Nexstar Media Group Q1 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

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Operator

Day, and welcome to Nexstar Media Group's First Quarter twenty twenty five Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to Joe Jaffoni, Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.

Joseph Jaffoni
Joseph Jaffoni
JCIR at Nexstar Media Group

Thank you, Michelle, and good morning, everyone. We'll get to management's presentation and comments momentarily as well as your questions and answers. And during the I'll now read the Safe Harbor language, and then we'll get right into the call. All statements and comments made by management during today's conference call other than statements of historical fact may be deemed forward looking statements for purposes of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Nexstar cautions that these forward looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected by the forward looking statements made during today's call.

Joseph Jaffoni
Joseph Jaffoni
JCIR at Nexstar Media Group

For additional details on these risks and uncertainties, please see Nexstar's annual report on Form 10 ks for the year ended 12/31/2024, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and Nexstar's subsequent public filings with the SEC. Nexstar undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. With that, it's now my pleasure to turn the conference over to your host, Nexstar Founder, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Perry Suk. Perry, please go ahead.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Thank you, Joseph, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you all joining us today. Mike Baird, our President and Chief Operating Officer and Leanne Gliha, our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer are both with me on the call this morning. Nexstar's first quarter financial results mark a solid start to the year with net revenue, adjusted EBITDA, and adjusted free cash flow all benefitting from record first quarter distribution revenue and disciplined expense management. Before reviewing the highlights, I would like to begin where I ended our last earnings call on a topic that remains a key strategic priority for Nexstar in 2025, which is deregulation.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

In today's competitive landscape where big tech and big media are afforded unbridled and ubiquitous reach, current restrictions on local broadcast ownership are outdated, arbitrary, and exclusionary and no one can logically defend those rules. In my forty five plus years in the industry, I continue to believe that the prospect of meaningful broadcast ownership reform has never been better than it is today. As Chairman and CEO of Nexstar and in my role as Chair of the Joint Board of Directors of the National Association of Broadcasters, our trade association, achieving deregulation is my top priority. We are fortunate to have a strong FCC Chair in Brendan Carr who keenly understands the need for local broadcast deregulation and the relief that we and the industry need on both the national ownership cap and in market local ownership rules. Once the fifth commissioner is confirmed, which could happen by early this summer, we anticipate Chairman Carr will begin to take action on his agenda.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

In addition to our deregulatory agenda to level the playing field and to enable consolidation, we are also seeking to obtain a firm transition date for ATSC one point zero standards to ATSC three point zero standards, which will support and advance our rollout of high speed data transmission and other services to allow us to fully monetize ancillary uses of our spectrum. Given our strong financial position and balance sheet, we are prepared to capitalize on deregulation through M and A. Historically, this strategy has created tremendous shareholder value, helping drive our stock from $4.55 per share at the beginning of twenty eleven when the first consolidation wave began to the mid 160s neighborhood that we are in as of this morning. As many of you know, Nexstar has a well defined M and A playbook. Once we identify attractive assets in strategic markets, our focus turns to evaluating synergies across these three key areas: retransmission revenue opportunities, operational and cost efficiencies, and the strategic value derived from increasing our scale.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

The most compelling transactions typically involve stations with opportunities for CW affiliations, those in larger markets, or stations located in areas that overlap with our existing footprint. And we expect that all of these opportunities will present themselves in this current environment. The one big change from the last consolidation wave is the cost of capital. Our financial model will factor in both elevated interest rates as well as reduced maximum leverage and the current valuations across the television sector. Since we have the ability to buy our own assets by buying back our stock, any new transactions being contemplated will have to be more accretive than that.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Turning to our business outlook, our business model has evolved significantly and the stability of our revenue streams remains underappreciated in my view. Given questions surrounding the potential impact of proposed tariffs and the general economic uncertainty, I thought it might be helpful to take a step back and provide some perspective on just where Nexstar derives its revenues, The sum of which is that the current conditions, combined with our business model, don't give us much cause for concern at this point in time. To begin with, in the first quarter, which will be a decent barometer for the year, 63% of Nexstar's revenue came from distribution and other revenue sources. This revenue stream is driven by our growing retransmission rates multiplied by the number of subscribers serviced by our distribution partners. And last quarter we guided for this revenue line to be relatively flat for the year inclusive of subscriber attrition.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

The remaining 37% of our Q1 revenue was derived primarily from non political advertising. About one fifth of our non political advertising revenue comes from digital advertising, which is comprised of digital CTV advertising on our own inventory, as well as the sale of third party digital and CTV advertising to our local clients. This is a revenue stream that has demonstrated consistent growth overall and we do expect to see that trend continue this year. The other 80% of our advertising revenue comes from television advertising and the majority of that is from stable local sources where advertising is closely tied to the revenue it generates for the client. Cut another way, only about 40% of non political advertising revenue, or 15% of our total revenue, is tied to goods based businesses that could potentially be impacted by tariffs.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

The remaining 60% of our non political advertising revenue comes from services and paid programming, which actually grew during the twenty eighteen trade war. I am excluding comments on political advertising here, but as demonstrated again in 2024, Nexstar remains a significant beneficiary of the two year political ad cycle given our geography and our scale. Turning to the CW, we continue to execute our strategy to drive profitability through a combination of top line growth and expense reductions as our refreshed and reconstituted program lineup continues to drive incremental revenue distribution and advertising revenues. It is clear that our new content strategy is resonating with audiences as the twenty twenty five first quarter marked the CW's strongest primetime performance in eight quarters. In fact, this season so far, the CW's primetime ratings have surpassed other broadcast networks 74 times across key demos.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

