2/28/2024

speaker
Operator

Greetings and welcome to the Liberty Media Corporation and Atlanta Brave Holding 2023 year-end earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Shane Kleinstein, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you, Shane. You may begin.

speaker
Shane Kleinstein

Thank you. Good morning. Before we begin, we'd like to remind everyone that this call includes certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual events or results could differ materially due to a number of risks and uncertainties, including those mentioned in the most recent Form 10-K filed by Liberty Media and Atlanta Breeze Holdings with the SEC. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this call. and Liberty Media and Atlanta Braves Holdings expressly disclaim any obligation or undertaking to disseminate any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statement contained herein to reflect any change in Liberty Media or Atlanta Braves Holdings' expectations with regard thereto, or any change in events, conditions, or circumstances on which any such statement is based. On today's call, we will discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures for Liberty Media, SiriusXM, and Atlanta Braves Holdings, including adjusted OIBA and adjusted EBITDA. The required definitions and reconciliations for Liberty Media, SiriusXM, and Atlanta Braves Holdings, Schedules 1 through 3, can be found at the end of the earnings press releases issued today, which are available on Liberty Media and Atlanta Braves Holdings websites. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Greg Maffei, Liberty's President and CEO.

speaker
Liberty Media

Thank you, Shane, and good morning to all. 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. Also during the Q&A, we will answer any questions related to Atlanta Braves Holdings and Braves Manager will be available too. So let me begin with Liberty SiriusXM. The LSXM Siri transaction is on schedule. We filed the preliminary proxy on the 1st, January 30th rather. We still expect to close by early Q3. And the NAV discount, which was about 42% prior to announcement, is now closed to about 25%, as we had hoped. And we expect it will continue to close. Looking at SiriusXM itself, the strong operating and financial performance that it had in 2023 showed the durability of the business. Self-pay net ads were up in the second half, as expected, boosted by streaming. The strong margins and free cash flow generation remained, largely through cost discipline. Importantly, they rebuilt their tech stack and relaunched their app in the fourth quarter, and we're beginning to show positive early results from that with better personalization, promising engagement, and improved service quality. We believe these initiatives, as well as the incremental content they added, will continue to drive long-term growth. Looking at the 2024 priorities of the business, First, increasing 360L adoption and boosting conversion and retention, continuing to deliver engaging content. Recently, they signed the quite popular Smart List podcast with Jason Bateman, Will Arnett, and Sean Hayes. We do expect self-pay net ad improvement throughout the year, and there is a focus on maintaining stable, dividend margins, and free cash flow. I look forward to remaining involved personally in the next evolution of the business as chairman and a shareholder. Turning to Formula One Group, an amazing 2023 at F1. We saw a double-digit growth across all revenue streams and adjusted oil up 22%. We see a strong commercial start to the season, four race promotion renewals, including Silverstone, a 10-year deal with venue upgrades in an important heritage market, and a new race in Madrid beginning in 2026, which will be a partial street race with convenient fan access. We do see continued growth in fandom. Recently, this week, F1 joined Threads, and 2.8 million followers were on board at the platform after half a day of use. We closed the Quint acquisition in January, as we previously noted, and it took that growing partnership opportunities from Quint with F1, LBGP, and other sports properties, including the Kentucky Derby and the NBA All-Star Game. Let me turn to a minute to Vegas. It was an incredible race. We were fortunate to have such a great outcome with a record 181 overtakes and the podium came down to the final lap. It was a great result for Formula One. It created new commercial opportunities and generated fantastic global buzz. A high percentage of the first time F1 attendees and massive audiences tuned in to this race. It drew marquee brands to F1, for example, American Express, T-Mobile, Moet Hennessy, Google, and we think these brands and the marquee aspects of joining Vegas will continue to help us in 2024 and beyond. It was also a huge success for the local community. The total economic impact of the race was estimated at $1.2 billion, and the average visitor spent 3.6 times what a typical visitor spends for a non-F1 event. We look forward to building on the success of LBGP in 2024. For example, we're going to increase the GA and expand the product offerings at various price points. We're going to optimize the cost structure. The year-round commercialization efforts at Grand Prix Plaza are developing, but we will expect only a modest contribution from those in 2024. Corporate events at that site kicked off around the Super Bowl this year. In summary, the Vegas race exceeded our expectations on many levels, even though year one costs came in higher than we had anticipated. We do not intend to disclose race specifics on this race consistent with our practice across all races. I would note that we are kicking off the F1 season with testing in Bahrain, which occurred, and look forward to the first race in Bahrain this weekend. Turn to Live Nation. 2023 was the biggest year ever, where there were all-time highs for attendance, ticket sales, and sponsorship. Concert attendance grew 20% with 145 million fans. Global demand for concerts continues to grow. The top 50 tours did 50% more international acts in 2023. We have an incredible pipeline for 2024 with no sign of consumer slowdown. We're seeing strong demand across all price points. For example, large venue shows are up double digits and 65% of full year large venue shows are already booked versus only 50% last year at this time. The number of shows at amphitheaters and other operated venues will also increase in 2024. Let me turn to the Braves. Obviously there was incredible team performance in 2023. So much to highlight. The 947 runs scored was the first in MLB, and it tied an MLB home run record as well for the team. The Braves also experienced great financial growth for the year. Baseball revenue was up 9%. We've seen continued success result in higher payments under MLB's revenue sharing plan, so that is the one negative about our continued revenue growth. But I'd also note the battery revenue was up 10%. and not Justin Oye, but it was up 11%. We clearly benefit from the strength of the Braves territory. In a recent study by YouGov, the Braves had 8.4 million fans in the South region, number one in MLB. And over 65% of all other local sports teams fans support the Braves, which is the highest crossover of any fandom in Atlanta. We've seen encouraging early season trades, including for seven-time All-Star Chris Sale and outfielder Jared Kalenic. We are well positioned for future commercial and on-field success. For example, 2024 season tickets are already sold out, and there is a 16,000-person wait list. We are looking forward with bated breath to the home opener against the D-backs on April 5th. And with that, let me turn it over to Brian for more on our financial results.

