5/14/2026

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the Urban One 2026 first quarter earnings call. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. We will begin this call with the following safe harbor statement. During this conference call, Urban One will be sharing with you certain projections or other forward-looking statements regarding future events or its future performance. Urban One cautions you that certain factors, including risks and uncertainties referred to in the 10-Ks, 10-Qs, and other reports it periodically files with the Securities and Exchange Commission, could cause the company's actual results to differ materially from those indicated by its projections or forward-looking statements. This call will present information as of May 14, 2026. Please note that Urban One disclaims any duty to update any forward-looking statements made in the presentation. In this call, Urban One may also discuss some non-GAAP financial measures in talking about its performance. These measures will be reconciled to GAAP either during the course of this call or in the company's press release, which can be found on its website at www.urbanone.com. A replay of the conference call will be available from 2 o'clock p.m. EDT May 14, 2026 until 1159 p.m. EDT May 21, 2026. Callers may access the replay by calling 1-800-770-2030. International callers may dial direct 1-609-800-9909. The replay access code is 3438559. Access to live audio and your replay of the conference will also be available on Urban One's corporate website at www.urbanone.com. The replay will be made available on the website for seven days after the call. No other recordings or copies of this call are authorized or may be relied upon. I will now turn the call over to Alfred C. Liggins, Chief Executive Officer of Urban One, who is joined by Peter Thompson, Chief Financial Officer. Mr. Liggins, please go ahead.

speaker
Alfred C. Liggins
Chief Executive Officer

Thank you very much, Operator, and welcome to our first quarter results conference call. Also joining Peter and I are Joe DiGiorno, the Chief Financial Officer at TV1, and Chris Simpson, who is our General Counsel. The press release came out this morning. I think that we had, you know, other people have also reported already, but first quarter was a very tough quarter. We were budgeted to be down, but things in the marketplace were softer than anticipated due to continued declines in the traditional ad marketplace. Peter will give you more specifics and details on the numbers in a moment. But with the slow start to the year, we've been focused on balance sheet management and debt reduction and deleveraging opportunities. Since the beginning of the year, we spent approximately $25 million to reduce our debt balance by another $60 million or so, approximately, just to over $300 million of gross debt. We've also announced some delevering and accretive M&A with the acquisition of service broadcasting in Dallas, Texas, two radio stations there in the marketplace for an in-market consolidation opportunity for an announced purchase price of just about $22 million. But net of dispositions of one station in Dallas and two stations in Charlotte, we will spend approximately – and by the way, those dispositions don't contribute any cash flow currently, we'll invest approximately $11 million and pick up about $5 million in pro forma EBITDA. And with that, we are also giving out a new, as I said in the last conference call, we're going to wait until after we got through first quarter to look at what we wanted to do about updating guidance for 2026. So with that, we're actually updating the 2026 guide to approximately $60 million of EBITDA. And we expect year-end leverage to be below five times by year-end with these acquisitions and dispositions. Another bright spot on this is with There's a free cash flow this year. Peter is going to have more details on that in his comments. So I'm going to let Peter go into the details, and then we can open it up for Q&A and answer any more detailed questions about the business.

