Bill Wilson
Analyst · Barrington Research
Thank you, Claire, and thank you all for joining us today. It's great to speak with you this morning. We're very pleased to share with you today that Townsquare's fourth quarter results and therefore, our full year results for 2025 met the total net revenue and adjusted EBITDA guidance that we provided on our last call, reflecting our team's hard work in the current environment. We are proud that the execution of our digital-first local media strategy allowed us to deliver excellent results for our clients while also outperforming competitors and gaining market share in 2025. In addition, we produced strong cash flow from operations due to the thoughtful and deliberate management of our expense base and executed a refinancing in a challenging environment that was unforgiving to broadcast media companies, extending our maturity profile through 2030 and granting us ample runway to execute our growth strategy. Due to our strong cash flow characteristics, we were able to pay down debt throughout the year while also maintaining a high-yielding dividend for our shareholders and organically investing in our business for future growth. Before diving into our results, I'd like to take a minute to address our dividend. I bring this up because due to the stock price performance at year-end, our dividend yield spiked, causing some investors to contact us and express concern about the dividend safety. To be transparent, we do not pay too much attention to the implied dividend yield as we believe the underlying strength of our digital advertising business and its differentiation is not reflected in the current stock price, making the dividend yield a somewhat irrelevant metric at times. With that backdrop and context, I'm pleased to share that management, along with our Board of Directors, remain confident in the strong cash flow generation that our business model delivers and therefore, in our ability to support our dividend at its current rate. Now back to our results. By now, it should be very clear that Townsquare has transformed from a legacy broadcast company into a digital-first local media company and that our digital platform and digital execution sets us apart from others in local media. In 2025, approximately 55% of our company's total net revenue came from digital, which is up from 52% in 2024. And in 2025, 56% of our total segment profit was generated from our digital solutions, which is up from 50% in 2024. As highlighted on Slide 10, this is industry-leading at 2x our competitors as on average, they only have 30% of their revenue coming from digital sources. As we have consistently stated for many years, digital is and digital will continue to be Townsquare's growth engine and the area where we focus the bulk of our investment capital going forward, consistent with our strategy of being a digital-first local media company, focusing on markets outside the top 50 in the United States and further differentiating us from others in local media. Our digital growth engine is comprised of 2 segments: digital advertising, which we call Townsquare Ignite; and subscription digital marketing solutions, which we call Townsquare Interactive. While we expect both to deliver long-term profitable growth with strong profit margins, we expect that our digital advertising business and more specifically, our digital programmatic business will be our leading growth vehicle. In 2025, our digital advertising business started the year with strong revenue growth rates. In fact, revenue grew plus 8% year-over-year in Q1 of 2025. As the year progressed, however, we were faced with 2 very different trends. Digital advertising related to our direct-to-client sales were very healthy and strong, but were largely offset by a decline in indirect revenue, also known as remnant revenue, driven by a significant deterioration in our online audience trends on our local and national websites, which you may recall, we went into great detail on our last earnings call. All in all, 2025 digital advertising revenue increased plus 2% year-over-year. This growth was driven by: one, our programmatic digital advertising platform; and two, the direct local sales of our owned and operated or O&O digital properties. First, our Digital Programmatic business, which made up approximately 65% of our digital advertising segment 2025 revenue, delivered strong full year revenue results of plus 9% year-over-year for Digital Programmatic. We believe this part of our business has very strong organic growth opportunities supported by our best-in-class digital offering, strong industry tailwinds and a great leadership team. We expect Programmatic will continue to be our primary growth driver in 2026 and beyond. Our third-party media partnership model, which is a component of our Programmatic business, has been progressing quite, quite nicely since its beta launch in early of 2024. This strategy will be a meaningful component of our digital advertising growth in future years. In 2025, media partnerships revenue was approximately $6 million, and we had 6 local media partners. As a reminder, through this capital-light model, we partner with other local media companies and handle all the major components of their digital advertising campaigns, including managing the creative, buying and optimizing the inventory, providing customer support of the digital campaigns and importantly, training our partner sales teams to sell our solutions. Therefore, we can enter new markets to offer programmatic digital advertising solutions without having to acquire radio broadcast assets to do so, freeing up our capital for other purposes. I expect that in 4 years, this division can grow to be $50 million in revenue for Townsquare at an approximate 20% profit margin. Ultimately, our goal with this initiative and division is to become the chosen provider of digital programmatic advertising to broadcasters and digital agencies in local markets outside of major cities. We