speaker
Little Big Town
Multigrammy Award-Winning Group

I pull my rose colored Ray-Bans out I got some nuts on my Chevy but it's ready to roll I got a rise from sky and a song in my soul It ain't a smooth ride, life, it's a winding road It might be gravel but it feels like gold Yeah, it feels like gold Yeah, it feels like gold It ain't a smooth ride, life, it's a winding road It might be gravel but it feels like gold

speaker
House Announcer
Grand Ole Opry Announcer

Up next, we have an ACM and CMA Award winner. Members of the Grand Ole Opry since 2014. Here's the multigrammy award winning group, Little Big Town, live from the Grand Ole Opry.

speaker
Broadcast Technician
Audio System Announcement

Please stand by your program as the bouncing begins.

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

Welcome to Ryman Hospitality Properties Second quarter 2025 earnings conference call. Hosting the call today from Ryman Hospitality Properties are Mr. Colin Reed, Executive Chairman, Mr. Mark Fioravanti, President and Chief Executive Officer, Ms. Jennifer Hutchison, Chief Financial Officer, Mr. Patrick Chaffin, Chief Operating Officer, and Mr. Patrick Moore, Chief Executive Officer, Opry Entertainment Group. This call will be available for digital replay. The number is -727-5306 with no conference ID required. At this time, all participants have been placed on a listen only mode. It is now my pleasure to turn the floor over to Ms. Jennifer Hutchison. Ma'am, you may begin.

speaker
Jennifer Hutchison
Chief Financial Officer

Good morning. Thank you for joining us today. This call may contain forward looking statements as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements about the company's expected financial performance. Any statements we make today that are not statements of historical fact may be deemed to be forward looking statements. Words such as believe or expect are intended to identify these statements, which may be affected by many factors, including those listed in the company's SEC filings and in today's release. The company's actual results may differ materially from the results we discuss or project today. We will not update any forward looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or any other reason. We will also discuss non-GAAP financial measures today. We reconcile each non-GAAP measure to the most comparable GAAP measure and exhibits to today's release. I'll now turn the call over to Colin.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

Jennifer, thank you. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. Before we start, I'd like to take a moment to acknowledge the families and communities affected by the catastrophic flooding in central Texas. Managing through the devastating flood we experienced here in Nashville in 2010 that directly impacted our businesses, our employees, and our city was, I can tell you, one of the most difficult experiences of my entire career. And we're heartened to see how communities across Texas have wrapped their arms around their neighbors. While our assets were not directly impacted by the flooding, we have contributed to the relief efforts through our Texas-based properties indirectly by making a donation to the community foundation of the Texas Hill Country. We will continue to engage in the recovery efforts as we learn more. The second quarter was an exciting one for our company, both strategically and operationally. Strategically, we announced, funded, and closed the acquisition of the J.W. Desert Ridge in Phoenix, Arizona, an asset that has long been at the top of our acquisition list and one that we have tried to acquire, I don't know, several times in the last 10 years. Mark will talk about the acquisition in more detail in just a moment. In addition, we completed the Presidential Meeting Space renovations at Gaylord-Opry Land among several other projects smaller in scope, including food and beverage enhancements at the Gaylord Texan and the Gaylord National. The Presidential Meeting Space, together with the recently renovated Governor's Space, represents approximately 40% of the carpet meeting space at Gaylord-Opry Land today. Actually, we will be unveiling new names for these meeting spaces in the coming weeks. And for our entertainment business, the second quarter marked our first festival season with Southern Entertainment. Operationally, our businesses delivered record consolidated revenue. And in our same-store hospitality segment, the second highest adjusted EBITDA RE in the history of that business, trailing only the second quarter of last year. In fact, for the -to-date period, same-store hospitality adjusted EBITDA RE came within $30,000 of our original operating plan for that part of the year. An incredible result given the complexities of the current operating environment. I said this on our last call, but it warrants saying again, we're living and operating in very unpredictable times. Throughout my 24-year tenure at this company, I cannot remember a period when there were so many different and complicated issues occurring at once. We and our customers are bombarded daily with rhetoric around tariffs, inflation, interest rates, wars, and other issues that have significant implications for our businesses. This level of uncertainty has caused some of our group and leisure customers to put activities on hold or at least proceed with caution. Since Liberation Day in early April, some of these near-term uncertainties have abated, and we've seen some improvement in meeting planner sentiment for 25. In the year before the year, bookings activity has trended better than our expectations in early May. But given the complexities of the overall economy, our outlook still contemplates the potential for slightly higher group attrition and cancellations in the second half of this year. For the portfolio, our leisure business is, I would say, steady as she goes, with particular strength that Gaylord Palms and Gaylord Rock is behind our recent investments in those assets, particularly offset by softness at Gaylord Rock Reland. For several quarters now, transient occupancy trends in Nashville have lagged the top 25 markets, and in the second quarter, so did transient rate trends, both of which we view as a temporary side effect of the substantial influx of new hotel supply in this market. Visitation and tourism in Nashville remains robust, and in fact, rooms sold in the market in the second quarter increase year over year. We expect the transient occupancy and rate trends to begin to reverse as tourism grows, and hotel demand catches up with the new supply. Our entertainment business continues to perform well. Demand for live entertainment remains robust, and our recent capital investments in Cap 10, Block 21, Old Red Las Vegas are delivering strong results. Next month, the Opry heads to the Royal Albert Hall in London for its first ever international performance, which will also be broadcast in the UK. NBC will also be re-airing the televised Opry 100 special from earlier this year, and we've just announced that the Opry will have a special performance at Carnegie Hall in New York City in the first quarter of 26. As we had anticipated through the marketing investments we're making behind Opry 100, we're reaching more fans than ever. Now, before I hand over to Mark, I want to make one more comment. As a fairly large investor in this company, I'm of course very much interested in what's going on in the business on a daily basis, but my focus always has been on the long term. At our hotel business, which represents the lion's share of Ryman, our customers are making decisions two to four years out, in some cases much longer. What's really important is how strong our relationship with these folks are. Do they trust us? Do they recognize the superior proposition we're putting before them? Are we growing our share of their business? Do our advanced bookings for the future years look strong? Will large capital projects that are underway create meaningful growth for our shareholders? The simple answer to all of these questions is an emphatic yes, and Mark will now explain to you why Ryman and our hotel business in particular has never been in such a strong position.