speaker
Shane

Thank you, Greg, and good morning, everyone. At year end, Liberty Sirius XM Group had attributed cash, liquid investments, and monetizable public holdings of $90 million. This excludes $216 million of cash held directly at Sirius XM. During the quarter, Liberty Sirius XM repaid the remaining $199 million outstanding principal of its 1.375 basket convertible notes using cash on hand. Also during Q4, Liberty Sirius XM paid down $80 million under the Margin loan, $61 million of which was from the monetization of its 1.8 million better K shares. At quarter end, there's $1.1 billion of undrawn margin loan capacity at the parent level related to our SiriusXM margin loan. As of February 27th, the value of our SiriusXM stock was $15 billion. We have $1.3 billion in principal amount of debt against these holdings. Total Liberty Sirius XM Group attributed principal amount of debt is $11.1 billion, which includes $9.3 billion of debt held directly at Sirius XM. Turning to the Formula One Group, at quarter end, Formula One Group had attributed cash and liquid investments of $1.4 billion, which includes $1 billion of cash held directly at Formula One. Note the Quinn acquisition closed in January, which will be a use of Formula One Group cash. Total Formula One Group attributed principal amount of debt was $2.9 billion, which which includes $2.5 billion of debt at Formula One, leaving $533 million at the corporate level. And F1's $500 million revolver remains undrawn, and leverage at the end of the year was 1.9 times. As we've said in the past, the F1 business is best analyzed on an annual basis, so we'll only be speaking to full-year results. Total revenue grew 25% in 2023, with double-digit growth across all primary revenue streams. Year-over-year revenue increases include the significant revenue generation from self-promoting the Las Vegas Grand Prix, including ticketing revenue, which is included in race promotion, sponsorship revenue, which is recognized accordingly, and hospitality and experience income, which is included in other F1 revenue. Race promotion revenue also benefited from the mix of events held compared to 2022, with two additional flyaway races this year with Qatar and Las Vegas. versus Imola in France in the prior year. And sponsorship in meteorites revenue grew due to increased fees under new and renewed commercial agreements. Other F1 revenue grew 42%, or $196 million, driven by hospitality and experiences, largely attributed to the Las Vegas Grand Prix, as well as growth in the paddock club and other events, partially offset by reduced freight income due to easing of freight cost inflation. Team payments as a percent of pre-team adjusted OIVDA, as reported, was 63% in 2023, down from 66% in 2022. Other costs of F1 revenue increased from 23% of total revenue in the prior year to 32% of total revenue this year, primarily driven by promoting, organizing, and delivering the Las Vegas Grand Prix, as well as increased costs of servicing additional hospitality offerings. SG&A at 7% of total revenue was in line with historic averages. Corporate and other adjusted OIVDA was a loss of $39 million in 2023, which includes the $15 million of revenue for use of the pit building during the Las Vegas race weekend. Formula One incurs a fixed monthly rent payment that approximates depreciation, plus a variable rent component during the race weekend. Note that the fixed rent payment in 2023 reflects only a portion of the years the building wasn't occupied. until closer to the race weekend. Corporate level expense at Formula One Group was also elevated due to the split-off and reclassification costs. In 2024, Formula One Group corporate and other adjusted-oibitable benefit from the Quinn acquisition that closed in January, as well as a full year of the rent payments. Looking to 2024, F1 will host 24 races with the return of China and Imola, compared to 22 races in this past year. Quickly looking at a few cash items, F1 estimates its cash tax rate in 2024 to be a high single-digit percent of F1-adjusted OIVDA, increasing towards low double digits in future years as a result of the U.K. tax rate increase. Total capex incurred at the Formula One Group in 2023 was $426 million, approximately $390 million of which related to the development of LBGP, with the majority incurred at the Formula One Group corporate level. At the Liberty Live Group, there's attributed cash, liquid investments, and monetizable public holdings of $418 million, which includes ETF assets. There's $400 million of undrawn margin loan capacity related to our Live Nation margin loan. And as of February 27th, the value of the Live Nation stock was $6.5 billion. We have $1.2 billion in principal amount of debt against these holdings. Liberty and our consolidated subsidiaries are in compliance with their debt covenants at quarter end. And then quickly looking at the Braves, The Braves business is also best analyzed on an annual basis due to fluctuations in game count. Baseball revenue increased 9% in 2023, primarily due to increased ticket demand and attendance, leading to a 14% growth in baseball event revenue and 8% growth in retail and licensing revenue. Other baseball revenue declined primarily due to fewer concerts held compared to the prior year. The Battery had another great year with mixed-use revenue increasing 10%. Total adjusted OIBDA decreased for the year primarily due to increased player payroll expense as Braze Management continues to invest in its on-field success, including a number of trades and accelerated player signings in December of 2023. Adjusted OIBDA for the mixed-use development increased 11% in 2023. And just a reminder that SG&A was elevated for the full year due to the split-off costs. We would anticipate a $10 million to $15 million annual run rate for corporate overhead at the Atlanta Brace Holdings. With that, I'll turn it over to Stefano to discuss Formula One.

