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RCI Hospitality Q4 Earnings Call Highlights

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Key Points

  • RCI reported Q4 revenue of $79.0 million but a net loss attributable to common shareholders of $5.5 million, with adjusted EBITDA down to $7.4 million as corporate expenses rose largely from a $9 million legal reserve and other insurance-related reserves.
  • Operationally, nightclubs were stable with revenue of $60.9 million and improved margins, while Bombshells revenue fell to $9.4 million amid fewer locations and weaker same-store sales; management is prioritizing profitability through rebrands/reformats and may sell Bombshells when market conditions improve.
  • Management’s five-year capital-allocation plan targets ~40% of free cash flow for acquisitions and ~60% for buybacks/debt/dividends, but the company is currently directing 100% of free cash flow to share repurchases, having reduced shares outstanding to ~7.7 million; RCI ended the quarter with $33.7 million in cash and debt down to $5.5 million.
  • MarketBeat previews top five stocks to own in May.

RCI Hospitality NASDAQ: RICK reported fourth-quarter and year-end results alongside the filing of its Form 10-K, with management emphasizing progress on its “back-to-basics” five-year capital allocation plan and continued focus on free cash flow and portfolio optimization.

Fourth-quarter results reflected higher corporate costs and legal reserve

Interim President and CEO Travis Reese said fourth-quarter nightclub revenues were “nearly level” despite “continued economic uncertainty,” while Bombshells results primarily reflected the previously announced divestiture of five underperforming locations. He added that profitability in the quarter was pressured by a higher non-cash legal accrual, increased income taxes, and lower impairments.

Interim CFO Albert Molina reported total revenue of $79.0 million, up from $73.2 million a year earlier. Molina said the change primarily reflected five fewer Bombshells-related locations, partially offset by new nightclub locations.

Corporate expenses rose to $15.4 million from $7.1 million, which Molina attributed primarily to establishing a legal reserve. Impairments and other charges were $3.7 million versus $10.1 million in the year-ago period. Income tax shifted to a $1.0 million expense compared to a $0.8 million benefit a year earlier.

Net income attributable to common shareholders was a loss of $5.5 million, compared with profit of $244,000 a year earlier. The company reported loss per share of $0.63 versus EPS of $0.03 in the prior-year quarter.

Operating cash flow was $13.7 million compared with $15.7 million, while free cash flow was described as level at $13.1 million due to lower maintenance capital spending. Molina reported adjusted EBITDA of $7.4 million compared with $17.9 million, and non-GAAP loss per share of $0.12 compared with non-GAAP profit per share of $1.63.

Segment performance: stable nightclubs, lower Bombshells revenue

In the nightclubs segment, Molina reported revenue of $60.9 million, up 0.4% year over year. He cited contributions from four new clubs acquired or opened in the second and third quarters and sales from two smaller rebranded and/or reformatted Texas clubs that were not in the same-store sales base. Offsetting factors included a decline in same-store sales, reduced sales from closing Dallas Show Club for reformatting, and reduced sales at Baby Dolls Fort Worth due to a fire.

By revenue type in nightclubs, food, merchandise and other increased 4.3%, service revenue increased 1.5%, and “LBW” declined 2%. Molina highlighted several clubs he said “stood out,” including Rick’s Cabaret Fort Worth, Rick’s Cabaret New York City, Rick’s Cabaret Pittsburgh, and Jaguars Club Phoenix.

Nightclubs operating income increased to $16.3 million from $13.0 million, with margin rising to 26.8% from 21.5%. On a non-GAAP basis excluding other net charges, operating income was $19.1 million compared with $20.5 million, and margin was 31.3% compared with 33.8%.

Bombshells revenue was $9.4 million, down $2.6 million, reflecting fewer locations and lower same-store sales, partially offset by openings in Denver in January 2025 and Lubbock in early July 2025. Bombshells posted an operating loss of $1.6 million compared with a $2.6 million loss a year earlier. On a non-GAAP basis excluding impairments, Bombshells generated operating income of $29,000 versus $649,000. Molina said Bombshells’ focus is “profitability, not sales,” adding that while same-store sales were down, profitability was improving.

Liquidity, leverage, and share repurchases

RCI ended the quarter with $33.7 million in cash and cash equivalents, up $4.4 million from June 30. The company spent $2.7 million on share repurchases during the quarter.