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Colin, and good morning everyone. Before I discuss the second quarter, I'll spend a moment on our acquisition of the JW Marriott Desert Ridge. As Colin mentioned, this is an asset that's long been at the top of our acquisition list. For us, the Desert Ridge property is an ideal acquisition target, a large Marriott managed group hotel with significant leisure demand, in a top 10 meetings market, with opportunities to create value through inclusion in our portfolio and incremental capital investment. This acquisition unlocks incremental group rotation opportunities for our existing Gaylord Hotel customers, and is the second JW branded asset in our portfolio, rotation within the JW brand. For our Gaylord Hotel's customer base, we estimate groups comprising approximately 25 to 30 percent of group room nights could rotate to one of our JW properties, with the limiting factors being group size and ADR. For our JW customer base, where those limitations don't apply, the opportunity is arguably more significant. We estimate the overlap in meetings today between the Desert Ridge and the Hill Country properties is approximately 5 percent. Our 2023 acquisition of the JW Marriott Hill Country provides a repeatable playbook for integration and subsequent value creation, and with the benefit of that experience, we're moving quickly on Desert Ridge. We've already aligned the resources within Marriott dedicated to our portfolio, and our design and construction team is on the ground completing the meeting space renovations that were initiated prior to our purchase. In addition, we're pursuing a handful of capital light high return enhancements to drive better yield, including converting approximately 5,000 square feet of vacant office space to sellable carpeted breakout space, and enhancing some of the event loans to support the addition of our ICE programming for the 2026 holiday season. We expect many of these enhancements will be completed by the first quarter of 2026. Longer term, we believe the dynamics in the Phoenix-Scotsdale market will support a resort expansion, providing the ability to accommodate groups with over 1,000 room nights on peak, all under one roof. Today, the only larger hotel by room count in that market is the Thousand Room Sheraton, located in downtown Phoenix. Like the JW Marriott Hill Country, the more we learn about this property, the more we like it, and we look forward to sharing our progress over time. Now let me provide more color on the second quarter results. Our same store hospitality segment delivered results at the midpoint of the color we provided on our first quarter earnings call. RevPAR was essentially flat compared to last year, and total RevPAR declined 160 basis points. We estimate the timing of the Easter holiday was 130 basis point headwind to RevPAR growth, and higher association group mix, which came in with lower absolute banquet and AV revenue, was a 270 basis point headwind to total RevPAR growth. As anticipated, association group room nights traveled in the second quarter were approximately 49,000 higher than last year, and corporate group room nights traveled declined by a similar amount. 2024 had unusually strong corporate mix of 59%, whereas 2025 mix is more consistent with historical trends. Typical historical patterns reflect corporate group mix in the low 50s as a percentage of total group room nights, and association group mix in the mid-30s. In general, association group ADR is lower than corporate group ADR. However, ADR for both segments were higher year over year and supported higher total group ADR. Banquet and AV revenue declined approximately $16 million compared to last year, driven primarily by the group mix shift, and to a lesser extent lower in the year for the year bookings for travel in the second quarter. As Colin noted, in the year for the year bookings activity improved in the second quarter, but bookings for travel in the second quarter were adversely affected by the first quarter pause in meeting plan or decision making. Banquet and AV contribution per group room night, or spend per attendee, actually finished slightly ahead of our expectations. As we've seen in recent quarters, group outside the room spending levels once attendees are on site continues to exceed our expectations. Leisure demand increased approximately 4% compared to last year, driven by strong performance at Gaylord Palms and Gaylord Rockies, partially offset by softer demand at Gaylord Ocriland due to the supply-induced challenges in the Nashville market. Over time, we've consistently demonstrated that our group-focused strategy, irreplaceable assets, and capital investment strategies drive superior growth, and our competitive position has continued to strengthen in 2025. For the -to-date period through June relative to 2019, we've grown the STR RevPAR index for our Gaylord Hotels portfolio by more than seven points relative to both our primary national competitive set and the local luxury and upper upscale competitive sets in the markets in which our properties are located. Same-store hospitality segment adjusted EBIT.RE was $187 million, a decline of approximately $18 million year over year, but still the second highest quarter of all time. Same-store adjusted EBIT.RE margin declined 280 basis points due to the timing of Easter, the group mixed shift from corporate to association, the one-time franchise tax refunds received in the second quarter of last year, and the planned wage of benefit increases under the collective bargaining agreement for Gaylord National. Several properties delivered standout performances including the Gaylord Rockies and the JW Marriott Hill Country, both of which achieved all-time monthly records for revenue and adjusted EBIT.RE in the quarter. Outlet spend per occupied room at Gaylord Rockies increased nearly 30% compared to last year, as the repositioned Grand Lodge continues to perform ahead of our underwriting expectations. The recent renovation at Gaylord Palms continues to be received favorably by our customers, and recent guests and meeting planner satisfaction scores for the property are some of the highest in Marriott's Convention Resort Network. These results confirm our capital deployment decisions are driving value for our customers and shareholders alike. Same-store group production trends were also strong. The last year's record second quarter created a challenging year over year comparison. Gross Group Room Nights booked in the second quarter for all future periods were down approximately 15% from last year's record second quarter, which benefited from a handful of very large multi-year bookings at Gaylord Opryland. However, compared to the average quarterly bookings for the 2019 to 2023 period, this quarter bookings were up high single digits. Given the uncertain near-term economic environment, lead volumes for the -the-year, -the-year period were down 16% -over-year, however, closure rates were up meaningfully, and Gross Group Room Nights booked in the second quarter for the year were up 3%. As a result, -to-date, -the-year, -the-year group bookings demand recovered to flat to prior year levels, with -single-digit ADR growth. These results are a testament to the quality of our portfolio, the loyalty of our customer base, and the strong execution of our Marriott sales teams. Looking beyond 2025, group demand remains strong and our book of business remains healthy. Group rooms revenue on the books for 2026 and 2027 is up 9 and 10% compared to the same time last year for 2025 and 2026, and ADR growth is in the mid-single digits. Lead volumes for all future years remains robust, and the sales funnel sits near record levels. Our entertainment segment delivered record revenue of $143 million and adjusted EBITDA RE of $34 million, driven by our recent investments in Category 10, Block 21, and Southern Entertainment. Consistent with the caller we provided on our first quarter call, entertainment adjusted EBITDA RE margin declined -over-year, due primarily to our investment in Southern Entertainment, as well as the one-time franchise tax refunds received in the second quarter of last year. Seasonality for the Southern Entertainment business is heavily weighted to the second quarter, due to the timing of their largest festivals, and this year some unfavorable weather conditions impacted festival attendance and margin performance in that business. We continue to be very bullish on the long-term potential of the festival's business, given its customer demographics, capital-light growth potential, and artist reach. Before I turn it over to Jennifer, let me provide some color on our expectations for the rest of the year. Recall in early May we lowered REVPAR and total REVPAR growth guidance ranges for increased conservatism around near-term group behavior. While in the year before the year bookings activity has trended modestly better, we're maintaining our cautious outlook for higher group attrition and cancellations in the second half. In addition, the second half continues to present challenging -over-year comparisons due to the unusually strong corporate mix in 2024. Market dynamics in Nashville for the transient segment are modestly softer than anticipated earlier this year. As Colin noted, transient demand in the market remains healthy. However, the significant influx of new hotel supply is pressuring room rates. While we continue to believe our hotels are well positioned in the market, we will revise our outlook to account for these dynamics. Outside of Nashville, our leisure business continues to perform in line with our expectations. Our entertainment business is well positioned for the second half with strong Opry 100 programming ahead of the Opry's birthday month in October. A strong show calendar for the Ryman and continued momentum behind our recent investments. Taken together, our business is in a terrific position. We're pleased to have the first half largely in line with our original plan for the year. Along the way, we picked up a premier asset in the JW Marriott Desert Ridge that's been on our wish list for a long time, and we're nearly halfway through our multi-year capital program. And at the midpoint, our adjusted EBITDA RE guidance revision is less than 1% of full year profitability. Now I'll turn it over to Jennifer to run through our guidance revisions and review our financial position.