speaker
Greg

Thanks, Brian. The 2023 season delivered incredible racing and record financial results. On the track, we want to recognize Max Verstappen and Red Bull once again on their superb performance. The rest of the grid battled until the end. The race for the second in the Constructor Championship came down to the final lap of the season between Mercedes and Ferrari. McLaren and Aston Martin battled for fourth, with McLaren intensifying the competition after a solid mid-season upgrade. Oscar Piastri had a stellar rookie season, securing 97 points, including two podiums and a sprint race victory. And Albon fans, had much to cheer about as he scored points in a number of races in 2023, helping Williams finish in seventh, showing good progress under James Dahl's leadership. Across the entire 2023 season, six teams were represented on the podium, a reflection of the talent up and down the grid. The new regulations are increasingly benefiting competition across the field, and we believe this will continue in 2024 as the benefits of the cost cap and the technical regulations continue to mature. Financially, the business generated record revenue and adjusted OEBDA for the year. All primary revenue streams grew, benefiting from new and renewed commercial agreements. Furthermore, our PadoClub had an incredibly strong year, with hospitality and experiences revenue growing nearly 100%, percent year on year. This was driven by the expansive suite of hospitality and experience offerings at Las Vegas Grand Prix, as well as growth in our core PaddleClub product, with the PaddleClub sellout at 10 of 19 events. Towards the end of the season, we had the spectacular inaugural Las Vegas Grand Prix. It was a formidable undertaking, moving the project from startup planning to race delivery in little more than one year. We are incredibly proud of the Las Vegas team who worked with multiple stakeholders in the city and within the wider F1 community to deliver an incredible event on and off the track. Total ticket sales were 316,000 for the weekend. The race was thrilling from the start to finish. Charles Leclerc passed Perez on the last lap to secure his second place finish. The race generated a fun-reaching multi-platform bus and drew in new viewers who hadn't engaged all season. The local economic benefit generated by this race is remarkable. Local casino partners had record revenue, with monthly gaming revenue for Clark County at all-time high for the month of November. Stepping back to the broader calendar, the 2023 season overall delivered another year of record attendance. Six million total fans attended the race weekend, up 5% compared to the 2022 season. 12 races promoted report a new attendance record, including 480,000 at Silverstone, 445,000 at Melbourne, 405,000 in Mexico and 308,000 in Belgium. Race attendance remained strong through the end of the season with record crowds in Sao Paulo and Abu Dhabi. F1 fans tuned in across platforms. Last season, we worked closely with our media partners and created new tools to estimate digital viewership on platforms and channels not covered by Nielsen. Our findings suggest an additional 29% of audiences are not currently covered by traditional measurements globally, representing almost 20 million on average per race weekend. The share of digital viewership is much higher for markets like the US, where fans, rely more on video on demand and streaming platforms to watch races, especially those at less convenient times for live viewing. We will keep working with Nielsen this year to incorporate more of these digital audiences into their standard reporting to provide the most accurate picture of our total audience. Looking at broadcast TV, cumulative TV audience for the 2023 season excluding digital viewership was 1.5 billion, and average viewership per race was approximately 70 million. In the US, cumulative viewership was up 4% compared to the prior year, setting a new season cumulative TV audience record. Importantly, viewership among the under 35 and female demographics grew across all of our markets. Our sprint series continued to drive increased engagement throughout the season, which boosted TV audiences and raised weekend attendances. For our sponsor, there was an over 50% increase in average brand exposure during the spring weekends. We look forward to the sixth event in 2024. Formula One was once again the fastest growing major sport league on social media for the fourth year in a row, with the highest growth rate compared to the 11 other global sports, including NBA, NFL, and Champions League. We grew to 70.5 million followers on social media, up 17% from the prior year. We continued growth, especially in the US, where social media followers were up 28%. The US continues to make up our largest audience on YouTube and TikTok social platforms. For our F1.com and F1 app platforms, over 100 million unique visitors viewed over 3.1 billion pages. an increase of plus 10% over 2022. Consumption of highlight videos on our web and app also grew by 35%. And we made greater commercial progress in 2023, securing contracts that will underpin our continued future success. As of year end, we had over $12 billion in future revenue under multi-year contracts. Our momentum continues during the off-season and into 2024. On race promotion, we are prioritizing the quality and the value of every race slot, having reached what we believe is a comfortable near-term max of 24 races. Early this month, we announced 10 years extension with Silverstone and look forward to enhancement to the paddle club and other physical infrastructure upgrades at the circuit. We are excited to welcome the Madrid Grand Prix under 10 years agreement in a brand new circuit with both street and non-street segments from 2026. The race has plans to invite 110,000 fans initially and has potential to expand to over 140,000 over several years. We also announced five years extension for our Japan and Brazil