Roland Caputo
Analyst · Evercore. Please go ahead
Thank you, Mark and good morning everyone. As Mark said, 2019 was a strong year for the company and we continue to be optimistic about the opportunity ahead. Adjusted diluted earnings per share was $0.43 in the quarter, $0.11 higher than the prior year. We reported adjusted operating profit of approximately $96 million in the fourth quarter which is slightly higher than the same period in 2018. Total subscription revenues increased approximately 4.5% in the quarter with digital-only subscription revenue growing 16% to $122 million. This represents a sequential increase in the rate of quarterly growth. As Mark said we remain very happy with the retention we're seeing from the $1 a week promotional subscriptions who have passed the yearlong promotional period. We continue to run a test that deliberately bifurcate subscriptions at promotion expiration with approximately half moving to full price, while the others are moved to an intermediate step-up price. The goal of the test is to identify characteristics that might indicate whether a subscriber may be more price-sensitive and therefore, may require additional engagement with our product before moving to full price. Over the longer term, we expect that most subscriptions will eventually move to full price. Quarterly digital news subscription ARPU declined approximately 10% compared to the prior year and approximately 3% compared to the prior quarter. While the impact from the large number of newly acquired subscriptions, mostly on the $1 a week promotion, continued to be larger than the benefit from existing subscriptions whose promotional offers ended and graduated to higher prices during the period, this marks a slight deceleration in the rate of ARPU decline over both the prior year and quarter. Given the success we're experiencing in retaining new subscriptions beyond their initial promotional period, either at full price or an intermediate step-up price, we plan to continue to use a low introductory price to acquire long retaining profitable subscribers. As was mentioned in this quarter, we have begun to phase in a price increase for many of our more tenured digital new subscriptions with those currently paying $15 per billing cycle moving to $17. We expect the phase-in to consist of a handful of tranches with the largest tranche of subscriptions effective beginning with their March bill. We expect approximately 750,000 domestic subscriptions to see a price rise by the end of 2020. The effect on Q1 digital subscription revenue from this price increase is expected to be modest due to the rollout occurring late in the quarter and this is reflected in our guidance. We also expect the rate of pressure on ARPU to moderate in subsequent quarters this year. On the print subscription side, revenues were down 3.2% due to declines in the number of home delivery subscriptions, the continued shift of subscribers moving to less frequent and therefore less expensive delivery packages, as well as a decline in single-copy sales. This decrease in print subscription revenues was partially offset by a home delivery price increase that was implemented early in the year. Total daily circulation declined 10.3% in the quarter compared with prior year, while Sunday circulation declined 8.3%. As we mentioned on last quarter's call, at the end of August, the Starbucks retail chain discontinued the distribution of all print newspapers, including The New York Times, at its corporate-owned locations. This had a meaningful impact on copies, accounting for approximately two percentage points of the decline. Print subscription revenue was approximately one percentage point lower, as a result of the loss of this distribution channel. The effect was more dramatic in the third quarter, when only one month of sales was affected. Print and digital advertising revenue, each declined, approximately 10.5%, compared with the prior year. The decrease in digital advertising revenue was largely a result of strong comparisons in the prior year in direct sold advertising, both on our core digital platforms and in creative services, partially offset by continued growth in podcast. The print advertising result was mainly due to declines in the luxury and financial categories. Other revenues grew 30% compared with the prior year to $62 million, principally driven by revenue associated with our television series The Weekly, which aired 10 new episodes in the quarter, as well as from our licensing revenue related to Facebook News. GAAP operating costs and adjusted operating costs each increased approximately 1% in the quarter as a result of higher content costs, reflecting both higher staffing in the newsroom as well as production costs related to, The Weekly. Growth in the number of employees working in digital product development also drove costs higher. These increases were substantially offset by lower costs in print production and distribution, advertising and marketing. Our effective tax rate for the fourth quarter was 10%, which was lower than the statutory tax rate, largely due to the reduced tax rate on foreign-derived income and federal tax credits for research activities. On a going-forward basis, we continue to expect our tax rate to be approximately 25% on every dollar of marginal income, with some variability around the quarterly effective rate. The under funded balance of our qualified pension plans at the end of the year was approximately $12 million. And the plans were approximately 99% funded. Moving to the balance sheet, our cash and marketable securities balance, ended the year at $684 million, a decrease from the prior quarter, as a result of an approximately $245 million payment, made to exercise our option to retire the sale leaseback of our headquarters building. With this debt retirement, the company has regained full control of our original leasehold condominium interest in our headquarters building. And the company is debt free. As a result, the interest expense line on our income statement will flip to interest income in the first quarter of 2020. Given the strong results in 2019, and the retirement of our last piece of outstanding debt, the company's Board of Directors has approved a $0.01 per share or 20% increase to the dividend to $0.06. Management and our Board will continue to keep the balance sheet and our plans for capital allocation under close review. But as I have previously stated, we have a strong preference for maintaining the flexibility to invest when and in the manner we want in order to fuel further growth in our digital businesses, independent of the vagaries of the market. And will therefore continue to take a relatively conservative approach to the management of the balance sheet. Let me conclude with our outlook, for the first quarter of 2020. Total subscription revenues are expected to increase in the mid-single digits compared with the first quarter of 2019, with digital-only subscription revenue expected to increase in the high teens. Overall advertising revenues are expected to decrease approximately 10%, compared with the first quarter of 2019. And digital advertising revenues are expected to decrease in the mid-single digits. Other revenues are expected to increase approximately 15%, largely due to our television series, The Weekly and licensing revenue from Facebook News. Both operating costs and adjusted operating costs are expected to increase, approximately 5% to 7%, compared with the first quarter of 2019, as we continue to invest in the drivers of digital subscription growth. And with that, we'd be happy to open it up for questions.