That is a notable increase compared to the just 17 times for the full twenty three-twenty four prime time season. WWE Next is a ratings standout for us in prime time as it generated a 19% increase in audience versus last year's first quarter results on cable. CW Sports is now a core pillar of our programming lineup at the network and it has grown to include over four hundred hours of live sports programming annually in 2025, representing over 40% of the CW's total programming hours. The NASCAR Xfinity Series racing has quickly become a consistent high performer, with the first eleven races averaging over 1,200,000 viewers representing an increase year over year of 19% compared to last season. In fact, 2025 is the first time in nine years that each of the season's first eleven races delivered an average audience of more than 1,000,000 viewers.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

And there are more sports coming. In addition to our existing agreement with the ACC for both football and basketball, we recently announced exclusive broadcast agreements with AVP Volleyball, the new Grand Slap track series featuring names that you got to know at last summer's Olympics, as well as the HBCU All Star Basketball game and the renewal of our agreement with Pac-twelve football. Turning to News Nation, we celebrated the network's four year anniversary this past quarter following its successful rebrand in March of twenty twenty one. With the 20 fourseven programming rollout now complete, the network continues to build momentum, growing its audience every month of the first quarter of twenty twenty five. In fact, since December of twenty twenty four, News Nation's ratings have outperformed MSNBC twenty four times and CNN six times in the key adult twenty five-fifty four demo.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Breaking news and special coverage continue to be key drivers of audience growth across both linear and digital, underscoring the unique competitive advantage of Nexstar's deep and local footprint in facilitating premium on the ground coverage of key national events. News Nation's special programming is also gaining traction. Last week's town hall with President Trump ranked among the network's top five rated broadcasts ever, While News Nation's second interview special featuring Tucker Carlson and Chris Cuomo garnered more than 2,000,000 total views across all platforms. In the first quarter, News Nation was added to the White House press pool with our correspondents now asking key questions during daily briefings and aboard Air Force One. That is a significant additional milestone in establishing the network as a trusted national news source.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

In summary, Nexter's first quarter performance reflects a strong start to the year driven by our stable diversified revenue base, disciplined operations and continued execution across our portfolio. As we move through the rest of 2025, our priorities remain unchanged renewing distribution agreements covering approximately 60% of our subscriber base continuing the CW's path to breakeven, actively pursuing long overdue deregulation, and preparing for elections again in 2026. With unmatched scale, strong free cash flow, and a proven track record of value creation, we are well positioned to navigate today's challenges and capitalize on the significant opportunities ahead. With all of that said, let me now turn the call over to Mike.

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

Thank you, Perry, and

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

good morning everyone. Nexstar delivered first quarter net revenues of $1,230,000,000 a decline of 3.9% compared to the prior year, primarily reflecting the year over year reduction in political advertising. Record first quarter distribution revenue of $762,000,000 increased by 1,000,000 or 0.1% over the comparable prior year quarter. Distribution revenue growth primarily reflects annual rate escalators and other contractual increases, growth in vMVPD subscribers, and the addition of CW affiliations on certain of our stations, which more than offset vMVPD subscriber attrition. As Perry mentioned, approximately 60% of our total subscriber base is up for renewal in 2025.

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

As the majority of those negotiations occur toward the end of the year, we would expect to see the benefit to distribution revenue beginning in the first quarter of twenty twenty six. While we continue to see subscriber attrition across the industry, recent earnings reports from our distribution partners suggest some marginal improvement in subscriber trends. We continue to monitor this closely as we work to secure agreements that are better aligned with the value Nexstar delivers to our partners and their customers. Turning back to our first quarter performance. Advertising revenue of $460,000,000 decreased $52,000,000 or 10.2% over the comparable prior year quarter, primarily reflecting a $32,000,000 decrease in political advertising to $6,000,000 as well as a $20,000,000 or 4.2 percent reduction in non political advertising revenue due to advertising market softness.

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

We continued to be impacted by a challenging television advertising market in Q1, with the most meaningful pullback coming from the insurance category. The automotive category where declines at the Tier two and Tier three levels were partially offset by growth in spending from tier one OEMs. And the sports betting category, which faced a difficult year over year comparison given North Carolina's legalization of sports betting in 2024 and no comparable markets coming online this year. On the upside, we saw growth in key categories including attorneys, home repair, and travel, demonstrating the continued resilience of service based and intent driven advertisers. Further offsetting the declines was slight advertising growth in our national businesses, while our local businesses benefited from high single digit growth in digital advertising.

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

We also benefited from the Super Bowl airing on Fox this year versus on CBS in 2024, which had a positive impact on our first quarter advertising performance given Nexstar's position as the largest owner of Fox affiliated stations, including WDAF TV, the Fox affiliate in Kansas City. As mentioned, we generated approximately 6,000,000 in political advertising revenue during the quarter, primarily driven by the high profile Wisconsin State Supreme Court election. This marks a slight increase over the comparable post presidential cycle in Q1 twenty twenty one, which benefited from the Georgia Senate runoff that extended into the New Year. I am pleased to report that with our newly created national political sales division, we completed the process of bringing our advertising sales operation completely in house. This strategic move enhances our control over pricing, inventory management, and client relationships during peak political cycles.

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

By internalizing our advertising sales operation, we've streamlined coordination and workflows across our stations and centralized teams, allowing us to respond more quickly to demand, optimize yield, and maximize revenue opportunities. Looking ahead to the second quarter, non political advertising is currently forecast to be down in the mid single digits on a year over year basis, similar to Q1 results. Turning to the CW. As expected, the CW's profitability in Q1 declined by mid teens millions due to additional sports programming amortization the network didn't have in the same quarter last year. However, our outlook for the year remains unchanged, and we continue to project improved profitability in 2025 versus 2024, with expectations of achieving profitability sometime in 2026.