speaker
Jennifer Hutchison
Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Mark. Regarding our outlook for full year 2025, we adjusted our guidance ranges to include the acquisition of the JW Marriott Desert Ridge. For our period of ownership in 2025, we expect to generate adjusted EBITDA RE from Desert Ridge of $18 to $22 million, which reflects the normal seasonality of that business and some construction disruption related to the meeting space renovation currently underway. We also lowered the top end of our adjusted EBITDA RE guidance range for the same store hospitality business, which lowered the midpoint for that by $5 million to $690 million. This primarily reflects the flow-through impact of incremental transient rate risk for our Nashville-based hotel properties. On a consolidated basis, we now expect adjusted EBITDA RE for the full year 2025 in the range of $767 to $813 million. Our revised guidance ranges for full year AFFO and AFFO for fully diluted share incorporate the adjustments to adjusted EBITDA RE, as well as the financing activities we completed in the second quarter. We now expect AFFO for the year in the range of $505 to $546.5 million, and AFFO for fully diluted share in the range of $7.93 to $8.49. Let me also provide some additional colors for how we expect the third and fourth quarters to play out. For the same store hospitality business, in the third quarter we anticipate RevPAR and Total RevPAR to decline low to mid-single digits with lower adjusted EBITDA RE margin. In the fourth quarter, we expect those trends to reverse, driven by greater rooms availability at Gable and Palms this year and easier comparisons in our leisure business. We anticipate RevPAR and Total RevPAR growth in the low to -single-digit range with adjusted EBITDA RE margin expansion. On the contribution for JW Desert Ridge this year, the typical seasonality for the Desert Ridge results in approximately 40% of adjusted EBITDA RE generated in the first quarter, and approximately 30 to 35% of its annual profitability in the back half. Finally, in our entertainment business, due to typical seasonality, we expect stronger adjusted EBITDA RE contribution in the fourth quarter than in the third quarter. Now turning to our balance sheet. We ended the first quarter with $421 million of unrestricted cash on hand and our revolving credit facilities both undrawn. Total available liquidity was approximately $1.2 billion and we've retained an additional $30 million of restricted cash available for FF&E and other maintenance projects. During the quarter, we issued approximately 3 million shares and $625 million of senior unsecured notes to fund the acquisition of the JW Desert Ridge. The equity transaction represented the first marketed equity offering in the lodging read space since we last issued equity in 2023 to fund a portion of the Hill Country acquisition. Our current bond offering priced approximately 30 basis points better than the average yield for our credit ratings category. Additionally, and related to the JW Desert Ridge acquisition, we received a same-day credit ratings upgrade from S&P from B-plus to double B-minus. We also deceased a $128 million Block 21 CMBS line that was set to mature in January 2026 with an add-on to the existing OEG Term Loan V. As a result, at the end of the quarter, our pro forma net leverage ratio, based on total consolidated net debt to adjusted EBITDA RE, assuming a full year contribution of adjusted EBITDA RE from the Desert Ridge, was 4.4 times. And finally, let me comment on our anticipated major cash outflows for the year. Regarding our outlook for capital expenditures in 2025, we are reiterating our expectations for $350-450 million for the year based on our latest construction timelines for projects currently underway. This also includes modest incremental capital investment at the Desert Ridge, which Mark touched on earlier. Regarding our dividend, it remains our intention to continue to pay 100% of our re-taxable income through dividends. With that, operator, let's open it up for questions.