races. With this announcement, we have now finalized all contest negotiations for the 2025 season and will turn our attention to optimize the risk calendar for 2026 and beyond. Additionally, on Mediarite, we are delighted to have recently secured a long-term pan-regional deal across the MENA region with its biggest sport platform being Sport. This is on the heels of over half of those in renewal signed in 2023. F1 continues to benefit from the demand for live global premium content. We are broadcasting in 200 territories and have a well-diversified portfolio of media rights contracts across markets, typically ranging from three to five years. As we have said, alternative bidders, including digital players, are increasingly showing interest in live sport and increases competition from scarce media rights. Our F1 TV product has grown significantly since launch, with active F1 TV Pro subscribers growing 37% in 2023 compared to 2022. The product has been boosted by growing in the F1 calendars, F1 sprint races, new in-depth shows, all 20 onboard cameras, team radios, and continuously adding live programming around every season plus a revamped mobile-friendly design. We believe it delivers the best-in-class product for fans and is now available in 120 countries. Early this year, we rolled our price increase across markets for the first time since product launch in 2018 to bring the pricing in line with the market rates for the qualifying of the offering. Turning to sponsorship, we had successful 2023 growing existing partnerships while securing new brands, including leveraging new assets like Las Vegas and F1 Academy to generate incremental demand. Puma and Tommy Rifkin recently announced as official partner of F1 Academy and will have design liberty for the season. And beauty brands like Charlotte Tilbury also became an official partner of F1 Academy, marking their first ever global support partnership. We also announced the unattractive multi-year renewal with our global partner DHL this week. Going forward, we are optimizing our existing inventory to maximize impact, exclusivity and value for our partners. We are also actively creating new assets to capitalize our growing demand and sponsor preference for tailored opportunity in live events. There are targets vertical where we are underexposed, including financial services and betting, to name a few. Our fan engagement activities off the track continue to gain momentum. F1 Arcade's first location in London recorded 400,000 visitors in its first year and a second UK location opened in Birmingham. The first US venue will open in Boston and DC this year, with 20 venues targeted over the next five years. The F1 exhibition moved from Madrid, where it welcomed 170,000 visitors. It opened its second location in Vienna early this month and will continue touring iconic global cities to inspire the next generation of F1 fans. Sustainability remains a large priority for FOMO1 across our organization, commercial partners and F1 teams. More detail will be provided in the coming weeks detailing our progress towards reaching the sustainability strategy we laid out in 2019. There are a number of sustainability accomplishments to highlight from last year. To name a few, progress continues to develop 100% sustainable hybrid that will be introduced in 2026 and will be a drop in fuel usable in road cars without modification, which provides broader global benefits to the automotive industry well beyond the impact of FOMO1. The nine European events of the 2023 season used the freight transportation by DHL on a new fleet of biofueled trucks, reducing related logistic carbon emissions by 83%. The first cohort of students from F1 engineering scholarship embarked on their first world placement with the F1 teams. We will welcome the third cohort this year. Finally, we launched F1 Academy, the all-female driver category, to develop and prepare young female drivers to progress to higher levels of competition. The second season in 2024 will see F1 Academy race as a support series at seven F1 events. The F1 teams are getting more involved in supporting the series. In 2024, all 10 will have their liveries displayed on one F1 Academy car each, and will each nominate one female driver to race in the series. We look forward to beginning our 2024 season next month. The 2024 race calendar has greater regionalization and more efficient flows of races, which reduce the distance our freight kits travel globally in support of our 2013 net-zero commitment. China returned to the calendar for the first time since 2019. The six-spring series will take place in Miami, Austria, Austin, Brazil, Qatar, and China. We made small changes to the format this season, with sprint qualifying on Friday, sprint race followed by race qualifying on Saturday, and the Grand Prix as normal on Sunday. And much to the delight of our fans, this off-season has certainly derived excitement. Young talent secured seats for years to come, with Charles Leclerc committing to the Scuderia at least through 2025 and Lando Norris remaining in McLaren at least through 2026. Capturing headlines, Lewis Hamilton will leave Mercedes for Ferrari in 2025 after an incredible 12 seasons with the Silver Arrows. In closing, I'm incredibly proud of the accomplishment in 2023 and eager to begin our 24 seasons. We have a solid financial foundation and an attractive growing fan base. Our team is focused on deepening this fandom with optimized content and platforms to boost engagements while capturing more fast data so we can better tailor our commercial outreach. These efforts are spread across protecting our established fans nurturing newly acquired fans and growing up into new cohorts, especially younger audiences and underserved growth markets like Asia. We will continue to invest in our sport to capitalize on our incredible momentum. Avanti tutta, full speed ahead. And now I will turn the call back over to Greg. Bye-bye. Ciao.