are proud and honored to share that in addition to the 6 strong partners we had in this division in 2025, we have now signed agreements with 5 additional parties, bringing the total to 11 media partners, and we are excited to start working with them. In total, our programmatic digital business, which again now makes up 65% of our digital advertising segment is on a roll and firing on all cylinders as we start 2026, with revenue up a strong approximately 20% year-over-year in Q1. Again, in Q1 '26, we're up approximately 20% in our programmatic digital advertising business. Our local teams are selling digital advertising better than ever, while at the same time, our media partnership division is on pace to nearly double revenue in 2026. Second, the direct sales of our local O&O digital assets, which include our local salespeople selling the inventory on our own 400-plus local mobile apps and local websites was also quite strong in 2025, growing plus 9% year-over-year, driven by increases in both number of clients and average monthly spend. In Q1 2026, sales of our local O&O digital assets is projected to be over plus 10% with the deep skill set of our digital product and engineering team, we have developed a multitude of digital advertising solutions for our clients, bringing national scale and sophistication to our size markets, including high-impact solutions that are not available on programmatic exchanges, such as site takeovers, first impression full site coverage, mobile interstitials, sponsored social mentions, endorsements and so much more. In addition, we have the unique ability to collect and analyze first-party data from our digital audience, allowing us to provide detailed and unique insights about consumer behaviors, audience interest and purchase intent that drive real results with strong ROI for our clients, giving us a true strategic advantage over our local competition. We're especially proud of the success of our local sales team and what they've done to drive direct sales growth, and they continue to do so, a conviction that is currently supported by our first quarter forecast, which is Q1 revenue for our direct sold O&O digital advertising up over 10% year-over-year. Now to address the digital advertising headwinds created by the emergence of AI, which we also detailed on our last earnings call, for clarity, AI is negatively impacting the revenue that we get by selling excess or remnant digital inventory on our owned and operated websites programmatically, aka impressions that were unsold by our local sales team due to the fact that we now have less excess digital inventory available to be sold. In 2025, our digital audience decreased as referrals from search engines such as Google declined significantly as again, we addressed on earlier earnings calls. Unique visitors to our O&O local and national websites and mobile apps was on average approximately 40 million people per month in 2025, a decline of approximately 45% as compared to the approximately 70 million per month in 2024. As we have previously shared, this is an industry-wide issue, impacting publishers of all sizes to a significant degree. Revenue generated from remnant inventory on our websites, which, as a reminder, is almost 100% profit margin revenue for us, declined approximately 40% year-over-year to approximately $12 million in 2025, and this was from approximately $20 million in 2024. Therefore, remnant indirect digital revenue declined from being approximately 13% of our total digital advertising revenue to now being just 8% in 2025. Importantly, our direct digital advertising sales were not impacted by the decline in audience. As I've already shared, direct sales of our local O&O websites increased plus 9% in 2025 year-over-year and is now pacing up over plus 10% in Q1 2026. This is because although the declines of our audience are material, we have so much excess or unsold digital inventory due to the huge scale of our audience that we are nowhere near close to touching the amount of digital advertising we can sell directly. This meaningful and unforeseen drag on our otherwise strong digital advertising performance significantly muted our overall revenue and profit growth rates in 2025. In fact, excluding the revenue from remnant inventory sold programmatically, 2025 digital advertising revenue overall would have increased plus 8% year-over-year for Townsquare. We have been asked if we believe that our digital audience and therefore, our indirect digital advertising revenue will go to 0 and also if that then impacts our direct digital advertising revenue. And the answer is, without a doubt, no. Why is that? Quite simply. It's because there are other drivers of digital audience to our websites and mobile apps that are not tied to Google and other search engines, providing us a floor. A meaningful portion of our traffic is driven by social media as well as direct visits to our websites and mobile apps from our loyal audience as well as traffic from our local e-mail newsletters as well as traffic from mobile alerts and many other sources of organic traffic. And we're leaning into this, developing new traffic strategies, building new content publishing tools and reinvigorating our team. Early signs are very, very promising. In January, unique visitors to our websites increased month-over-month, although still down year-over-year, they also reached our highest audience level in January since July of 2025. This is an early proof point that even with the impact of AI and search engine traffic, we are in a differentiated position given our focus on hyperlocal content, coupled with the power of our social media platforms to stop the decline and we believe grow our online audience once more. As we have outlined on our last earnings call, the year-over-year comparison for remnant indirect revenue will be quite negative through August of this year. We forecast Q1 and Q2 remnant revenue to be down approximately 40% year-over-year in each