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

To close, let me reiterate our confidence in Nexstar's long term outlook and the enduring strength of the broadcast business model. As Perry noted, amid dynamic economic and industry landscapes, more than 60% of our revenues come from subscription based revenue streams, higher than many others in the media and entertainment space. We're staying focused on what we can control, executing our strategy with discipline to ensure we're in the best position to capitalize on the meaningful tailwinds ahead, including our upcoming distribution renewal cycle, the twenty twenty six midterm elections, and the Winter Olympics. As the industry continues to evolve, we see the momentum shifting in favor of broadcasters, and we remain committed to pursuing opportunities that drive long term value for our shareholders. With that, it's my pleasure to turn the call over to Leanne for the remainder of the financial review.

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

Leanne?

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

Thank you, Mike, and good morning, everyone. Mike gave you most of the details on the revenue side and on the CW, so I'll provide an overview of expenses, adjusted EBITDA, adjusted free cash flow, along with a review of our capital allocation activities and some additional perspectives on our valuation. Together, first quarter direct operating and SG and A expenses, excluding depreciation and amortization and corporate expenses, declined by $9,000,000 or 1%, primarily driven by our operational restructuring initiatives undertaken in the fourth quarter. Q1 '20 '20 '5 total corporate expense was $52,000,000 including noncash compensation expense of $18,000,000 compared to $55,000,000 including noncash compensation expense of $18,000,000 in the first quarter of twenty twenty four. The $3,000,000 decrease is primarily due to lower legal expenses than the prior year.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

Q one twenty twenty five depreciation and amortization was $2.00 5,000,000 versus 190,000,000 in the prior year quarter, an increase of $15,000,000. Of these amounts included in our definition of adjusted EBITDA is $88,000,000 related to the amortization of broadcast rights for Q1 twenty twenty five compared to $69,000,000 for Q1 twenty twenty four. The increase of amortization of broadcast rights by $19,000,000 was due to programming costs at the CW as newly acquired programming premiered. Please note that while Q1 CW programming amortization was up year over year, do not expect 2025 CW programming amortization to be higher than 2024. Q1 '20 '20 '5 income from equity method investments, which primarily reflects our 31% ownership in TV Food Network, declined by 11,000,000 versus the prior year quarter, primarily related to TV Food Network's lower revenue.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

Putting it all together, on a consolidated basis, first quarter adjusted EBITDA was 381,000,000, representing margin and a decrease of $71,000,000 from the first quarter twenty twenty four of $452,000,000 Moving to the components of free cash flow and adjusted free cash flow. First quarter CapEx was $35,000,000 a decrease from $44,000,000 in the first quarter of last year primarily due to timing of CapEx projects. First quarter net interest expense was $97,000,000 a reduction of $17,000,000 from the first quarter of twenty twenty four. On a cash basis, this compares to $95,000,000 in Q1 twenty twenty five versus $111,000,000 in Q1 twenty twenty four. The reduction in interest expense was primarily related to a reduction in SOFR and Nexstar's reduced debt balances.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

First quarter operating cash taxes were $2,000,000 as we only have small state tax payments due in the first quarter. Payments for capitalized software obligations and pension credits net of proceeds from disposal of assets and insurance recoveries were $11,000,000 versus $7,000,000 last year. Cash distributions from the Food Network were $114,000,000 in the first quarter, which amount is still captured in our free cash flow and our adjusted free cash flow definition. This amount reflects our pro rata share of cash from operations related to the Food Network's twenty twenty four operating results, which had not been distributed to us during 2024. Included in the first quarter's adjusted EBITDA, but excluded from free cash flow, is $26,000,000 of income before amortization from equity method investments, which is primarily our pro rata share of Food Network's income net income in the first quarter of twenty twenty five.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

Cash contributions from our partners in the CW were zero in the quarter versus 19,000,000 in q one twenty twenty four. In q one, programming amortization costs were higher than cash payments by 8,000,000 as certain programming payments were deferred. Putting this all together, consolidated first quarter twenty twenty five adjusted free cash flow was $348,000,000 as compared to $389,000,000 last year. A few additional points of guidance with respect to adjusted free cash flow. We are currently projecting CapEx of $30,000,000 to $35,000,000 in Q2.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

Based on the current year yield curve and our mandatory amortization payments, Q2 interest expense is expected to be in the $95,000,000 range. Q2 cash taxes are expected to be in the 150,000,000 to $155,000,000 range as we have two cash tax payments in the second quarter in addition to the deferred cash tax payment from 2024 as a result of using the annualization method for our federal income taxes. In Q2 twenty twenty five, cash distributions from the Food Network are expected to be in the high single to low double digit range, and payments for programming are expected to be in excess of amortization by about $15,000,000 due primarily to deferred programming payments. Turning to capital allocation on our balance sheet. Together with the cash from operations generated in the quarter and cash on hand, we used $22,000,000 of cash to fund the acquisition of WBNX, an independent station in Cleveland that will become a CW affiliate on September 1.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

We also returned a hundred and $32,000,000 to shareholders comprised of $57,000,000 in dividends and the repurchase of $75,000,000 of stock at an average price of a hundred and $69.99 per share, reducing shares outstanding net of equity vesting by just under 1%. Nexstar's outstanding debt at 03/31/2025 was 6,500,000,000.0, a reduction of 28,000,000 for the quarter as we made quarterly amortization payments of $31,000,000, which were partially offset by amortization of debt discount. Our cash balance at quarter end was $253,000,000 including $20,000,000 of cash related to the CW. Because we designated the CW as an unrestricted subsidiary, the losses associated with the CW are not accounted for in our calculation of leverage for purposes of our credit agreement. As such, our first lien covenant ratio for Nexstar as of 03/31/2025 was 1.67 times, which is well below our first lien and only covenant of 4.25 times.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