speaker
Liberty Media

Thank you, Stefano, and thank you, Brian. To the listening audience, we appreciate your continued interest in Liberty Media and the Atlanta Braves Holdings. And with that, operator, I'd like to open the line for questions.

speaker
Operator

Thank you. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad. A confirmation time will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star 2 if you'd like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star key. Our first question is from Ben Swinburne with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
Ben Swinburne

Thanks. Good morning. And congratulations to Renee and the Las Vegas team on a great race and outcome. I know that was a lot of work. Greg, I had a couple for you and maybe one for Brian if he's willing to entertain it. You mentioned optimizing the cost structure in Las Vegas for year two. I just maybe could spend a minute on what the opportunities are. And even if you're willing to tell us where in the P&L that might show up between kind of G&A at F1 versus direct costs. Any thoughts on a new Concord agreement? That had been something you guys had talked about trying to execute last year. Just curious if you had any update there. And then, Brian, I didn't know if you had any guidance for us on CapEx at F1 in 2024. you know, now that everything is sort of built, but you probably have some maintenance costs on all these new assets. So that was it. Thanks so much.

speaker
Liberty Media

Ben, I'm going to touch on the optimizing the cost structure, then let Rene add to it. And on the concrete agreement, I'll let Stefano cover where we stand. So on the optimizing the cost structure, look, because we moved with real speed to try and get Las Vegas up in a record time, Many things were done to accommodate a great fan experience and make sure we got done on time. And with the benefit of more time, there are many things we can optimize. For example, there is a temporary structure or a bridge that was put over one of the roads that will become, but it was our cost, that will not be reincurred. There was work that was done around ensuring Great security that I think we'll learn how to do that in a more cost-effective manner. But I'll let Renee touch on other items that she thinks we might be able to save on.

speaker
Ben

Sure. Thanks, Greg. So to Greg's point, we really did lean in on transportation planning and security. No one knew just how traffic would flow. We were hoping for the best but planning for the worst. And it did turn out to be significantly better than anyone feared. That will hopefully allow us this year to start looking for areas that we can cut back in. We also have the benefit in year two of having a playbook. Again, we had to lean in on fan experience and other events that would allow us to create that inaugural race weekend that we needed for year one. But this year we are looking very closely at every line item on the budget to see where can we maximize the fan experience and ensure safety while also looking to really cut back on some of those costs.

speaker
Liberty Media

Some of that will be, I think most of that will be in direct costs. Some of that will be in G&A, but mostly in direct. Do you agree, Brian?

speaker
Shane

I would think most of them, yeah, most would be in the operating costs.

speaker
Liberty Media

Stefano, do you want to touch on the Concord Agreement?

speaker
Greg

Yeah. Thank you, Greg. Yes, Ben. So we expect to address the renewal of the Concord Agreement with the teams very, very shortly. We are, our view that is basically shared with the teams that basically the Concord Agreement we need we not need any substantial changes this time around so we're going to start very very soon We had priority to finalize before them the season talking about you know Regulation and other stuff with it with regard to other things that need to be sold before so now We're getting close to the time where we're going to start this discussion very very shortly as I said then got it and then lastly been on the on the capex and

speaker
Shane

We're not going to disclose any specific numbers, but we would expect it to start to trend back to what our normal rate was in the past, specifically on LBGP. The team might evaluate different opportunities where you could put stuff on the balance sheet versus having it as rentals in OPEX. So those opportunities might arise, but overall we wouldn't expect it to be overly material.

speaker
Ben Swinburne

Thanks so much.

speaker
Operator

Our next question is from Brian Kraft with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
Brian Kraft

Hi, good morning. I had one for Greg and Stefano and Brian. Greg, I was wondering if you could walk us through the steps that you still need to take in order to close the spin merge from SiriusXM. Stefano, I was wondering if you could just clarify, will the Madrid Grand Prix bring the race count to 25 in 2026, or will it substitute for Barcelona or another race? And then also, Stefano, if you could... Just comment, I mean, just qualitatively on the media rights outlook. It seems like 2024 will be a lighter year from a media rights revenue growth standpoint based on the renewal schedule, and then a stronger year in 25. I just want to see if that was right. And then the last one I had was for Brian. Brian, I was wondering if you could just help us with some baseline numbers for Quint events so that we could, you know, try to model that correctly, you know, any estimate of revenue and EBITDA from last year and any color on seasonality. Thanks.

speaker
Liberty Media

So I'll touch on the first one. We received initial comments from the SEC on the proxy. I think those were relatively light. Credit the legal and accounting teams for having a proxy that was clear and transparent, and we'll be able to answer those relatively quickly. So that will need to be cleared, the final proxy, by the SEC before we can go forward with a vote at the LibertySiri level. We also have a parallel process with the FCC that I think is relatively pro forma. We do not believe that will be the long pole in the tent. So we're still targeting early third quarter. Some chance we may be able to get it done quicker, but we're trying to manage your expectations and ours. Next question, the next part of the questions.