quarter. And then for Q3 and Q4 2026, we expect remnant revenue to be approximately flat year-over-year. For the full year 2026, our expectation is that the approximately $12 million in remnant indirect revenue declines to approximately $9 million in 2026 and thus approximately a $3 million decline. And again, this is close to 100% profit margin for Townsquare. The positive news is that with our online audience to our owned and operated properties growing in January over December, we forecast that revenue will be up over 10% in Q1 2026 versus Q4 2025. On a sequential basis, at a minimum, we expect that the remnant revenue decline we experienced throughout 2025 will subside substantially and quite possibly, we could have ongoing quarter-over-quarter growth like we are experiencing in Q1 2026 versus Q4 of 2025, a very positive development and one that I foreshadowed on our last call during our Q&A session. So again, although our Q1 remnant revenue is down approximately 40% year-over-year, I'd like to emphasize that it represents only a small portion, approximately 8% of our total digital advertising revenue today. In fact, the majority of our digital advertising segment, including and especially our Programmatic business continues to deliver very strong and healthy profitable revenue growth, and we expect that Q1 2026 digital advertising revenue overall will be up high single digits given the strength of our direct sales results. In addition, even with the decline of an estimated $3 million in indirect remnant revenue, our full year forecast is for digital advertising to also be up high single digits for 2026, which is a significant acceleration from 2025's plus 2% growth. Again, in 2026 full year, we expect our digital advertising in total to be up high single digits versus 2025's full year plus 2% growth. At Townsquare Interactive, our subscription digital marketing solutions business, we are proud to share that we delivered the highest segment profit margin in its history as well as the best profit growth since 2019 and the second strongest year-over-year profit improvement ever, with year-over-year segment profit growing nearly plus $4 million versus the prior year or plus 17%, nearly erasing the past 2 years of profit declines at Townsquare Interactive. Our strong profit performance at Townsquare Interactive is largely due to 3 factors: one, the restructuring of our customer service model in 2023 that allows us to grow more efficiently; number 2, changes to our sales structure at the end of 2024 and early 2025 that has led both to a temporarily smaller sales team down approximately 40%, but very importantly, a more productive sales team with much higher ROI. And finally, number three, efficiency gain from AI. We are very proud of how our Townsquare Interactive team has embraced AI and leveraged its usage for meaningful cost savings and improvement in efficiency across the business from helping to create websites to assistance with customer service. However, as I just mentioned, with a much smaller sales teams from slower sales velocity and therefore, muted revenue performance at Townsquare Interactive in the short term. In 2025, Townsquare Interactive net revenue declined negative 0.7% year-over-year, and we expect the year-over-year declines in revenue to continue short term as we rebuild our sales teams -- and it is absolutely our plan to rebuild our sales team to prior levels as we still have the utmost confidence in our service offering and the addressable market for Townsquare Interactive, which in our estimation is nearly 9 million target customers as outlined on Slide 14. We expect Q1 revenue at Townsquare Interactive will decline approximately 8%. And based on current forecast, we could see a return to quarter-over-quarter revenue growth as early as Q3 2026. In the meantime, we expect that strong profit margins will continue throughout 2026, just as we delivered in 2025. I'd like to emphasize that we remain very confident that the changes we have made to both our customer service and our sales model, along with our continued deployment of AI solutions, combined with the future growth of our sales teams are setting Townsquare Interactive up for the next decade of efficient and profitable growth and success. Now turning to our third and final business segment, Broadcast radio. As you are all aware, at Townsquare, we view local radio as an extremely valuable asset with significant cash flow properties, unparalleled consumer reach and an important local connection to our audience and to our clients. However, radio is not a growth driver for Townsquare. And in 2025, broadcast advertising net revenue, excluding political, declined negative 8% year-over-year and negative 12.6% in total. Despite broadcast revenue declines and macro headwinds, we outperformed the industry again in 2025, gaining local and national broadcast market share according to [Meier Kaplan] estimates. In Q1 2026, we are currently forecasting a very slight improvement in the ex-political performance in our Broadcast segment versus Q4 and full year 2025. With our differentiated local content on our local radio broadcast, combined with being able to offer clients marketing solutions powered by the combination of digital plus radio, we believe that we will continue to gain broadcast market share and total market share across our market footprint while also generating a solid profit as we carefully manage expenses to maintain a strong broadcast profit margin. In fact, we were able to manage broadcast expenses in 2025, such that despite revenue declines, broadcast segment profit margins were approximately 26% in both 2024 and 2025 when excluding the impact of political revenue. In the long term, it is our belief that our differentiated digital platform will deliver strong growth to offset future core broadcast revenue declines. And now I'll hand it over to Stu to discuss our financial results and guidance in more details. All yours, Stu, take it away, please.