Our total net leverage for Nexstar was 2.93 times at quarter end. As is typical in nonpolitical years, we expect leverage which we calculate on an LTM basis versus a two year average to increase during 2025 as adjusted EBITDA falls in non election years when political advertising is significantly lower. For the remainder of 2025, assuming no m and a, we plan to optionally repay an incremental amount of debt and not reborrow the debt that was repaid during 2025 with cash from deferred taxes. The additional optional deleveraging will prepare our balance sheet better for any potential m and a and should benefit us if there even if there is no m and a, as many investors value us based on EBITDA multiple. Based on that methodology, any debt reduction mathematically increases our equity value dollar for dollar.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

We also plan to continue to repurchase shares, which will continue to be the largest component of our capital allocation strategy, especially given our current valuation. Before I turn it over to the operator for questions, I'd just like to make an observation about the volatility in our stock price. Subsequent to reporting q four in February, our stock price rose to a high of just over a hundred and 80 and then fell to the hundred and $50 area on concerns about tariffs in the economy. That's that approximate $30 per share swing resulted in the loss of about $900,000,000 in market cap. At a six to seven times multiple, this implies an expected decline of about 140 to 145 140 to 150,000,000 of EBITDA, which assuming an 80% contribution implies 175 to $190,000,000 decline in non political advertising revenue.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

That would mean our non political advertising would decline nine to 10% during 2025. We're not seeing that so far as our q one actuals and our q two expectations are both down low mid single digits. And Perry's comment about the 2018 tariffs would further indicate this impact is overstated. Not to mention the upside we see from potential deregulation and follow on accretive M and A. With that, I'll open up the call for questions.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

Operator, can you go to our first question?

Operator

Thank you. We'll now be conducting a question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press Our first question comes from the line of Dan Kurnos with The Benchmark Company. Please proceed with your question.

Daniel Kurnos
Equity Research Analyst at The Benchmark Company LLC

Great. Thanks. Good morning. Also nice job on expenses, Leigh Ann. Perry, let me just let's just ask one broad regulatory question.

Daniel Kurnos
Equity Research Analyst at The Benchmark Company LLC

Let's say, trustee hypothetically gets confirmed, I don't know, end of this month, you said summer. What would that mean for the time line of when you think things start moving? And given all of the commentary we've now had from Carr, we've got the Simonton op ed now, do we think an NPRM would be shortly forthcoming? Do you proactively test the market? And how much do you think the FCC can accomplish versus what has to go to Congress?

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Sure, Dan. I don't pretend to speak or know exactly what's on the mind of chairman Carr, but I would think that an NPRM would be the most likely way to kick off a re visitation of the rules, both local and national, as they relate to ownership. So I would expect that could be one of the very first moves that the chairman could make. And I would anticipate there was a letter, as you know, delivered from house members to the FCC a couple of weeks ago. There is a senate letter being delivered today with 22 senators signing on urging the FCC to revisit and relax and eliminate ownership regulations as they relate to television.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

There were also notably four public interest groups that historically have been on the other side of this discussion that endorsed the need for ownership regulations. So we think the momentum in Washington continues. We had a board meeting there last week and everything we heard from the administration and officials were that the path to deregulation, I think, would proceed apace here once the fifth commissioner at the FCC is confirmed. As to what the FCC can do, I think they can do pretty much everything. Former chairman Ajit Pai felt that the FCC had the authority to modify or eliminate the national cap as well as the end market ownership rules.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

We happen to ascribe to that rule or that point of view. And so we think things could go pretty far, pretty fast. Obviously any action that Congress would take would put whatever those rule changes were out of reach of judicial review, which would be nice as well. But I also think that the chairman has indicated his willingness to consider waivers during either dependency of rulemaking or waivers just in general. So I think you will see all of those levers be pushed as time goes on this year.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

And I do think you will see M and A activity come into focus as the year goes on.

Daniel Kurnos
Equity Research Analyst at The Benchmark Company LLC

Thanks very much, Perry. Looking forward to it.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Steven Cahall with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question.

Steven Cahall
Steven Cahall
Managing Director, Senior Analyst - Media, Advertising & Cable at Wells Fargo Securities

Thank you. Maybe first just to follow-up on Dan's question and your comments there, Perry. So if we do get an NPRM, I think there's precedent of deals being proposed under the conditionality of the FCC's new procedures under an NPRM. Are you comfortable sort of putting pen to paper and beginning to transact when the process is at that phase, but maybe does still face some challenges in the courts? So that's just the first one as we think about that timeline.

Steven Cahall
Steven Cahall
Managing Director, Senior Analyst - Media, Advertising & Cable at Wells Fargo Securities

And then secondly, Ann, I know you don't update EBITDA guidance as we go through the year. Overall, it seems like things are really performing pretty close to the trends that you had suggested when you gave the initial guide in February. So as we just roll everything up, the ad market may be a little bit worse, your expenses have looked pretty good, the CW guidance didn't change. So any meaningful puts or takes that you think we should be aware of in terms of how the overall year looks to be trending?