speaker
Greg

Yes. I would say I think I can come in, Greg, to answer Brian to the point of Madrid. Madrid 26 and that is a year where there will be a lot of Grand Prix where mainly Europe we have different options that we can take over. Therefore, I think Madrid shows one thing that was very important for us to see that the attention F1 is there also in the old continent where everyone was thinking, oh, You know, we need to move out of Europe because there's not anymore the interest. Madrid showed the opposite. I think in 26 you're going to see something interesting. We are discussing with other promoters in Europe to do something that will be announced as soon as we close for sure. But Madrid will be a big boost. because the event will be organized in a place where, as Greg was mentioning at the beginning of his speech, you know, will be in a sort of track and a place where will be around the convention area to allow to give the opportunity to the fans to live that event in an incredible way. But, of course, so far the focus in Spain is in Barcelona. There is a big commitment to do a great Grand Prix there in the next couple of years. But with regard to the media rights, I would say there are two points that... I think that we cannot consider light the 2024 because we just plan a very important deal we'll be in for the next 10 years. And we do believe that also the F1 Plus TV will be going very, very well this year. So I think that for sure is an year where you're going to see another growth and, of course, We are getting ready for a very important year when in the future, in two years' time, there will be the media deal in the U.S. that will be a very important deal we need to discuss in the right moment where we believe this will be another step in terms of our growth in that landscape.

speaker
Shane

Brian, on Quint, we're not going to give the 2024 numbers, but what we would say is that the acquisition should be accretive to the Formula One group overall. So you can kind of do the math from there. It's not overly material to the Formula One business, but it should be accretive going forward.

speaker
Brian Kraft

Thank you. Maybe just one follow-up for Greg. Greg, what's the amount of time you need between SEC approval for the proxy and the vote, and then the vote and closing the transaction?

speaker
Liberty Media

Circa two months.

speaker
Brian Kraft

Okay, gotcha. Thanks very much. Appreciate it.

speaker
Operator

Our next question is from David Karnofsky with JP Morgan. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
David Karnofsky

Hi, thank you. For Gregor and I, I think your Vegas hotel partners were consistent in their views on their earnings calls that the raise should have a broader appeal and benefit some of the lower end or further properties on the strip. So interested in how you're thinking about potentially accommodating that and what it means for the race in terms of ticketing or operational adjustments. And then for Brian, F1 operating leverage for the year was a little better than I think some investors had anticipated. You know, the release, you called out a reduction in the team payout percentage as per the 2021 Concord. Just want to make sure that was the main driver and there weren't kind of any one-time adjustments to consider.

speaker
Liberty Media

I'll let Rene touch on the Vegas partners.

speaker
Ben

Yes, thanks for the question. So we will be going on sale pretty soon and when we go on sale you'll see that we have a significantly higher number of general admissions. We are actually creating a brand new general admission only zone which will have single day tickets and will be at the lowest price point that you will have seen for the Las Vegas Grand Prix. This is largely driven to accommodate the lower end properties and also to bring downtown into the mix. We are also working in partnership with the LVCBA to actually engage downtown different types of activations, potentially watch parties, but really to spread this benefit of what was an incredible weekend throughout the entirety of the Valley.

speaker
Shane

And then on the F1 operating leverage, to your point, it primarily is the team fees. There's lots of ins and outs, but there's no material one-time items.

speaker
Operator

Great. Thank you. Our next question is from David Joyce with Seaport Research Partners. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
David Joyce

Thank you. I just wanted to try to get a finer point on the team payments there. Would quints be excluded from team share payments, or would some of those activities, if one related, be involved? I guess the same would go for any other acquisitions. Would any tuck-ins be outside of the Concord Agreement And related to that, how are you balancing reinvesting into business versus thinking about capital returns from here? Thanks.

speaker
Liberty Media

So I think Quint has an arm's length deal existing prior to our purchase with F1, and we would expect that arm's length deal to continue, but the Quint results are part of the F1 tracking stock, not part of F1. And that would likely be the case for any other acquisitions. Can't say absolutely because it would depend on the company, but likely that would be outside the F1 group or the F1 operating statement shared with the teams. We continue to weigh opportunities like Vegas. Obviously, we look at lots of sporting properties. We think we have something to bring to the sporting world based on what we have been able to achieve at F1, and we think there are some things that we could bring forward to other sports properties. but we're judicious in that, and people approach us because of those skills. Certainly looking at continued share repurchase is an alternative as well, and we weigh third-party alternatives that might arise with that.

speaker
David Joyce

Thanks. And if I could add one on the Braves, if we could just get an update, please, on where the process is with the with the bankruptcy courts and the RSNs. Thanks.

speaker
Liberty Media

Derek, do you want to touch on that?

speaker
LVGP

Sure. Thanks for your question. We're watching that closely, and what we see is the bankruptcy presentation that was made is still being followed. Diamond Sports seems to have a plan for emerging from bankruptcy, as you've probably read. We're watching and seeing that just like you are. For our purposes, we're still getting full payment and operating the agreement as normal. So at this point in time, nothing's deviating from that. We don't expect that, especially as they've laid out per their plan.