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

Thank you. At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad. You may remove yourself from the queue at any time by pressing star 2. Once again, that is star 1 to ask a question. We'll pause for just a moment to allow questions to queue. Thank you. Our first question will come from Ari Klein with BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open.

speaker
Ari Klein
BMO Capital Markets Analyst

Thanks. Maybe first just on the lead volume, I think they were down 16% year over year.

speaker
Patrick Chaffin
Chief Operating Officer

Yeah, please. Hey, good morning. This is Patrick. Yeah, I mean, our lead volumes have definitely felt some pressure on the end of the year for the year, and we expect that to continue as we continue to move through the rest of this year. But our lead volumes look very good for 2026, 2027, and beyond. So we do believe that some of the pressures and headwinds that we've been seeing have thus far been relegated just to the 2025 calendar

speaker
Ari Klein
BMO Capital Markets Analyst

year. Got it. And that may be more of a strategic question. You talked a little bit about the potential for rotation within the JW brand now that you acquired Desert Ridge. I'm curious how you're thinking about JWs more broadly longer term and creating something where you own more JWs, kind of replicate what you have within the Gaylord hotels that you own. Is that something you would potentially consider?

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

I mean, that certainly is. You know, as we think about what the growth strategy is for the portfolio, you know, adding adding JWs in the right markets, you know, that allow us to create that rotation not only between JW and Gaylord, but also across JWs is something that that we think quite a bit about.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

Ari, this is Colin.

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

When we

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

when we we put the crosshairs on these two just happened to be JWs 10, 12 years ago, we did so because we like San Antonio as a market and we very much like Scottsdale as a market. And the reason we like those markets is because the large group meeting planner wants to frequent those markets. Those markets are both top 10 markets. These hotels were, in our opinion, leaders within those two markets. And both these hotels, in our opinion, have the ability for us to extend these these assets from around 800 around, you know, a thousand rooms to 1250, 1500 rooms over over time. And of course, they're within the portfolio of Marriott. So, you know, we can we can aggregate and bring ourselves structure into them. I would I think the other benefit of JW is the the rate structure of JW has been a little more favorable. Well,

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

it's fairly higher than

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

the Gaylord brand. And so picking these customers up that go there today and then rotating them into our into our infrastructure is a good thing. But the primary reason we like these assets is is the market and the fact that our big group customers want to go to these markets. And in our opinion, this was a very efficient way to get into these businesses. Thank

speaker
Ari Klein
BMO Capital Markets Analyst

you for

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

the call. Thank you.

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

Thank you. Our next question will come from Chris. Chris Baronka with Dolce Bank. Your line is open.

speaker
Chris Baronka
Dolce Bank Analyst

Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the question. I had kind of a two parter. First one is, you know, it seems like the average spend is, you know, is continuing to hold up really well, even in cases where you're maybe having a little bit of attendance attrition or less pickup. But you're just curious as to what you think is driving that in the context of a little bit of softness you mentioned here and there. And then the second part is maybe we talk a little bit about the market and what you're seeing there. There's a lot of noise in the market. We've heard some mixed things. Can you

speaker
spk00

just

speaker
Chris Baronka
Dolce Bank Analyst

talk about maybe your, you know, near and medium term outlook for national and how you can maybe offset some of the broader market hiccups if there are any? Thanks.

speaker
Patrick Chaffin
Chief Operating Officer

Hey, Chris, this is Patrick. Good to hear your voice. Let's start with your first question on out of the room spend. Yes, we agree. It has been extremely resilient. And when you take into account the mix shift that we've seen in the second quarter and, you know, some of the other things we've seen for the remainder of year, we're still very, very positive on how banquet and outside the room spend contributions per group room night are holding up. Groups continue to react to some of the things that they're seeing in the macro environment. But when they get on property, they continue to do very, very well. And that is a trend that we've been seeing for several years. And it continues to hold up, especially on the corporate side. But the association is definitely not underperforming on that side either. So we've been very encouraged by that. To your second question on the D.C. market, I would tell you that we're really pleased that the Giller National has been doing a really good job in a very challenging market and continues to move in a very positive direction. And, you know, we've made some fundamental structural changes to that hotel in the wake of COVID when we reopened it. And those have continued to pay benefits for us long term. And so while there is some pressure from the government side, Giller National seems to have really found its space to operate in in a very healthy way and continues to move in a positive direction. So we feel good about where it's heading.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

Chris, hey, good morning, Colin. I want to add just one more comment to Patrick's answer to the first question about average spend. You know, when you step back and you look at what is really going on within the economy of the United States of America, things aren't all that bad. Yeah, we had a rough first quarter for multiple reasons. But the second quarter GDP has just come out, 3% GDP growth. If you look at where the S&P 500 is trading, you look at where the market is trading, you look at underlying profits of corporations throughout this country, things are in pretty good shape. And so, you know, our thesis is, you know, if interest rates do come down, the big beautiful bill takes effect where people, organizations can invest in new infrastructure and claim 100% tax depreciation. And I, my personal view, you know, as a company is over the next one, two, three years, this economy should be pretty decent. And so I honestly I think that's one of the reasons why the average spend is holding up. But it's very complicated because, you know, we're being bombarded every single day with things like what is going on with tariffs and wars and, you know, the consumers pulling their hair out trying to understand, you know, what things are going to be like, you know, six months from now. But I think my personal view is I think things could be decent for 26, 27 and 28. Yeah,

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

I mean, in addition to the macro trends, Chris, the one thing I would add is that when you look over the last several years at how we've invested capital into these hotels in terms of food and beverage, carpeted breakout space, you know, things like what we've done in Colorado, right? And those are, all those investments have been to drive outside the room spending and to attract a higher quality customer and a higher rated customer. And I think that you're starting to see those investments pay off in some of the outside the room spending behavior that you're seeing in our hotels.

speaker
Chris Baronka
Dolce Bank Analyst

Okay, well, very good. Appreciate all the perspectives, guys. Thanks. Thanks, Chris.