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

Steve, you're right. We do not update the EBITDA guidance as we go. But as we go through the year, we will continue to sort of give you kind of the what we're seeing in terms of the current market environment. I think as we talked about on the when I gave the guidance, the puts and takes really, I think the key things that we don't have control of are really what's going on in the advertising market and what's going on with subscriber attrition. And so those are the two things I would have you sort of focus on with respect to any adjustments you want to make to your model as it relates to the guidance that we gave at the beginning of the year.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

But I would say, Steve, that you're right, that we have not seen, and I get questions all the time, are you seeing things just fall off a cliff? And the answer is no. First of all, we talked in my remarks about the percent of our ad revenue that is determined by services advertising, which is really not dependent or even related to tariffs, and the amount that is tied to goods, whether it be automotive or furniture or others, which is a much lower percent of our ad revenue and a much lower percent than that of our total revenue. So our exposure is not anything that we would think would be extraordinary. Going back to 02/2008 when we were very highly dependent on advertising support, that was a different story.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

So I think that we were very considered in the guidance that we gave, and I think that things are unfolding pretty much as we had anticipated. There might be puts and takes on the margin, but thematically things aren't any different than what we had seen at the time we gave the guidance than what we saw last year. So we are not sanguine about it, but I think we are very clear eyed about it that we think things are unfolding pretty much according to guidance that we gave. As it relates to your question, would we be willing to put pen to paper during dependency of an NPRM? I think, again, depends on the circumstances and having a willing counterparty that was willing to do so as well.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

But I think you have seen this company take risk, acceptable risk, calculated risk for an opportunity. So I don't think you would see any change in our behavior as we move through this year and the deregulation of our industry.

Steven Cahall
Steven Cahall
Managing Director, Senior Analyst - Media, Advertising & Cable at Wells Fargo Securities

Thank you. Very helpful.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Benjamin Soff with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question.

Benjamin Soff
Benjamin Soff
Analyst at Deutsche Bank

Good morning, everyone. Thanks for the question. As you guys talked about, we've seen the levels of cord cutting throughout the industry moderate again this quarter. I'm curious if and when you think that will start to show up in results for Nexstar if it hasn't already, and what does that mean for your upcoming slate of renewals later this year? And then appreciate all the color on advertising.

Benjamin Soff
Benjamin Soff
Analyst at Deutsche Bank

I was hoping you could spend a little bit more time with what you're seeing more recently. And I believe in the last quarter you talked about aspiring to get positive growth in that line for the year. Is that still a reasonable expectation? Thank you.

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

So I'll take the first question on subs. I think we've seen a material change yet. I think the commentary around it has been optimistic, certainly coming from some of the MVPDs who've reported. And like others in the industry, we think that a rationalization of some of the MVPD products out there can only provide tailwinds to those trends. Right?

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

The rationalization, what I mean by that is the coming together of D2C with linear in ways that are more attractive to subscribers and make sense for really everyone involved. So in terms of impact on our results yet, we have not seen any. And as I said in the prepared remarks, I think we're cautiously optimistic that we may see that play out in the rest of the year. In terms of the impact on our deals, really no impact right now. We'll we'll approach our business the way we always do.

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

We continue to believe that the value that we deliver to distributors and therefore to their customers continues to be underweight relative to our our share of wallet, if you will.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

And then, Ben, I guess on the advertising side, you know, I think we're seeing what we said in the in the prepared remarks is our our q two forecast at the current moment is very similar to what you saw in the first quarter in terms of the decline in non traditional advertise or non political advertising rather. With respect to the full year, you know, we do expect to pick up in the back half of the year, given the elimination of crowd out.

Benjamin Soff
Benjamin Soff
Analyst at Deutsche Bank

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Aaron Watts with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question.

Aaron Watts
Aaron Watts
Managing Director, Media, Entertainment, Cable, & Satellite Credit Analyst at Deutsche Bank

Hi, thanks for having me on. On deregulation and consolidation, I'm just curious with in terms of your focus on the opportunities in the market, how would you prioritize between expanding your national footprint, increasing in market duopolies or perhaps bringing in assets that enrich your underlying spectrum holdings? And on the in market option, can you remind us what type of lift you get from creating a new duopoly in a given market or adding a CW affiliation to a market like you just did in Cleveland?

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Sure. Let me try and unpack that a little bit, Aaron. I would say that our focus here is first and foremost on accretive acquisitions, acquisitions that are more accretive than buying back our stock. Whether that takes the form of in market additional stations added to our roster or expanding our national footprint, both have strategic importance to the company. I would say growing our national footprint has more strategic importance than adding a second or third station in a market.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

If you look at our overall footprint today, we are duopolized or virtually duopolized in the majority of our markets already. The opportunities that remain to do that are primarily in the top 10 markets where we operate exclusively CW affiliates. So that would be interesting should there be actionable opportunities. I think that, again, underlying spectrum, I think we are the largest holder of commercial television spectrum in the country, UHF television spectrum. And so adding to that footprint is the byproduct of acquisitions.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

With rare exceptions would we do a transaction just to acquire additional spectrum. We are focused on the operating up top and the accretion from that vis a vis distribution, expense management, and again, putting stations together in markets where we don't already have that opportunity. If the FCC were to eliminate the two to a market rule, then I think that opens up an even broader opportunity for us to look at in market consolidations. And as it relates to margin lift there, it depends on the combination of stations. If you put two big four together, you are going to have the opportunity I think for cost takeouts aside from the payments to the networks, because you probably have too robust news operations, too robust production operations.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

And while our focus would be to preserve the journalistic layer there, there's no reason you can't take the technical and production infrastructure and streamline that vis a vis automation and in effect running two newspapers off the same printing press. The margin lift there can be 20 points, twenty, twenty five points, depending on the combinations and the status of the stations. In Cleveland, adding a CW affiliation to an independent station gives us an immediate distribution lift in revenues. And then taking a very powerful organization, which is our Fox affiliate in Cleveland, a very good content operation and a very, very good sales operation, operation and overlaying that on the assets of the CW will give us lift long term down the road. The accretion of that acquisition is primarily through the distribution economics once it becomes a CW affiliate later this year.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

So I hope that's responsive to your question. Know there was a lot in that.

