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Live Nation Entertainment, Inc. (LYV)

Q3 2015 Earnings Call· Thu, Oct 29, 2015

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. My name is Kelsey McKinley, and I will be your conference facilitator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Live Nation Entertainment Third Quarter 2015 Earnings Conference Call. Today's conference is being recorded. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question-and-answer period. Before we begin, Live Nation has asked me to remind you that this afternoon's call will contain certain forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ, including statements relating to the company's anticipated financial performance, business prospects, new developments and similar matters. Please refer to Live Nation's SEC filings including the Risk Factors and cautionary statements included in the company's most recent filings on Form 10-K, Form 10-Q and Form 8-K for a description of risks and uncertainties that could impact the actual results. Live Nation will also refer to some non-GAAP measures on this call. In accordance with SEC Regulation G, Live Nation has provided a full reconciliation for the most comparable GAAP measures in their earnings release. The release, reconciliations and other financial or statistical information to be discussed on this call can be found under the Investor Relations tab on investors.livenationentertainment.com. It is now my pleasure to turn the conference over to Michael Rapino, President and Chief Executive Officer of Live Nation Entertainment. Please go ahead, sir. Michael Rapino - President, Chief Executive Officer & Director: Good afternoon and welcome to our third quarter 2015 conference call. Live Nation had a record third quarter and remains on track to deliver its planned growth and record performance in 2015. Our key financial metrics are up for the quarter with revenue growing 10% and AOI up…

Joe Berchtold - Chief Operating Officer

Management

Thanks, Michael. Looking at our business segments, first concerts. Live Nation concerts revenue in the third quarter was up 9% and AOI was up 6% on a constant currency basis. The revenue growth was driven by a 10% increase in attendance at our shows for the quarter, specifically our amphitheaters had over 10 million fans that attend 1,100 shows, is an all-time high, up over 1 million fans from Q3 last year. Arena attendance was up 30% to over 4 million fans for the quarter and festival attendance for Q3 was a record of 3.5 million fans. This translated into a record summer, looking to Q2 and Q3 for concerts with 40 million fans attending 12,000 shows globally, 9% higher attendance than last year. For the full year, we expect to deliver record attendance, increasing by about 3 million fans with 25,000 shows. And as a result, we expect to deliver strong double-digit AOI growth in our concerts business for the full year. At Artist Nation, revenue was up 6% for the quarter and 9% year-to-date at constant currency as we have been successful in growing our artist management and related businesses. AOI for the quarter is up 39% as we continue investing in new business lines, notably in sports management. And for the full year, we expect to deliver high single-digit revenue growth with Q4 largely in line with last year. Turning to our sponsorship and advertising business. Our sponsorship and advertising revenue for the third quarter grew by 17% and AOI was up 16% at constant currency. 62% of our revenue growth this quarter came from festival sponsorship, which increased 39% year-on-year at constant currency and festival sponsorship growth this year came primarily from increased monetization of our fans as we grew revenue per fan by 33% globally…

Kathy Willard - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Thanks, Joe. And good afternoon, everyone. Starting with our results for the third quarter. Revenue is $2.8 billion, up 10% from the same period in 2014 and AOI is $279 million, up 8% over last year, both at constant currency. As reported revenue is $2.6 billion and AOI is $266 million. Free cash flow is $205 million. Revenue growth for the quarter was driven by higher concerts revenue from increased shows in North America amphitheaters and arenas along with acquisition activity. Ticketing revenue growth also drove the increase with higher primary and resale revenue. Reported AOI for the third quarter was $266 million, 3% higher than last year. FX impact for the third quarter reduced AOI by $13 million or 5%. The majority of the AOI growth came from our ticketing and sponsorship and advertising segment. Ticketing AOI was driven by the higher primary and resale activity. Sponsorship and advertising AOI increased with higher festival sales along with other new sponsors. Concerts AOI was at 6% to last year at constant currency, while Artist Nation AOI was impacted by our continued investment in new service lines. Our operating income for the quarter was $154 million compared to $151 million last year. The FX impact to operating for the third quarter was a decrease of $10 million. Net income was $89 million compared to $105 million last year with an increase in taxes driven by the growth in profitability internationally. Free cash flow in the third quarter was $205 million, in line with last year. Now for the nine months results. Revenue is up 9% from last year to $5.8 billion and AOI is $504 million, up 4% over 2014 both at constant currency. As reported, revenue is $5.5 billion and AOI is $477 million. Our free cash flow for the…