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

Thank you. Our next question will come from Smiths Rose with Citi. Your line is open.

speaker
Smeeds Rose
Citi Analyst

Hi, thank you. I wanted to ask a little bit more about your expectations at the Gaylord Opryland. Does that property do more transient business maybe relative to your other properties? Because I guess I was a little surprised to see that you brought down the guidance based on transient given the emphasis on group across your properties. And just on the room supply pressure that you mentioned, I maybe haven't been paying attention closely enough, but I feel like room supply in Nashville has been increasing fairly steadily for a long time now. And I'm just wondering why you think now you're starting to see the impact, whereas maybe you hadn't seen it as much in prior years.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

Shall I start? Okay, so let's step back a sec and understand what is going on here in the city and then we'll get onto Opryland. There is a unique product that emanates from Nashville. It's called music, country music. There's not another city in America that has the infrastructure that we have here. This product has become global. Over the last five to ten years, it has gone global. All these great artists that live here, play here, are now playing in cities all across the world. And this is generating tremendous amount of demand for the city of Nashville. In addition to that, you're right, we've seen over the last decade, I would suggest, probably 15,000 new hotel rooms. There's not another city in America that's seen this supply. And we forget about Airbnb that didn't exist ten years ago, now does. We've got about 7,000 of those babies in this town. But on the other hand, when you look at the demand generators, the things that are underway in this city, things like this brand new stadium, and we call it the Titan Stadium, but it's a dome stadium similar to the stadium in Las Vegas. And this stadium will, I suspect, do 25 to 50 new big concerts a year, playing in front of 70,000 people. This stadium will most certainly, over the course of the next few years, will attract a Super Bowl, will attract a Final Four, has in fact recently signed WWE to come here, which was, you know, quite frankly, when it was in Vegas a year ago, was one of the biggest demand generators for that city. We have massive development going on on the East Bank with new demand generators being built there. We have the Bridgestone Arena downtown Nashville that the current owner of is a guy called Bill Haslam, the ex-governor of the state, owns the Predators, has very, very, very exciting plans for the expansion of that. I look out of my office window here, I see cranes everywhere. We have relocations coming into Nashville, the likes of which, you know, we haven't seen before. You know, we have Oracle bringing their world headquarters here over a period of time, $4 billion relocation. So, you know, this city is an extraordinarily unique position. Now, Autri-Land, you know, we talk about it and we take it for granted, 2,880 rooms. This hotel, when Mark and I got here, you know, 20-plus years ago, did $40 million of EBITDA. That baby this year, you know, is going to push just under $200 million of EBITDA. This is the most relevant convention resort in America. And we have added, as you all know, things like sound waves because of the incredible amount of influx that we've seen from a tourism perspective. Yeah, this hotel does more tourism business than the rest of our hotels, than any of the other hotels. But it's simply because we've got far more rooms and, you know, 30% of its business is leisure. So leisure is going to continue to grow in this market. By the way, I didn't mention what has happened at the airport. There's not another airport in America that's had two major expansions in the last decade. There's not another airport in America that when you speak to the CEO of the airport, good guy, Doug Kruegel, who runs it, and you ask him, you've just put a whole series of gates in, he will tell you that we're 30 gates short today. We're 30 gates short of what the demand for airlines flying to this town will be. So our thesis for Nashville, I know this is a long-winded answer, Smeeds, to a very simple question. Our thesis for this market is because of this unique product and the desire for consumers to touch it and feel it, we're going to continue to see growth in this market big time, I think, over the next 10 years. Oh, and by the way, I forgot one other thing. On Monday of this week, I beg your pardon, last week, the Boring Company, which is Musk's company that digs tunnels, this is the second city that they have selected to come to. And they have been working with the governor's office for the last 12 months to connect the airport to downtown Nashville. And we met with them and we would obviously like them to connect it through Opryland. And this is exciting. This is going to move people from very crowded streets to subterranean and will, I think, be another benefit to tourism in this city. So that's how we think about it.

speaker
Smeeds Rose
Citi Analyst

Okay, well maybe if I could just ask a quick follow-up and just kind of just backing up a little bit. I mean, you obviously have improving visibility into 26 and 27. You talked about some of the positives there. So are you still comfortable with the EBITDA ranges on the same store basis that you provided back in I think January of 24 in terms of being able to get to those levels in 27?

speaker
Jennifer Hutchison
Chief Financial Officer

The short answer, Smeeds, is yes. I think there's obviously as you go through a period of looking at a four-year time period, things that are going to be better. There's pluses, there's minuses, there's puts, there's takes. There's a lot of ways we can get to that answer. But the short answer is yes. We're as positive as ever on the portfolio of businesses that we have and how we're going to be able to get to that profitability. I'm

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

really, really glad, Smeeds, you remember that because it's something that all of us sitting around this table focus on every single day. You know, as we look out to 27 and we look out to what dividends should be, where the EBITDA ranges should be. As Jen said, there's going to be some ups and downs. But overall, our guide slope is well and truly intact.

speaker
Patrick Chaffin
Chief Operating Officer

Yes, Smeeds, this is Patrick. I would just add to it that, you know, to summarize what everyone's saying, this is a short-term phenomenon. You had a pretty significant increase in supply come into the national market in the short term. A lot of our competitors got panicky and dropped their rates pretty dramatically. We tested that within our own hotel at Opryland to make sure that we were responding. But I'm proud to say that the hotel did a great job of holding their ADR share. And they grew their group base, even as some of the transient occupancy pulled back a bit. But on the transient rate side, the entire market went down significantly and the hotel did a great job of managing through that. But it is a short-term phenomenon. And you see it with some of the more price conscious consumers that are going to places like Las Vegas, New Orleans, and Nashville. And it is a short-term phenomenon that we think we're going to move through. To your question earlier, just to build on Colin's point, Opryland does more absolute room nights of transient. But it is in line with what the rest of the brand does from a percentage basis of its total room nights.

speaker
Smeeds Rose
Citi Analyst

Thank you guys. Appreciate it. Thanks, thanks, Mies.