Aaron Watts
Aaron Watts
Managing Director, Media, Entertainment, Cable, & Satellite Credit Analyst at Deutsche Bank

Really helpful. Thanks, Perry.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jason Bazinet with Citi. Please proceed with your question.

Steven Cahall
Steven Cahall
Managing Director, Senior Analyst - Media, Advertising & Cable at Wells Fargo Securities

I also had a regulatory question.

Jason Bazinet
Jason Bazinet
Director at Citigroup

Is your sense that the industry that there's broad agreement among potential sellers that consolidation should happen and therefore in your seat, you may have the choice of pursuing several different paths in terms of M and A? In other words

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

The short answer is yes. I mean, I chair the NAB Joint Board of Directors and prior to that I chaired the NAB Television Board. And this is the first time in history that the entire board voted unanimously that the national cap elimination and end market ownership restrictions be eliminated. Hasn't always been the case. But I think that is a notable achievement in the ability to get the industry organized under one set of marching orders.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

And that certainly is impactful at the regulatory agencies and on Capitol Hill that the industry is speaking with one voice as it relates to that issue. So I think that the NAB television board is made up of representatives. Mike Barrett represents us on the NAB TV board, so a very large group. And there are very small market group operators that also have a voice on that board. And I think everyone realizes that without the ability for strategics to expand and potentially private equity to enter the space because of deregulatory nature, that there may not be much of a bid for their family assets or generational assets.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

So I think everyone sees the need for deregulation to allow the industry reach its full value potential.

Jason Bazinet
Jason Bazinet
Director at Citigroup

Can I ask one follow-up? And this may be too legal, but I'm going to try. I heard your point about the FCC potentially doing waivers and about the NPRM. The one thing that I don't know how to think about is I think it was last year the Supreme Court sort of pushed back on Chevron deference, meaning robbing the expert agencies of some of the power that they've historically had and sort of forcing Congress to be more explicit about changes that take place as opposed to just pushing it down to an expert agency like the FCC to do the rulemaking. Do you do you feel that that shift at the Supreme Court is a potential fly in the ointment that would require congressional action as opposed to relying on the FCC as the expert agency?

Jason Bazinet
Jason Bazinet
Director at Citigroup

Or is that sort of a red herring?

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Well, one man's opinion is it's a red herring. We actually read the Chevron ruling as a positive for industry, meaning that there could be judicial review of regulatory agency sanctions that they couldn't just happen in a vacuum that there could be a question for the need of those. And so we see it as a positive. I don't see that as a red herring necessarily. I think the entire administration as well as both houses of Congress certainly are focused on streamlining government intrusiveness into private business.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

And so I think that at this point in time, I don't see that as an impediment. And in fact, there's been very little at this point, reaction to the Chevron ruling as it relates to the day to day operations of businesses and the government. So from our perspective, I don't see that as an impediment on a going forward basis.

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

Would just add to that. I think the letters that you've seen from both houses of Congress would indicate that the legislators are encouraging the FCC to act as well. So certainly, don't see the FCC as being limited here.

Jason Bazinet
Jason Bazinet
Director at Citigroup

Thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Patrick Scholl with Barrington Research. Please proceed with your question.

Patrick Sholl
Vice President at Barrington Research Associates

Hi, good morning.

Patrick Sholl
Vice President at Barrington Research Associates

A question on the ad market. You mentioned the growth in the services sector in the last trade war. I was just kind of curious how much of that was increased penetration of getting new advertisers onto TV. And just within the various service categories, where you feel TV is relatively underutilized from those advertisers.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

Thanks. I think the, you know, from a from the last in 2018, there wasn't really like new advertisers that were coming on. It was just sort of our same our same group. It was just, you know, continuation of the, of the trend of benefits of advertising. These are companies that are really ringing the cash register because someone has heard their ad and they came into the store or they hired them for their lawsuit, whatever that was.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

And so it's a very stable piece of the pie and a nice you know, it's nice from our advertising composition perspective to be, you know, the significant percentage of our ads. And I think this time, you know, this time going around, it's really no different. I mean, we're seeing, you know, a definite difference in terms of the, you know, rate of decline of goods versus the services category. Significant.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Barton Crockett with Rosenblatt Securities. Please proceed with your question.

Barton Crockett
Managing Director & Senior Research Analyst at Rosenblatt Securities

Hi, great. Thanks for taking the question. I guess, if I could, too, but the first one is really on this regulatory question. So I get the FCC, but I'm wondering about the DOJ and antitrust. How much of an impediment could that be?

Barton Crockett
Managing Director & Senior Research Analyst at Rosenblatt Securities

And then kind of within that question, historically, I think there's been this very reasonable thought that they should include in the market definition these things that have been accused by the government of monopoly, like search and social. Does that need to change? Do you see any prospects that that could change under this administration?

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Yes, in one word. The folks that our GR team has spoken to at DOJ have said, have not gone on record, but have said in private conversations that no one can defend the current rules that television station advertising is a discrete market, as is radio station advertising. Nobody believes that. Nobody can defend that with a straight face. And so I do not see that as an impediment to in market opportunities to consolidate.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Let's just assume you have 50% of the television revenue in a marketplace, but let's talk about the part of the iceberg that is below the water level, which is every other form of advertising that our local sellers compete with. There is a line out the door at the car dealership or the furniture store, people in to sell digital advertising, connected television advertising, pens with your company's name on it, out of home advertising, billboards, ads in the high school yearbook, those are all compete for the one advertising budget that business owners have. And to believe anything other than that ignores the realities of what our salespeople encounter in the marketplace every day. So again, pretty high up the food chain at the DOJ, I think people understand that and are willing to address marketplace realities in transactions that might be proposed going forward.