Operator

Operator

Thank you, Ms. Willard. And our first question will come from Amy Yong with Macquarie. Amy Yong - Macquarie Capital (USA), Inc.: Thank you, and congratulations on another great quarter. So, I have a bigger picture question. As you are wrapping up your three-year plan, it seems like a lot of the large scale acquisition spending is over. Where do you think are the largest buckets of organic growth over the next few years? Michael Rapino - President, Chief Executive Officer & Director: Hi, Amy. It's Michael. First of all, I would say we still believe that there are some great acquisition opportunities available across the globe too that we think we can grow our business at a very accretive rate. But aside from that regardless of acquisitions, if you look at the historic business, we have been delivering most of our growth on an organic basis and we think we can continue to do more of that. We're going to do three things that are going to drive organic growth ongoing. Number one is what we talked about always is our advertising business. We think that has great runway because we believe Madison Avenue is going to continue shift more dollars to kind of event-based engaged business. We got a great platform. So we think the tide will rise on more dollars being spent in the events business and we'll continue to capture more of that as well as we grow our digital content business and on the mobile front, we'll be able to attract that. So we believe advertising will organically probably be our highest margin largest growth engine to our business. Ticketing, we believe, it just keeps getting better and better because all of the features and functions and products of our new mobile app coming out…

Operator

Operator

Moving on to David Joyce with Evercore.

David Carl Joyce - Evercore ISI

Analyst

Thank you. One of my question, I was just wondering about the phasing of the event timing with what you really experienced for the third quarter versus what you thought would be comparably shifting into the fourth. I was just wondering, there is still a lot of deferred revenue and prepaid expenses I think that is reflected in free cash indicating that there is a lot of volume in the fourth quarter. But was there anything that timing-wise got accelerated into the third or is everything still as planned from the last call?

Joe Berchtold - Chief Operating Officer

Management

I think things are still largely as planned. Q4 is a very big quarter for us this year in terms of show count, heavily driven on the theaters and club side. So that show count number is high. I think what you saw this summer, as we've talked about in the past, is just a seasonal, temporal, fewer stadiums this year, more amphitheaters, more arenas, more festivals and we think we disproportionally grew and took share during the summer season but largely what we expected in terms of show count attendance.

David Carl Joyce - Evercore ISI

Analyst

So sponsorship and advertising will be later in the fourth quarter due to the size of the venue of the events that are on the slate?

Joe Berchtold - Chief Operating Officer

Management

Well, again, it's not so much size of the venue. It is just – again, we talked about festival sponsorship in the past. We've talked about that's far and away our highest sponsorship per fan. Those are predominantly Q2, Q3 event. But just when you rollout the map that tends to be where you see your growth.

David Carl Joyce - Evercore ISI

Analyst

And on Artist Nation, you talked about how AOI should shake out for the fourth quarter, obviously there is more spending for the sports management this quarter. Is that infrastructure largely in place or is there going to be more spending to ramp that up or build that out for next year?

Joe Berchtold - Chief Operating Officer

Management

No. I mean, that spending is largely in place and will continue. We expect to start to see more revenue from that next year and in just Q4, trying to give some guidance in terms of level of overall activity.

Operator

Operator

And Doug Arthur with Huber Research has the next question.