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

Thank you. Our next question will come from Sean Kelly with Bank of America. Your line is open.

speaker
Sean Kelly
Bank of America Analyst

Hi. Good morning, everyone. And thanks for taking my question. Colin or Patrick, wondering if we could branch out from the Nashville conversation and just maybe do a little walk around the transient side of the rest of the kind of Ryman portfolio. I think we've picked up a little softness across some Sunbelt markets. And wondering what your experience was. I think there's some unique demand drivers that might be good for Orlando. But I'm curious specifically for the Texan, just given what we've heard about the housing market there. And just more broadly, kind of where are you at? What do you think we're seeing on the ground from the consumer right now?

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

Yeah. Sean, Pat, you want to take that?

speaker
Patrick Chaffin
Chief Operating Officer

Sure. Yeah. Let me lead with what's going on in Orlando. Everyone's been watching very closely to see what Epic Universe at the opening of that park would do. And it's been a very positive catalyst for the entire market. So we see Palms and the entire Orlando market continue to move in a very positive direction on the transient side. Gaylord Rockies has really hit the ground running and has found its sweet spot this year and last year and continues to perform really, really well, both on the group side as well as the transient side. And our investments at that property obviously are paying significant dividends on both sides of the segmentation of group and transient. So we're feeling really good about where Rockies is headed. Hill Country in the short term was impacted by the rainfall and some of the issues in that region. But again, we think that's a short-term issue. And the hotel, when the weather has been very good, the hotel has performed very well. And so we don't see any kind of systemic issue from a transient perspective there. It's just really more related to what happened on the rainfall side. Gaylord National, that's a house that leans heavier towards group and continues to do very well even though there are some headwinds, as I mentioned earlier. On the transient side, it's pretty much steady as she goes. Gaylord Texan, there's a lot of new supply and a lot of new competition as far as it goes in water parks and other summertime attractions. But we continue to invest long-term into that market and into that hotel and feel that it is well positioned for the future. We tried the universe of light with DC Comics at that hotel this summer. It was very well executed and it was a concept that we just wanted to pilot and see how it did. It didn't resonate quite as much as we had hoped, but we continue to feel that the transient picture there is in really solid shape and moving in a good direction. We

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

had little disruption there too with the room referred, right?

speaker
Patrick Chaffin
Chief Operating Officer

Yeah, that's right. In the short term, we have some renovation disruption that will mostly manifest on the transient side. But again, long-term, that market is heading in a great place and that hotel will continue to get investments to make sure it stays at the forefront of that.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

But steady as she goes, right Patrick? Yeah, I mean.

speaker
Sean Kelly
Bank of America Analyst

Thank you very much. Thanks, Sean.

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

Thank you. Our next question will come from Duane Benenworth with Evercore ISI. Your line is open.

speaker
Duane Benenworth
Evercore ISI Analyst

Hey, thank you. So as your future bookings improve, recover, what would you expect? When would you expect your corporate versus association mix to normalize? How long do you think we'll be in this higher association mix mode for group?

speaker
Patrick Chaffin
Chief Operating Officer

Yeah, it goes from year to year. As it stands right now, we're on the books for 2026. It shows a higher corporate mix. And so we knew we were going into 25 with a higher mix on the association side that reverses and goes back in the other direction in 2026.

speaker
Duane Benenworth
Evercore ISI Analyst

Thanks. That's helpful. And then just on cancellations, I wonder if you could put a finer point on how that has evolved since this initial shock period of March, April. And maybe just speak to the underlying assumptions in the back half there. I know you touched on it in your prepared remarks, but I wonder if you could provide any more detail. Thank you.

speaker
Patrick Chaffin
Chief Operating Officer

Sure. You know, most of the cancellations that we saw were in reaction to some of the tariff issues and macro concerns. And so that was more of the elevation that we saw in the first quarter. The second quarter, if you look at a three year average, really is in line with what we've seen. So a little bit more in the first quarter. We've seen groups, not so much on the cancellation front, but just modifying their blocks and maybe showing up with fewer folks than they originally anticipated. That really is going to manifest mostly in the third quarter. But we feel like we're going to move in a positive direction. And as Colin mentioned, the next six to nine months could be a very positive period for the hotel. So some short term issues. We saw some of that manifest in the third quarter. The cancellation is a little bit higher in the first quarter, but no long term issues from what we can see.

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

Most of that cancellation activities around government and a lot of the large consultants that had significant government contracts that were canceled as a part of DOJ.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

Absolutely. Helpful. Thank you. Thanks, Ryan.

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

Thank you. Our next question will come from Cooper Clark with Wells Fargo. Your line is open.

speaker
Cooper Clark
Wells Fargo Analyst

Great. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to touch on OEG. Could you just talk about the contribution from Southern Entertainment in Q2 and how we should be thinking about the seasonality of OEG going forward? Also, any color on farther investments, timing around the spin, and just the general health of the entertainment consumer would also be great. Thank you.

speaker
Jennifer Hutchison
Chief Financial Officer

Well, I can kick this off and then let Patrick Moore kind of fill in on additional details on that. In terms of the OEG contribution for Southern Entertainment, we don't really give out separate...

speaker
Patrick Moore
Chief Executive Officer, Opry Entertainment Group

Doge-sets.