speaker
Peter Thompson
Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Alfred. So consolidating that revenue for the quarter was approximately $77.7 million, down by 15.8% year over year. Net revenue for the radio broadcasting segment was $30.5 million, which was a decrease of 6.4% year over year. Excluding political revenue, then net revenue for radio was down 8.7% year over year. And according to Miller Kaplan, local ad sales were down 5.5% against a market that was down 7.1%. And national ad sales were down 8.2% against a market that was down 6.7%. Our largest ad category was services, which was up 14.5%, primarily due to legal services. And the government and public category was up 23.6% due to political spending. But all the other major categories were down. Net revenue for the reach media segment was $4.9 million, down 17% from the prior year. Just as EBITDA was a loss of half a million for the quarter. This decrease was primarily driven by a decrease in the network marketplace revenue and key client attrition. Net revenues for the digital segment were down 33.5% in the first quarter at $6.8 million. The decrease was driven by the decrease in national direct revenue streams as a result of a reduction of DEI-focused spending. Ad budgets being pushed to second quarter and second half. and a general pullback in advertiser spending due to macroeconomic concerns. Local digital revenue was up 10.9% for the quarter as we continue to focus on expanding and improving our local digital sales. We recognized approximately $36 million of revenue from our cable television segment during the quarter, a decrease of 18.5%. Cable television advertising revenue was down 24.9%. Prime delivery declined 24% year-over-year for persons 25-54. The integration of Nielsen dash data gave a boost to linear inventory, and this, along with a weak scatter market, led to more commercial units being allocated to direct response, which has a lower average unit rate. Cable television affiliate revenue was down by 9.8%, driven by a decrease in subscribers. as linear cable continues to decline when that was partially offset by an increase in subscriber rates. Cable subscribers for TV1 as measured by Nielsen finished the first quarter at 29.1 million compared to 30.2 million at the end of Q4. Decline is a result of the combination of churn and a conversion of virtual MVPDs that has been sold as connected television and therefore pulled out of the Nielsen numbers. Clio TV had 28.6 million Nielsen subscribers. Operating expenses, excluding depreciation and amortization, stock-based compensation and impairment of goodwill and intangible assets, was approximately $73.5 million, compared to approximately $80.7 million for the comparable period of 2025. Decrease was mainly driven by sales and marketing expense decreases in the operating segments. Radio expenses were down 3.8%, or $1.1 million, driven primarily by lower costs associated with revenue, lower facility and rental costs, lower national rep fees, and lower bank charges. Reach operating expenses were down by 16.2%, or $1.1 million, primarily due to lower bad debt reserve, lower bank charges, and lower revenue-related expenses. Operating expenses in the digital segment were down 19.7%, driven by a decrease in traffic acquisition costs, commissions, headcount-related savings, and third-party ad-serving costs. Operating expenses in the cable television segment were down 9.8%, which was driven by lower marketing expense, lower programming content amortization, and research costs. Operating expenses at corporate were down approximately 6.1%, driven by lower professional service fees and payroll-related costs. Consolidated adjusted EBITDA was $4.7 million for the first quarter, down 63.8%. Consolidated broadcast and digital operating income was approximately $14.9 million, a decrease of 35.4%. Interest expense was down to approximately $4.4 million, down from $10.9 million. Last year, the company made cash interest payments of approximately $700,000 in the quarter on the outstanding 2028 notes. Semi-annual cash interest payments for the 2030 and 2031 notes were made on April 1st for 102 days of accrued interest from the transaction day of December 18th, 2025. And the next payment on those notes is now due October 1st. for the full 180 days of accrued interest. During the first quarter, the company repurchased $43 million of its, sorry, $4.3 million of its 2028 notes at an average price of 51% of par for a $2.1 million gain and approximately $32.4 million of its 2031 secondly notes at a weighted average price of approximately 40.7% of par. The discounted debt repurchases in the first quarter reduced the outstanding long-term debt balance to $326.7 million as of March 31, 2026. The company repurchased an additional $23.5 million of its 2031 notes in Q2 at 42% of par, And so, as Alfred said, year-to-date is a total reduction in long-term debt of $60.2 million, which will give us an annual interest saving of $4.6 million. Under the troubled debt restructuring accounting, the long-term debt on the balance sheet includes a premium, which amortizes over the remaining term. And on the ABL, we drew $10 million in the fourth quarter and repaid that in the first quarter. And on March 31st, we drew another $10 million for the six-month maturity, which was outstanding as of March 31st, 2026. We drew a further $10 million in the second quarter of 2026 to help us do the long-term debt repurchase. And so we have a current outstanding balance today of $20 million on the ABL. And we have incremental borrowing capacity of approximately $22 million today. No impairment losses were recognized for the three months ended March 31st, 2026. We recorded amortization expense of approximately $6.2 million, including $5.6 million for the radio broadcast license and TV1 trade name for the three months ended March 31st, 2026. Benefit from income taxes was approximately $1.4 million for the first quarter. The company paid cash income taxes and that refunds in the amount of approximately $0.1 million. Capital expenditures were approximately $3.4 million in the quarter, which included the Indianapolis studio refurbishment, which is why that's higher than you would normally expect to see. So that will normalize over time. Net loss was approximately $3.1 million or $0.69 a share compared to a net loss of $11.7 million or $2.64 per share for the first quarter of 2025. During the three months, the company did not repurchase any shares of Class A common stock. and we executed stock-vest tax repurchases of 2,187 shares of Class D common stock at a price of $5.73 per share. As we previously announced, in March, the company agreed to sell its WMXG and also WLNK radio broadcast licenses in Charlotte, North Carolina, to unrelated third parties for approximately... $0.7 million and $4.2 million respectively. We anticipate to close on the sale by the end of Q2. In April, the company entered into an agreement to acquire a service broadcasting group in Dallas, Texas, including radio stations KKDA and KRMB for $22 million. At the same time, we also entered into an agreement to sell radio station KZMJ to Fusion Dallas for $6 million. Pending FCC approval, the Dallas transactions are expected to close in Q3. So the net of all of that radio M&A is roughly $11 million of outflow, and on a pro forma basis, we think the incremental cash flows from that will be around about $5 million. As of March 31, 2026, the current contractually outstanding debt balance was approximately $336 million, and the ending unrestricted cash balance was $27.2 million, resulting in net debt of approximately $309.5 million, compared to $48.5 million of LTN-reported adjusted EBITDA for total net leverage ratio of 6.39 times. Cash flow from operations It's expected to be around $40 million for the year, and we do anticipate repaying the $20 million ABL balance in the second half of the year. And based on the guidance that we gave, we anticipate net leverage being below five times the year end. And with that, I'll hand it back to you.

