to the rest of our top-quality Brave's management team, Terry, Mike and Derek and to all the Braves' country most of all. This was an excellent team effort particularly in Game 6 in Houston starting with Soler's ginormous 500-ish 3-run homer in the third that cleared the train tracks and Max Fried pitching the lights out despite getting his let spiked in the first inning. It was an amazing comeback since the All-Star break when we were 44 and 45 and the team wisely invested in talent of that trade deadline, which helped turn the season around and also generated a great financial performance. As I said, the financial performance of the team was as impressive as the on-field performance. The season-to-date baseball revenue per home game is up 11% compared to 2019 and retail per caps are up 33% versus 2019. The Braves ended the season number two in Major League Baseball and regular attendance at 2.3 million. This is close to our historical average of 2.4 million despite only reaching 100% capacity in May. With our on-field success, we've already sold thousands of new season ticket plans for the 2022 season. The battery was booming throughout the playoffs and we estimate crowds were well in excess of 100,000 for each of our World Series Games. Very exciting. So let me turn now to Liberty SiriusXM. This morning we also had some good news going over 80% at SiriusXM through a tax-free exchange and we now expect it to be an 80B. Accordingly all future distributions from Siri will be tax-free. We did continue our share repurchases, repurchasing $98 million across the As and the Ks from August through September -- excuse me, through October. The discount remains and we were purchased at a look-through price on Siri of just over $4. We continue to take advantage of that discount. We also sold our entire iHeart stake at an average price of $25.31 per share for after-tax proceeds of $175 million, the majority of which we sold after quarter end in October. This was well timed and we sold the stock for a 40% pre-tax gain. This investment was intended to take an option in adjacent business. But we like the hand we have at Siri and now have additional cash to fuel incremental buybacks. Looking at Siri itself, strong results for the quarter $616,000 in self-paying net adds, the highest quarterly figure ever recorded. We obtained our full year guidance in nine months. We also reported for the quarter the highest revenue and EBITDA ever. We have a continued focus on growing engagement outside the vehicle, perhaps you saw our very entertaining SiriusXM House ad campaign. And we have been driving impressive growth on the advertising platform with revenue up 31%. We are back to producing live content and experiences with our small stage series and we hosted Dave Matthews, Brandi Carlile, Coldplay and John Mulaney. Further on content, we completed an investment in a content agreement with Audio Up, which will create new original scripted podcast for the Siri platforms. Turning briefly to Live Nation. I noted reports later today, so I really can't comment on the results, other than to say demand is endured and is now being met with supply and we are pleased with the equity performance up 43% year-to-date. Turning to Formula One Group. Thrilling season continues. The lead for the Drivers' Championship has gone back and forth between Max and Lewis. Among the rest of the drivers there are tight competition across the grid. And in the Constructors' Championship, Mercedes and Red Bull are fighting for first, with McLaren and Ferrari in a tight battle for third. Fans are attending and tuning in. We have never seen such a crowd in Austin, for example, which set an F1 attendance record over the race weekend. Of the 400000 people that showed up in Austin, almost 70% were attending their first Grand Prix. Usually this figure is more like in the mid-30s. As Stefano will discuss in a moment, recently results -- released results of F1 fan survey and survey in our demographic is skewing younger, something fewer the sports can claim. We are already looking towards 2022 and have announced a 2023 race calendar. We are excited to have our second race in the U.S. and welcome the Miami GP in May. Demand is high. 275,000 people pre-registered to purchase tickets, as compared to a planned capacity of around 80,000. 1800 people have placed a $5000 deposit for luxury hospitality, Paddock Club and suite sold throughout -- they sold out the available inventory in the first day. We've also sold through the available Grandstand Tickets in the first day. Turning briefly to Almac, we continue to review opportunities. We believe the changes in the SPAC market will ultimately be to Liberty's benefit. And with that, I'd like to turn it over to Brian, for more on our financial results.