speaker
David Joyce

All right.

speaker
LVGP

Thank you very much.

speaker
Operator

Our next question is from are in Crockett with Rosenblatt Securities. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
spk12

Okay. Thank you for taking the question. I'm just wondering on the EBITDA growth year over year, you know, I understand you're not going to break out Vegas in any specificity, but is there any comment you can make on whether or not Vegas provided any material impact on that EBITDA change? Did it, you know, up, down, or was it no impact? because that was very big kind of year-over-year growth, and that was a new race that was obviously meaningful. So that's one. And then secondarily, following up on the Braves kind of questioning, I was wondering if you could comment on some of the discussion that Major League Baseball is interested potentially in rolling up sports local team rights for its own kind of streaming service and that that could potentially, you know, be a roadblock or, you know, something to be resolved as you go through this diamond restructuring. So if you could talk about kind of your views, your support for that idea. Thank you.

speaker
Liberty Media

So touching on LVGP, I can say that LVGP was a positive contributor to FJAN's earnings for 2023. And with the cost optimization measures we've discussed, and frankly, you know, improved interest in the raise and improved potential price points, I think we will see a greater contribution in 2024. I think that's where we'll leave that. On MLB, I think I'm reluctant to comment. You've seen some of the public actions that MLB has was against some of the Diamond proposed restructurings, but other than that, I think we'd leave it alone other than Derek, if you want to add anything.

speaker
LVGP

No, the only other thing I might say, just point of clarification if you're not aware, the current agreement with Diamond does not include streaming rights, so those streaming rights continue to be held at the league level. That's not necessarily the case for all teams, but in our case it is, and so we're obviously deferential to what the league is going to do as a whole, but right now our streaming remains at the league-wide level.

speaker
spk12

Okay, great. Thank you.

speaker
Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Steven Lazik with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
Steven Lazik

Thanks. Good morning. Two on Formula One, maybe for both Greg and Stefano. First on paddock, could you maybe talk a little bit about where you see opportunity to grow hospitality revenues in 24? I'm curious what ending of the pricing increase front we're at for paddock. It's been a pretty nice tailwind over the last few years. And then are there any areas across the slate in particular where you think there's opportunity to grow capacity? And then secondly on sponsorship, nice growth in 23. Could you maybe just talk a little bit more about the opportunity in 24? How much room do you feel like there still is to increase inventory without diluting the existing sponsorship value add? Stefano, I think you mentioned creating some new assets. I'd be curious if you could talk a little bit more about that and what verticals remain large opportunities. Thank you.

speaker
Liberty Media

Stefano, do you want to start on hospitality?

speaker
Greg

Yeah. Thank you, Greg. Thank you, Steven. I think that what has been amazing in the last couple of years is the fact that our offer in terms of Paddock Lab has been always appreciated by our customers. We did some adjustment on pricing, not everywhere, because of course we understand that the prices are very important and very sensitive things to do. or to apply. And therefore, I think that what we have done this year, that is basically already confirming an incredible request from our partners and teams and guests, is try to maximize eventual potential of growth in ERA that there is still availability of space. And the other thing that we are doing is to see if there is another kind of offer that we can put together. Of course, the fact that now we are together with Quint we're going to exploit the maximum opportunity to make sure that the paddle cable experience can grow also in the area of entertainment because that's another place where we are exploiting a different way the racing we can experience for our fans. With regard to the sponsorship, I think that what we have seen in the last couple of years has been an incredible growth in terms of quality and in terms of quantity of our partners. That means that we need to keep having the right attention toward this kind of revenue stream, but that means that also we need to be ready to increase our possibilities to having the right offer in terms of new opportunity. I think that one that is pretty clear that we are able to optimize and we've done already last year in a way has been the digital possibilities to differentiate from area to area these different options for our partners. On the other side, of course, there are two main areas where we believe there is potential to do, but we need to have the right competences and we need to find the right partners, consider the complexity. That is one area, the gambling, and the other area is on the financial services that has been already taking a big step last year with Amex, but I think there is a huge opportunity that we can take into the future. And that's really where I believe in the long term that the potential to even grow is still there and will be there.

speaker
Steven Lazik

Got it. Thank you.

speaker
Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Peter Cepino with Wolf Research. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
Peter Cepino

Hi. Good morning. One for Stefano and one for Greg. If you wouldn't mind, with Silverstone and Madrid and San Paolo and Suzuka all signed in the last quarter, I guess we have seen contracts locked in for five or 10 years in some cases. How should we be thinking about the trade-offs in terms of contract duration, escalators, step-ups for promotion rights like this? Curious about the pros and cons and how we can think about that for modeling. And then Greg, if you could please comment on the a bigger picture for sports rights. It's become very controversial, this topic that was once only driven by optimists. And if you could let us know how you see sports rights values playing out over the next several years, given the puts and takes of linear and streaming. Thank you.