speaker
Alfred C. Liggins
Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Peter. Operator, could you please open up the lines for questions?

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. Again, four questions, simply press star, followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. Our first question will come from the line of Ben Briggs with Stonex Financial. Please go ahead.

speaker
Ben Briggs
Analyst, Stonex Financial

Hey, good morning, guys, and thank you for taking the call and taking the questions. So I wanted to touch on one thing here. So first of all, congratulations on the acquisitions that you made this quarter. I know kind of moving some chips around the board is an important strategy for you guys. Can you give us some clarity on the thought process behind these? Is it more attractive formats? that you think are going to make the difference, or is it better geographies or a combination of both? Any clarity there would be great.

speaker
Alfred C. Liggins
Chief Executive Officer

They aren't different formats. They're similar formats in the marketplace. We're really looking to expand our reach and our service of the African American community in Dallas, Texas. It all the way around in terms of serving local advertisers. The economics of putting those clusters together and also selling off our one station are going to create a much larger cluster that has you know, more revenue scale. And with those economies of scale, you're, you know, producing significantly more EBITDA. So it makes a lot of sense. It's an acquisition that we've been – I've been trying to do for almost 30 years. You know, I think we, you know – actually, so we went public in May of 99. That's when we bought our first established station and, you know, been trying to make a deal with – the owner operator there, Mr. Hyman Childs, who's a wonderful broadcaster and has been in this business for a long time. We've always stayed in touch, and we finally were able to do something. What really helps it is, again, the disposition of the one station that we have that I think does maybe a couple million dollars of revenue, but really no cash flow contribution. Those two stations in Charlotte that we're selling will probably do just about a million dollars of revenue this year and also contribute no cash flow. The two stations in Charlotte became saleable because we moved our our news talk format off of WBTAM and we put it on what was WLNKFM which is a full market signal there because these spoken word formats have to move to the FM band so we finally did that and then we moved the adult contemporary format to these stations which one's a Class A in Charlotte, the other one is a that's just south of Charlotte, and so we're really positioning that Charlotte cluster for the future, but there was no cash flow associated with it. It also actually frees up the land associated with the tower sites for WBTAM and also for our old WBTAM which we also moved to the FM band. So something I didn't talk about is that we've got significant value in those land assets in Charlotte, and there is a process going on as we speak to monetize those parcels. So all in the vein of How do we, you know, look for accretive and de-levering M&A? So you've got to get it at the right price. It's got to be an operational fit such that one plus one equals three in terms of profitability. And so, you know, we think what we did in, you know, Dallas and what we're doing in Charlotte is, you know, are going to be significant plays in our effort to continue to deliver.