Michael Biard
Michael Biard
President & COO at Nexstar Media Group

I'll just add that to the extent that you thought that rule, or really not a rule, but that interpretation of the marketplace made any sense historically. Certainly, changes in the marketplace recently would would really undermine it. What I mean by that is introduction of advertising, television advertising in particular, across Netflix and and Amazon Prime. I think you can look at those and that flood of inventory that they brought to the market as a fundamental change in the marketplace that absolutely should compel a different view of that.

Barton Crockett
Managing Director & Senior Research Analyst at Rosenblatt Securities

Now, if I could ask kind of an adjacent question. To what degree in Nexstar, specifically in local television generally, is this emerging kind of form of programmatic and connected TV advertising that's part of what Netflix is doing and just a lot of momentum around that generally that we see at the national networks. I don't really hear you guys talking about that locally or or see it that much. And to what degree is that kinda change? Should it change?

Barton Crockett
Managing Director & Senior Research Analyst at Rosenblatt Securities

Can it change?

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Well, and again, I don't want to open our playbook so everybody can read it, but we certainly are cognizant of the fact that the vast majority of advertising, all digital, all national advertising is sold on an impression based basis and here is television selling demography. And so I think that we are at a forefront of having discussions that would enable us to be selling more of our inventory on an impression based basis. We can control the rate at which those orders are accepted and all of that. But it also, listen, advertising agencies make less money placing linear television ads than they do placing digital ads. And until we address that structural inequity, it's going to be hard to talk about sustained growth in this business at advertising support level.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

So we are totally cognizant of it and focused on it. And discussions are ongoing behind the scenes. Obviously if we have something to announce, we will announce it. But we are focused on creating removing all structural impediments and any other impediment in doing business with our company and in our industry, think that is where everyone should be focused. So we get it and are taking moves to evolve the way we sell our advertising to be as compatible as possible.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Everyone understands the superior value proposition, but if it is hard to buy and less profitable to buy, we can understand why people may move their money in other places. So we are straight up addressing it ourselves and expect that the industry will ultimately follow.

Barton Crockett
Managing Director & Senior Research Analyst at Rosenblatt Securities

Okay, great. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Craig Huber with Huber Research Partners. Please proceed with your question.

Craig Huber
Equity Research Analyst at Huber Research Partners

Great, thank you. I wanted to ask you, Perry, about this proposal or this op ed out there about capping reverse retrans at 30% of retrans revenues for your companies and stuff. And when you sort of think about it, I want your comment on this if you could please. We've been talking about for years and years about deregulating your stuff out there, in market rules, a 39% ownership cap. And all of a sudden now there's this potential out there of a 30% cap on the reverse retrans side of things here.

Craig Huber
Equity Research Analyst at Huber Research Partners

I mean, I sit back and think about the FCC, the Trump administration, Congress, if they got involved here, they're either deregulatory, leave us alone, or they're not. I mean, why does it make sense to get rid of the 39% ownership cap, which I am sympathetic with, in the end market rules, certainly on board with that as well. But then why put in place a cap on the retrans payment side of things here? There'll surely benefit you guys on the surface, but there's an unintended consequence there, I think, because the networks, I would think, logically, would just pull back how much money they spent on programming that they put on your TV stations and your peers out there and stuff. So can you just comment on that?

Craig Huber
Equity Research Analyst at Huber Research Partners

Because it seems totally inconsistent to me. I'm baffled by the whole thing, frankly.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Well, listen, we have a great deal of respect for Commissioner Symington and his approach to free markets and deregulation. I would say that his thoughts were expressed in an op ed, which I would characterize as one man's opinion. I will tell you, having spent, I think I've been on Capitol Hill 7 times so far this year, there is very little interest in getting involved in the commerce between stations and networks other than there has been an increasing interest in the asymmetrical approach to virtual MVPDs and traditional MVPDs, given that YouTube now promotes themselves as the third largest MVPD, but yet they are virtual MVPDs, so our rules of engagement are different. And I don't think anyone feels that that makes much sense. But listen, we are largest affiliate groups and among the largest affiliate groups of all of the big four.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

We happen to own the big five and would not be handcuffed by a 30% rule should it come into effect in terms we aspire to 30% distribution revenue for the CW from our affiliates. But at this point in time, I think there will be very little traction for that taking hold. So I would take it as the op ed that it was, But I don't know that I see it gaining much traction in Washington or in the marketplace.

Craig Huber
Equity Research Analyst at Huber Research Partners

Thank you for that.

Craig Huber
Equity Research Analyst at Huber Research Partners

And then Leanne, if you could just comment if you would on the CW losses year over year in the first quarter, was it ballpark maybe roughly $10,000,000 worse than the first quarter here because of the higher sports program, I understand? And what is your outlook, if you could quantify that, what your outlook is for the CW losses for the full year? Thank you.

Lee Gliha
Lee Gliha
Executive VP & CFO at Nexstar Media Group

Yeah, our outlook for the CW losses for the full year are consistent with what we said on the last call, which was about a quarter better or 25% better than what it was in 2024. We did see, you know, an increase in the amortization of broadcast rights in the first quarter, which was, you know, about, you know, a substantial increase over the first quarter twenty twenty four, you can see that number. The losses did increase by more than $10,000,000 in the first quarter. But again, that's an anomaly, a seasonality anomaly, and we still are on track to get where we think we're going to get we had planned to get to for the full year.