speaker
Jennifer Hutchison
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, by business within OEG just given its relative significance of the overall portfolio. But certainly this is a business that we fully consolidate. So, you know, the revenue changes year over year, certainly in the second quarter, reflects the fact that the Southern Entertainment business is seasonally weighted pretty much entirely to the second quarter. So there's a few puts and takes compared to the second quarter last year as well. Also keep in mind outside of Southern Entertainment primarily the franchise tax on the expense side. So we can certainly help you reconcile some of those amounts. But again, we don't necessarily call out specific numbers on the individual business contribution within OEG. Right, right. I think to the broader point about the festival's business, Patrick, we can talk about why and how and how we see it being a positive contributor. Yeah,

speaker
Patrick Moore
Chief Executive Officer, Opry Entertainment Group

to Jen's point, this is Patrick, we are very bullish about the festival segment as a market that we recently entered, similarly to the amphitheater that we just won the contract for in downtown Nashville. Both of those are market segments from an entertainment standpoint that we did not participate in before this year. So we're super bullish on both of those opportunities providing us more surface area for the Opry Entertainment Group business to grow. And to Jen's point, it's more seasonal just given the summertime nature of those two business segments. Separately from an entertainment and a live entertainment perspective at a more macro level, we're very excited about what's happening in a live entertainment space. And it continues to be a very robust demand for that. When you think about through cycle demand for live entertainment and what people spend their time and their money on, live entertainment tends to be very, very stable relative to some other business segments in the world.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

We're seeing good traffic at the Opry, Ryman, Austin, and most of our live entertainment venues outside of Nashville, the Old Reds, and the one in Nashville, the Old Red here, category 10, they're all performing as we would anticipate. Yeah.

speaker
Patrick Moore
Chief Executive Officer, Opry Entertainment Group

And to Colin's point, we're also offering premium experiences in these markets with a set of distinctive capabilities that we believe set us apart. And so the entertainment business is, you know, sort of working very well. We're excited about the prospects for the future.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

Yeah. And hopefully we'll have some more to talk about on the entertainment business here over the next couple of months. We've got a lot of things we're working on and it's all pretty exciting. Great. Thank

speaker
Cooper Clark
Wells Fargo Analyst

you. And just a quick follow up on Desert Ridge. Curious if expectations have shifted at all since the closing of the acquisition and if you still expect that acquisition to be accretive to FY26 results?

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

Our expectations haven't changed. We do anticipate it being accretive. I know that there was some questions about, you know, kind of the back half and timing. And it really comes down to the seasonality of that market and that business. You know, they produce about 40% of their EBITDA in the first quarter. And obviously with us picking it up in June, you know, we missed that. We missed the sweet spot of the year. But, you know, that couldn't be helped.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

We didn't buy it for three months. No, I mean, this is a great market and a great asset and it's got a really good management team in place. And in my conversations with Patrick and Mark, you know, these guys, Patrick has spent a lot of time at this hotel over the last 12 months, particularly since we've acquired it. And, you know, Patrick, I don't want to put words in your mouth, but I think you're delighted with what we're unearthing there and the opportunities.

speaker
Patrick Chaffin
Chief Operating Officer

Yeah, we're encouraged. We think there's lots of upside and we're continuing to pursue it. And I think, you know, what we can do on the ICE and Holiday Programming front is a really, really solid contribution to the market. And there's a lot of low hanging fruit that doesn't require a ton of capital. So that's that is Nirvana for us. Great. Thank you.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

Thank you. One more call. How many do we have in the queue? Do you know?

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

We currently have four other callers in the queue at this time.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

Okay. Our next caller. Okay. Well, Katie, thank you.

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

It's four

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

in

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

the volume. Go ahead, Katie.

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

Thank you. Our next caller will come from Dan Pulitzer with JP Morgan. Your line is open.

speaker
Dan Pulitzer
J.P. Morgan Analyst

Hey, good morning, everyone. And thanks for taking my question. This is the high level one. Mark, Colin, you know, last quarter we sat here and I think it was early May. You guys said, you know, with a tweet things could change dramatically. As we sit here three months later and, you know, I guess arguably we got that tweet though probably a few others along the way. How do you think about your business and the level of uncertainty in this environment versus three months ago? And how do we reconcile that with what's changed in terms of lead volumes? And maybe as you look to Group and Leisure or ex-Nashville, how are you kind of reconciling the kind of outlook now versus three months ago?

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

Yeah. You know, Dan, I probably shouldn't talk about this on the call, but we have our board meeting tomorrow, starting tomorrow afternoon and Thursday at our hotel in Aurora. And one of the speakers we have is your head economist for JP Morgan that is coming in to talk to our board and our management about the backdrop that we are operating in. And I wanted him to come in and do this because, you know, there's a lot of balls in the air right now. When we were operating in May, we had the promise of the big, beautiful bill and some of these certainties around tax being discussed. But, you know, the bill hadn't passed. It now has. Yep, we haven't moved interest rates down. There's more clarity around, you know, the impact of tariffs. All that thing changes. That thing changes almost daily. But, you know, I think our sense, my sense, and I don't talk for Mark, but he can do it himself, is that, you know, we could find our economy through the rest of this year looking pretty decent. And I think there will be a lot more capital investment into the economy of the United States of America. I think there will be more certainty around the issue of tariffs and the impact that that will have on businesses. And, you know, my personal view is I'm an optimist about the next 12 to 24 months. And, you know, I sit on the board of a fairly large regional bank and, you know, the activity in banking is not negative. It's decent. So, I, you know, we spend a lot of our time as we, because we've got a lot of capital plans, not just underway, but plans, you know, that we're looking for, looking to do expanding things like Colorado, expanding Hill Country, Desert Ridge, assets that we have purchased. And so this question that you ask is something that's top of mind for us in terms of the economic well-being of this country and what is likely to happen. But right now, I think I'm a little bit more optimistic than I certainly was in May. Mark, we had a conversation last night on just this subject. And I think, you know, you normally have a half empty. You were surprised I