speaker
Ben Briggs
Analyst, Stonex Financial

Okay, that's great, Collar, and I appreciate the information about the land that some AM towers are on that frees up. Can you give any more clarity on the monetization process? Are you going to lease? Are you going to sell?

speaker
Alfred C. Liggins
Chief Executive Officer

Are you not sure yet? We're The land is listed with JLL right now, and there's a process going on to bring in offers and to evaluate and to eventually just sell it.

speaker
Ben Briggs
Analyst, Stonex Financial

Okay, great. That's very helpful, Keller. I appreciate it. Thank you, guys. Thank you.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Again, for questions, press star 1. And our next question will come from the line of Dennis Panula with LePan Partners. Please go ahead.

speaker
Dennis Panula
Analyst, LePan Partners

Hi. Good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Hey, Dennis. Hey. I know the first quarter, you know, seasonality is the weakest quarter of the year. But, man, to see TV down double digits. And did I hear Mr. Thompson right? Did you say digital, your digital broadcasting was up?

speaker
Ben Briggs
Analyst, Stonex Financial

Q2. Q2. I'm sorry.

speaker
Peter Thompson
Chief Financial Officer

No, so SuperSoft Q1, but a bunch of campaigns got pushed into Q2 in the back half, so Q2 and digital is actually up. Yeah, because digital is up. Yeah, so out of all of the divisions, I think that the digital folks are optimistic and confident about, you know, making their numbers for the year, right? So a weak Q2, a weak Q1, but a stronger Q2.

speaker
Dennis Panula
Analyst, LePan Partners

Yeah, because a lot of your peers are transitioning to digital, and digital sales have been pretty strong. So I'm sure that we're probably trying to head in that same direction, I would imagine. Margins are better. You know, sales numbers are better.

speaker
Alfred C. Liggins
Chief Executive Officer

Are we part of that division? Yes. The margin, well, the division, you know, has grown from, I mean, we created Interactive One and for a long time it was a break-even division, you know, and then I think revenue went from like low 30s to, you know, 75 after sort of the George Floyd DEI and it was wildly profitable. When I say wildly, it went up to, you know, call it 20 million bucks, you know, Now there's pressure on digital publishers, of which they are. You can see BuzzFeed had its challenge, etc. But even with all of that, advertisers are moving more towards digital. So it will still be not a $20 million profitable division, but probably six, of course. But a misnomer that you just mentioned is that the margins aren't better. in digital. The margins are actually worse, particularly on local digital because a lot of the campaigns that you sell require you to A, do specialized individual custom content, and B, oftentimes you need impressions that are not owned and operated impressions to build scale. and those impressions are very expensive to buy. And so you have TAC which is Traffic Acquisition Cost. And the radio business, local radio has been moving in that direction, but it is a lower margin business. And our local radio stations have been behind the curve in local digital and we're pushing and improving in that area because I tell my guys and ladies that low margin is better than no margin.

speaker
Peter Thompson
Chief Financial Officer

And Dennis, to Alfred's point, on local digital revenue, I mentioned in my prepared remarks, we were up 10.9% for the quarter. The marketplace was up 20%, so local digital is where the growth is in radio. And we're sort of trailing that curve, but we're working hard to catch up.

speaker
Alfred C. Liggins
Chief Executive Officer

More scale in our markets will help us be a better local digital marketing partner for our advertisers. So, you know, we're focused on that.

speaker
Dennis Panula
Analyst, LePan Partners

And let me just take a quick second to thank you in management for working so hard. I mean, my God, that refinancing you guys did in December was awesome. You didn't know. any of the company there was no dilution to shareholders and unfortunately the market didn't reward you in any way shape or form for that and now with this additional debt repurchase and another 1.1 million in interest savings plus the premium savings it's looking like if I'm not mistaken your quarterly interest cost on your P&L is going to be under three million dollars Does that sound about right, Mr. Thompson?