Molina said free cash flow margin was 18% of revenue, “virtually level” with the year-ago quarter. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 10%, and he said it would have been about 23% excluding the legal accrual.

Debt declined to $5.5 million from June 30, primarily from scheduled paydowns. The weighted average interest rate was 6.64% compared with 6.67% a year earlier. Total occupancy cost was 8.1% of revenue, roughly flat year over year. Debt to trailing twelve months adjusted EBITDA was cited at 4.4x to 4.8x due mainly to the legal accrual; excluding it, Molina said leverage would have been about 3.83x.

Management also noted that fiscal first quarter 2026 will include a $22 million two-year seller financing note from the ADW transaction.

Five-year plan and capital allocation priorities

Reese reiterated the company’s capital allocation framework of directing about 40% of free cash flow to club acquisitions and 60% to share buybacks, debt reduction, and dividends, with a goal of growing free cash flow per share 10% to 15% annually. He said the company is reviewing each club regularly, with underperformers to be rebranded, reformatted, or divested, and noted the company is generating about 70% of income from 20% of clubs.

For acquisitions, Reese said the company targets “strong clubs” at 3x to 5x adjusted EBITDA, fair market value for real estate, and 100% cash-on-cash returns within 3 to 5 years, using bank financing, cash, seller notes, and potentially stock if valuation improves. For Bombshells, he said the aim is to improve existing locations, target 15% operating margins, and return to same-store sales growth, while finishing the one location still under development. Reese added the company would like to sell the Bombshells chain as a whole, but said “the market isn’t right at the moment.”

Reese also said that since initiating the plan in fiscal fourth quarter 2024, the company has:

  • Divested four Bombshells in leased locations
  • Acquired three nightclubs
  • Opened four new clubs and a Bombshells
  • Attracted outside investment in one nightclub
  • Sold two underperforming clubs
  • Continued share repurchases

As of March 13, management said shares outstanding had been reduced to approximately 7.7 million, about 14% lower than at Sept. 30, 2024.

Reese outlined longer-term targets “by fiscal 2029” that included $400 billion in revenue, $75 million in free cash flow, and 7.5 million shares outstanding, while also stating a goal to generate more than $250 million in free cash flow over five years.

Q&A: filing timeline, legal/insurance reserves, buybacks, and Bombshells reset

In the question-and-answer portion, management said it expects to file the next quarterly report “sometime in April,” noting auditors are in a peak season. Management also discussed operating conditions, saying January and February had been “pretty solid,” and cited food input costs and vendor competition as favorable.

Management addressed the impact of reserves on reported results, stating a $9 million legal reserve and discussing insurance-related reserves, including comments that the company had no insurance last year and reserved $9.5 million for that period, with total reserves in 2025 cited at $18.5 million. Management said if reserves are not used, the amounts could be added back in future quarters, and if costs are incurred, they are already reserved and would not negatively affect future earnings.

On capital allocation, management said it is currently directing 100% of free cash flow to share buybacks at current price levels rather than holding to the 40% acquisition allocation, and cited additional repurchases since fiscal year-end.

Management also clarified real estate discussions, distinguishing non-income-producing assets and underperforming clubs being marketed (estimated at about $30 million combined) from the valuation range previously discussed for Bombshells real estate and operations, which management said was $65 million to $85 million.

In closing remarks, the company’s founder and head of M&A, Eric Langan, said the nightclub revenue mix has remained fairly consistent and noted the company has added mocktails and other lower-alcohol options. On Bombshells, Langan said the company is shifting the concept “back to its roots” toward being a sports bar with good food, aiming to rebuild bar business and improve profitability, with early changes beginning in mid-January and additional rollouts across the chain starting in early March.

About RCI Hospitality NASDAQ: RICK

RCI Hospitality Holdings, Inc operates as a diversified hospitality and entertainment company focused on the ownership and operation of adult nightclubs and themed sports bars throughout the United States and select international markets. The company's U.S. Nightclub segment includes venues branded as Rick's Cabaret, Club Onyx and various other upscale adult entertainment clubs, offering private dance experiences, VIP services and live performances. Its Restaurant & Bar segment operates Bombshells, a brunch-themed sports bar chain featuring chef-driven menus, craft cocktails and game-day viewing in a military-inspired setting.

In addition to its brick-and-mortar venues, RCI Hospitality deploys proprietary digital platforms for talent recruitment, training and scheduling, helping to streamline operations and drive customer engagement.

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