speaker
Greg

Well, Peter, thank you. With regard to the first question, I think, as always, while we take the decision with regard to the renewal there are a lot of elements that we need to consider. First of all, of course, the financial aspect is relevant, no doubt. And the fact that we are able to stabilize with certain promoters, which we believe represent an incredible opportunity in terms of our stability on this market is a relevant element to consider. The fact that you have seen in the last couple of years that that we were able to ratify incredible agreements with certain promoters means that there is, from one side, of course, a very interesting financial package, but on the other side, an incredible opportunity to develop our business in areas that are on top of the one that is related to the promotional fee. And that's really our approach. It is clear that if you see the development of our regionalization of the calendar, we have moved out from being European-centric to a very worldwide basic development that needs to be kept into the future. I just want to confirm the fact that we believe 24 races is the right number, and I think that we're going to play in the right way. I was mentioning just briefly before on the fact that we have certain opportunities we want to bring into the market in the next couple of years, starting from 2026 onwards.

speaker
Liberty Media

So I could just add on what Stefano said. Look, you weigh, I think it's, you know, not unlike your sports rights question, which I'll get to in a sec. You weigh what's the appeal of the venue and what are the economic opportunities for us. And in general, if you see us cut a very long deal, you must think we think it's a pretty good opportunity, both on the fan basis and on the economic basis. You see a shorter-term deal, that's open to question. And so we weigh all of those. On the sports rights... Clearly the world has gotten more muddled, as you suggested. In general, more people bidding, that's a positive. Also more sports, that may be a challenge. And then the issue of fragmentation and trying to find where your sport is for your fans and making it easy. We are always looking, particularly given our big sponsorship business, on the tradeoff between reach and what we get paid. So lots of factors there. Overall, on whether you're positive or negative, I would note I feel very positive about the sports properties we're involved with. Why? Both have incredible fan demand, have high ratings relative to what they get paid. Both have a passionate fan base, as I suggested. Look at the ratings for where the Braves are. Look at who is watching F1 and where they're willing to get up and watch it early in the morning. Both of them are not hugely monetized relative to what Some of their peers are monetized. And I think if you look at sports markets in general, you've seen renewals on properties that did not necessarily have massive growth and still get more money. So I remain, in general, bullish on sports rights given the multiplicity of buyers, and in particular, bullish on the sports rights of the properties we're involved in.

speaker
Peter Cepino

That's a great answer. Thank you. And if I could pile on with one, since my esteemed colleagues seem to be comfortable doing the same, I wanted to ask you on the the US media rights for F1, the ESPN renewal, it's generally understood that ESPN doesn't earn much advertising revenue on that contract. And so how do you think about the case for them paying more?

speaker
Liberty Media

I think the case, and obviously I have a little bit of bias for this, I think the case is pretty easy. You've got one of the cases where you have massive growth in fan interest, and we can show statistically how much our fan interest has grown across all sorts of platforms. We have a very desirable upscale audience. We have a younger audience. A lot of factors that they would like to bring to the party, ESPN or anybody else, not to limit it to that. So I think there are a lot of reasons why we can make the case that our media rights in the U.S. are more valuable and there will be likely a multiplicity of players and we will likely get a better number.

speaker
Peter Cepino

Thanks, you all.

speaker
Operator

Thank you. Our last question is from Jeffrey with Pivotal Research Group. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
Jeffrey

Good morning, guys. I had a follow-up on Vegas. Do you anticipate after your Vegas experience taking a promoter role in more races, I guess, post-25? And then specifically on your decision not to let in the 11th team, I assume you need a new – I guess you could provide color on that. And then do you need a new Concord agreement to raise the accuracy to make more teams more palatable for the existing teams? Thanks.

speaker
Liberty Media

Thanks, Jeff. I'll touch on the first part about promotion or co-promoting or whatever. You'll see my answer. And then, Stefano, maybe you will comment on the 11th team. Yep. Go on. On promotion. Look, I think we went in and promoted Vegas for a variety of reasons. We thought it was a unique opportunity to promote the sport. We thought it was a unique economic opportunity. We thought we would learn a lot about being a promoter and make us more credible with other promoters. I do not know that there are many opportunities out there like Vegas where we're going to say we absolutely want to do this. There may be opportunities in the future where we can partner with promoters. Some promoters are short on capital. Some promoters are short on some skills, and there are things that we could bring to the table. But in many cases, our promoters bring local knowledge, local contacts, local strengths that are very valuable. And we wouldn't necessarily be able to supplant those. So in some way to think about enhancing that and working together, I think that's the more likely path than thinking we're going to become a promoter of a bunch of races.

speaker
Greg

And yeah, Jeffrey, with regard to the second question, I maintain for sure is a point related to the Concord Agreement. It is a point of, you know, a joint work that has to be done between the FIA and FOM in regard to the different kind of evaluation that we need to do. So I think that with regard to what has happened, I think that the process has been followed and we presented the result in the right way. For the future, it's a matter of discussion, of course, with the teams, with the right commercial and technical proposition that will be discussed accordingly within this year. Thank you.

speaker
Liberty Media

All right. Thank you. I believe that was our last question. Thank you again to the listening audience for both your interest in Liberty Media and the Braves. We look forward to speaking with you again next quarter, if not sooner.

speaker
Operator

This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.

Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

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