speaker
Peter Thompson
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. Look, that's the weirdness of having to amortize the premium, and it reduces the effective interest rate. I think the way to think about the interest burden going forward is the cash interest expense. No, I know that. Yeah. So 24.8 is the pro forma cash interest expense moving forward, which is obviously – way down on where we've been historically, and to your point, helps us generate more free cash flow, right?

speaker
Alfred C. Liggins
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, look, we're in tougher businesses, right? And so it really is going to be a threading of the needle of how do you manage the balance sheet, get your interest burden down, get your debt down, find the places where you can create more cash flow And look, you've got to deal with the reality is that at least the assumptions that we make, like when we did this Dallas acquisition, our model has the Dallas market going down in spot revenue and digital going up with lower margins, but net the market coming down. And I don't have a crystal ball as to what happened to the media ecosystem in terms of technology and who's competing and what it means. You know, and I don't think anybody does, but, you know, you just got to manage that debt down and stay ahead of it. And so that's, you know, that's what we've been doing. That's what we planned. I mean, it's actually, in fact, that in February of 21, we had $825 million of debt. Five years later, we've got $303 million of debt.

speaker
Dennis Panula
Analyst, LePan Partners

We have less cash flow, too, but that's... Well, even looking at January of 2024, you had $725 million. So in just a few years, you guys took off over $400 million in debt without diluting a single share.

speaker
Alfred C. Liggins
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I mean, look, that's all fine and good, and I appreciate that, but the stock trades basically at an option level because you know, what's the value, right? Like, if you value stuff that, you know, we're like, hey, we're going to be below five times. Somebody could argue that, you know, your assets, cable and radio, are worth five times. So there's no equity value, right? Like, you know, it could certainly benchmark, whether it's AMC Networks or whether it's Versant or, like, you know, have seen multiples, you know, below five times, right? You know, so... But we sold you on. That's the reason you've got to get your debt down to three times, right? And that's what we're focusing on.

speaker
Dennis Panula
Analyst, LePan Partners

Well, even your free cash flow that you just mentioned, you're going to do $40 million, your current market cap is $26 million this morning. I mean, how many companies are trading under one times free cash flow? I don't know, Lenny. I mean, I don't know what your peers typically trade at. But when I took a look, they typically trade it five to eight times free cash flow. You guys are less than one.

speaker
Alfred C. Liggins
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, well, look, I think the market's got to get comfortable that, you know, our company, these companies are going to make it through the curve, right? Like, you know, because a number of folks have not made it. You know, Cumulus is in, you know, BK again, Spanish Broadcasting just went to BK. and so they've got to believe that you're going to make it, and then they'll buy your argument.

speaker
Dennis Panula
Analyst, LePan Partners

Well, and you don't have any liquidity issues either, and in the term debt issues. You just pushed them out for 2030 and 2031, and you're eliminating that debt at a rapid pace. So how do you not get re-rated and have your stock trading at literally bankruptcy prices?

speaker
Peter Thompson
Chief Financial Officer

Correct. S&P are on the call, I'm sure. Exactly.

speaker
Dennis Panula
Analyst, LePan Partners

I hope you're making notes.

speaker
Ben Briggs
Analyst, Stonex Financial

Thank you.

speaker
Dennis Panula
Analyst, LePan Partners

Guys, thank you for taking my questions. I appreciate your time and your hard work. And I hope you guys get rewarded share price-wise very soon. So do we.

speaker
Peter Thompson
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, thank you, Dennis.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

And once again, for questions, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad. This concludes our question and answer session. I'll hand the call back to Alfred for any closing comments.

speaker
Alfred C. Liggins
Chief Executive Officer

Operator, thank you very much. And also, thank you, everybody, for your support. And again, I always say this. It sounds like a broken record, but Peter and I pride ourselves on being accessible. And so if there are any follow-up questions, please feel free to reach out to us. Thank you very much.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

This concludes our call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.

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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