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

was optimistic. Exactly. Look, you know, you still wake up every day and don't know what could happen, you know, and what could get tweeted. But, you know, I would argue that the economy has been fairly resilient and the consumer has been fairly resilient, particularly at the higher end. You know, rates will come in eventually. That's another big, that should be a tailwind. And our business, you know, I think our business has proved to be very, very durable, both on the leisure side as well as on the group side. And, you know, look, it really comes down to the fact that the model that we have, the assets we have are incredibly unique, incredibly well positioned. And when you look at the geographic distribution of our portfolio, I can't think of other markets I'd rather be in than how we're distributed. When you just when you think about what's happening more broadly economically with, you know, economic growth and population migration. So we are we're we're extremely well positioned. And, you know, when you look at 26 and 27, you know, are on the books position has been remains very, very strong. And so, you know, we're we're really focused on the things that we can control, making sure that the capital we're deploying, we're doing it efficiently. You know, the projects that we have underway, we're executing those and minimizing disruption and just really trying to control the things that we can control. And, you know, we'll and we'll keep watching. We'll keep watching, you know, Twitter and and to social for the next announcement. And some of

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

the stuff that Patrick talked about this morning, Patrick, Patrick Chaffin, you know, we are taking share when you when you look at how our hotels are being managed. How our hotels are performing in their in their markets. We are taking share customers like us. And and it bodes really well. And the other question that was asked earlier this morning about how do we think about the projections that we laid out back 18 months ago, whenever it was, you know, for 27 and 28. And that business looks really good in 27 and 28. And, you know, we have a 5 percent there or thereabouts dividend yield right now. If you look out 27 with the capital we're deploying, the growth, you know, add dividend grows, you know, pretty well. And and that should this should create a lot of value for our shareholders. So your question is a really good one. And I'm really happy that that, you know, we have an analyst that the focus is on the long term here, which is which is a really good thing, because this is what's really important.

speaker
Dan Pulitzer
J.P. Morgan Analyst

Thanks so much for the detail.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

Yeah. Yeah, we're at the top of the hour. Let's just do one more question and

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

we'll keep our we'll keep our answers short. Let's see how we get through. Let's see if we can blow through this. We're

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

excited.

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

I know we're

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

excited.

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

Our next question comes from John Decree with CBRE. Your line is open.

speaker
Max Marsh
Analyst for John Decree (CBRE)

Hi, this is Max Marsh on for John Decree. Thanks for taking my question. Considering your expectation for softness in Nashville is really just isolated to that transient side, could you talk a little bit about the resilience of your group business against new competition in that market and broadly?

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

You want to take a question?

speaker
Patrick Chaffin
Chief Operating Officer

Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. To your point, transient ADR is really the only challenge that's going on at OperatorLand right now. There's a lot of excitement at that hotel as groups are starting to come in and seeing what we're doing from a CapEx perspective into the hotel and the groups that are performing are performing well at the hotel. So we continue to move the mix towards a higher corporate mix as they're seeing the renovations and the improvements as well as the expansions coming to fruition and feel really good that we have a really solid product to offer to group guests against this downtown or any other downtown in the area. So we feel really good about where OperatorLand is positioned from a group perspective.

speaker
Jennifer Hutchison
Chief Financial Officer

Great.

speaker
Max Marsh
Analyst for John Decree (CBRE)

Thank you for that.

speaker
Jennifer Hutchison
Chief Financial Officer

One more? Yeah. We could take

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

one more

speaker
Jennifer Hutchison
Chief Financial Officer

question.

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

Thank you. Our final question will come from Chris Darling with Green Street. Your line is open.

speaker
Chris Darling
Green Street Analyst

Hey, thanks. Good morning. Just a couple quick follow ups on OEG from me. First, can you update us on where things stand in terms of building out the internal infrastructure there? Yeah, I'm thinking about the management team, the board, basically everything you need for OEG to stand alone from Ryman. And then second, do you have any indication that Atteros will exercise their purchase option this year and how might that impact the timeline for a spin if it does it all?

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

You want to take it, Mark? Take the...

speaker
Chris Darling
Green Street Analyst

Well,

speaker
Mark Fioravanti
President & Chief Executive Officer

in terms of Atteros and their buying up, we don't really have any insight into that. That's kind of a year end activity. It starts in earnest in October as part of that process. We'll see kind of where they land and where they end up. I'll let Patrick talk a little bit about what he's doing on the management side. But we continue to focus on building the capabilities of the business, not only in terms of scale, but also in terms of just broad capabilities to be a stand-alone business. And I would just say that there's nothing that requires us to spin this. We don't have any re-compliance issues. We're really in the driver's seat in terms of determining when is the appropriate time to separate this business. And it's really on an eye of creating greater shareholder value. So that's really the end game here.

speaker
Patrick Moore
Chief Executive Officer, Opry Entertainment Group

Yeah, and from an organizational standpoint, I think about it in really three ways, leadership, capacity, and then capability and expertise. So from a leadership standpoint, which also adds that capacity and capability, we've added in the last year a new Chief Operating Officer, recently added a new Chief Marketing Officer. And we've added some important capabilities in pricing and dynamic pricing, as well as food and beverage, and most recently in the festival and amphitheater space. So we're really excited about the ability to not only scale up the business on the top line and drive the growth of both the top and bottom, but scale the organization in a way that's differentiated relative to a lot of other entertainment companies and we're now very sizable relative to the marketplace.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

All right. Okay.

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

I'm showing no further questions at this time.

speaker
Colin Reed
Executive Chairman

Okay, Katie, thank you. Thank you for chaperoning this meeting this morning and thank investors for their time and effort. And if I have any other questions, you know how to get hold of either Jen or Mark and our IRC. So thank you and we'll be speaking with you soon.

speaker
Conference Operator
Moderator

Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today's event. You may now disconnect.

speaker
Smeeds Rose
Citi Analyst

We're going to start with Charlie Pierce with What He Didn't Do, live from the Grand Ole Opry.

speaker
Broadcast Technician
Audio System Announcement

I ain't gonna go and tell you what he did, but I'll tell you what he didn't do. Dream me right, put me first, be a man of his words, say you won't because he wanted to. And always cry for my love, for my...

Disclaimer

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