Douglas Middleton Arthur - Huber Research Partners LLC

Analyst

Yeah, two questions. First sort of a technical issue. You had, looks like you had about a 40% increase in international events year-over-year in the third quarter. How much of that is acquisition related and how much of it is just timing? And then the second question, Michael on TMOne platform, what would you sort of characterize as sort of the five main benefits from it to the venues. Thank you. Michael Rapino - President, Chief Executive Officer & Director: International, we've had no real acquisitions that would be driving activity. Most of those acquisitions in the last year would have been in the U.S. festival space. So, Europe just had strong year as did North America, all organic. As far as ticketing, we've been very, very honest and clear with everyone that we bought a – Ticketmaster has a very old platform. And part of the challenge with the platform was it just wasn't technically enough to grade 2015 web-based platform that lets us just be innovative and flexible and fast. So obviously the biggest part about having a new platform is we get to build an ongoing new mobile business that's much more flexible and can move with the times, meaning today historically when you want to get a new iPad or new iOS update or Android, everything was very expensive and hard on our old platform to move and build. So, the biggest fundamental advantage is our new platform has a much more robust, flexible base to it. For the venues, we have an open API platform strategy there so we can plug-and-play with a lot of their needs whether it's the CRM or security or any partners that they need us to partner with for the venue. Our app will come to life in real terms next year, will be much more robust and convert much higher than our current one. And then at the core of a venue, what the venue really is looking for is a saleforce.com kind of strategy. They want a very robust, but simple user interface to manage their event, to staff their event, to sell their event, to market it, to change the ticket prices, to build it. Our new platform TMOne is very user-friendly. Every venue will have a host of great tools available from pricing, data analytics, search, marketing, publishing. It's a world-class platform that no one in the world would have the robust amount of data and analytical tools to help view the venue, build your show, put it out, market it, distribute it if you want to sell tickets to other partners. It's a very robust platform. It's going to put all the tools now in your hands to be the best at selling, understanding your market, understanding pricing, we believe ultimately selling more tickets because we're putting a lot more tools and data into the hands of every box office and every general manager in a venue.

Douglas Middleton Arthur - Huber Research Partners LLC

Analyst

Great. Thank you very much.

Operator

Operator

We'll now hear from Ben Mogil with Stifel. Kevin Lee Hon Siong - Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., Inc.: Hi, thank you. This is actually Kevin Lee for Ben. Just a quick question on the secondary ticketing market. Of the growth you're seeing in GTV, how much is that from share shift from competitors and how much do think is coming from Ticketmaster growing the actual secondary market? Thank you.

Joe Berchtold - Chief Operating Officer

Management

Kevin, this is Joe Berchtold. There is not a great industry information out there in terms of getting specific on that, but we absolutely believe that we are taking share on a global basis with the quality of product that we're delivering, starting with the joint primary and secondary inventory we're putting on Ticketmaster and then getting into our league exchanges. So we don't have exactness of those numbers, but we absolutely believe with the high growth that we have in that business that we are taking share. Kevin Lee Hon Siong - Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., Inc.: Thank you.

Operator

Operator

And Rich Tullo with Albert Fried & Company has the next question. Rich R. Tullo - Albert Fried & Co. LLC: Hey, guys. Congratulations on a great quarter. Little factoid, you grew Ticketmaster, your growth is as big as the whole Ticketfly. And they have a $550 million valuation, so that's I don't know what's Ticketmaster worth $20 billion? Over the last couple of days, you've seen Adele and Rihanna seeking to pitch sponsorship deals ahead of their concerts. Are you in that mix? How does that help you and how does that influence your business? I suspect it's generally favorable. But I'm just curious to see how it works? Michael Rapino - President, Chief Executive Officer & Director: Tullo, I'm still digesting your $20 billion valuation. That's question of the day, but. Rich R. Tullo - Albert Fried & Co. LLC: So it was just off the top of my head, I was just using like Reed Hastings, Ted Sarandos' numbers. Michael Rapino - President, Chief Executive Officer & Director: We certainly believe we have a very valuable asset that has lots of expansion ahead of it. Joe will dig in on the second part.

Joe Berchtold - Chief Operating Officer

Management

Yes. At its heart, Rich, our job is what the concert promoter and ticketing company is to sell ticket and make sure all the tickets for our artist shows get sold. We've got a host of services to do that ranging from our own fan club services to Ticketmaster, other specialty ticketing services. So, we support the concept of making sure all the tickets are sold. A lot of the technology development that Michael was just talking about at Ticketmaster is focused on creating more of an open platform and enabling the use of APIs on distributed commerce platform to more effectively sell those tickets. So, we think that we will see and we support the notion going forward, whether it's the artists or the teams, they are looking to retail and use other distribution channels as well to make sure we're selling a ticket in every corner possible. Rich R. Tullo - Albert Fried & Co. LLC: Excellent. Thank you very much.

Operator

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, with no further questions, this does conclude the Live Nation Entertainment third quarter 2015 earnings conference call. Thank you all for your participation.