Craig Huber
Equity Research Analyst at Huber Research Partners

Great. Thank you both.

Operator

Thank you. Our final question comes from the line of Alan Gould with Loop Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Alan Gould
Managing Director at Loop Capital

Thanks for taking the question. Two please. Perry, speaking of the Fifth Network, just wondering where you stand in repricing your CW fees to your station partners, your affiliates? And secondly, on advertising, just curious how big a difference there is on your advertising, your sports product versus your news product versus your general entertainment product? Thank you.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Well, listen, we're working on repricing our value proposition to our CW affiliates. And the way we do that is by demonstrating the value of the CW affiliation through investment in programming and most importantly, that programming paying off in terms of increased eyeballs to the network. Our affiliates are over the moon at our investments in sports programming, what it brings to them, the additional inventory that they don't have to program. And so our discussions with those affiliates, well as our own station group, is the largest customer of the network in terms of we are the largest CW affiliate group, People recognize the value we are bringing and now it's and we told them it was coming and so they've had a couple of years now to get out in front of that with distribution negotiations on their own behalf. So I do expect that one of the value levers to break even of the CW network over the next two years, twenty five and '26, will be through increased remuneration vis a vis distribution payments to the network from its affiliate base.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

So it's an ongoing process. When we first took over the network, we said all the great things we were going to do and asked for big increases. And they said, wait a minute, you haven't done anything yet. That's fair. Now we have and I think now it's our turn.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

And as it relates to the second part of your question, I forget what that was. Can you remind me again?

Alan Gould
Managing Director at Loop Capital

Sure. When you're selling advertising, how big a difference are you seeing selling advertising on sports content versus news content versus general entertainment content?

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Well, I would probably put them in that order. Sports programming is of the moment right now, and that's why we added additional sports programming. There is a big demand for sports because it's live, it's lean forward. I would say, as it relates to demand for local news, we have seen no affect in that. That is where local advertisers want to be for all the same reasons.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

You are talking about my local community, people are interested in that, my ads get more attention there. And I would say that unfortunately, because we produce some very good scripted programming, that's third in the batting order. That's not generally consumed live. It's consumed by appointment whenever I am ready to see it through a streaming or on my DVR. And so that is probably the least in demand of the three categories that you talked about.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

And if you look at the mix from a network perspective that we have orchestrated at the Scripted entertainment programming comprises a lower percent of the total hours of prime time and total hours programmed by the network. And I think it's in addressing that marketplace reality. So it wasn't just to cut costs, it was to mirror more what the television audience is looking to consume, is live programming, event programming, and sports programming. We still have a healthy we will have on the network in this upcoming season a Dick Wolf police procedural. That's kind of a watershed event for the CW when you think we are in business with one of the most prolific and successful program producers in television.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

And I'm excited about that and both hope and think that that show will do well. But we are not abandoning scripted, we are just evolving the programming mix to represent marketplace realities. I think if you look at right now, Wednesday night is a scripted night and Friday night is pen and teller night, and Tuesday night is wrestling night with WWE. And I think thematically, that is how we Brad Schwartz and his team and Sean Compton are building the network, and we think that it will over time pay significant dividends to both the network, the affiliates of which we're the largest, and our counterparties as well.

Alan Gould
Managing Director at Loop Capital

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We have reached the end of our question and answer session. I'd like to turn the call back over to Mr. Suk for any closing remarks.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

Thank you very much, operator. In closing, Network's local advertising, our political advertising, and our distribution revenue streams all provide us with a stable and growing foundation across all economic cycles. Our uniquely scaled portfolio of local and national media assets continue to generate substantial free cash flow to support our value enhancing capital allocation strategy that Leigh Ann described earlier. With our proven financial track record, our best in class balance sheet, and additional upside from potential regulatory reform, we believe that Nexstar offers a rare combination of consistency, flexibility, as well as growth. Simply put, we have the platform, the people, and the momentum to continue to deliver long term shareholder value.

Perry Sook
Perry Sook
Founder, Chairman & CEO at Nexstar Media Group

And as Nexstar's third largest shareholder, I might add, no one is more personally committed to that mission than I am. Thank you all for your continued support and we look forward to updating you again on our second quarter earnings call in August. Have a good day.

Operator

Thank you. This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines. Time. Thank you for your participation and have a wonderful day.

Executives
Analysts

Key Takeaways

  • Nexstar reported Q1 net revenues of $1.23 billion with a 0.1% increase in record first-quarter distribution revenue at $762 million, offsetting a 3.9% decline in political advertising, and generated $348 million in adjusted free cash flow through disciplined expense management.
  • Deregulation of broadcast ownership rules is CEO Perry Suk’s top strategic priority, with anticipated FCC action under Chair Brendan Carr and plans to leverage any reforms for accretive M&A using Nexstar’s strong balance sheet.
  • The CW network delivered its strongest primetime performance in eight quarters, driven by expanded live sports programming—including WWE Next and NASCAR Xfinity Series—and is on track for improved profitability in 2025 and breakeven in 2026.
  • News Nation marked its four-year anniversary with consistent audience growth—outperforming MSNBC and CNN in key demos—and secured White House press pool access, solidifying its position as a trusted national news source.
  • Nexstar returned $132 million to shareholders in Q1 through $75 million in buybacks and $57 million in dividends, and plans further optional debt repayments to optimize its leverage and support shareholder value.
A.I. generated. May contain errors.
Earnings Conference Call
Nexstar Media Group Q1 2025
00:00 / 00:00

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