Q4 2025 Sportradar Group AG Earnings Call
Speaker #1: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining us, and welcome to Sportradar Group's fourth quarter earnings call. After today's prepared remarks, we will host a question-and-answer session.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining us and welcome to Sportradar Group's Q4 Earnings Call. After today's prepared remarks, we will host a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please raise your hand. If you have dialed in to today's call, please press star nine to raise your hand and star six to unmute. I will now hand the conference over to Jim Bombace, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Finance. Please go ahead.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining us and welcome to Sportradar Group's Q4 Earnings Call. After today's prepared remarks, we will host a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please raise your hand. If you have dialed in to today's call, please press star nine to raise your hand and star six to unmute. I will now hand the conference over to Jim Bombace, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Finance. Please go ahead.
Speaker #1: If you would like to ask a question, please raise your hand. If you have dialed in to today's call, please press *9 to raise your hand, and *6 to unmute.
Speaker #1: I will now hand the conference over to Jim Bombasse, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Finance. Please go ahead.
Speaker #2: Thank you, Operator. Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us for Sportradar's earnings call for the fourth quarter and full year of 2025. Please note that the slides we will reference during this presentation can be accessed via the webcast on our website at investors.sportradar.com, and will be posted on our website at the conclusion of this call.
Jim Bombace: Thank you, operator. Hello, everyone, thank you for joining us for Sportradar's earnings call for the Q4 and full year 2025. Please note that the slides we will reference during this presentation can be accessed via the webcast on our website at investors.sportradar.com and will be posted on our website at the conclusion of this call. A replay of today's call will also be available on our website. After our prepared remarks, we will open the call to questions from analysts and investors. In the interest of time, please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Please note that some of the information you will hear during our discussion today will consist of forward-looking statements, including, without limitation, those regarding revenue and future business outlook. These statements involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results or trends to differ materially from our forecast.
Jim Bombace: Thank you, operator. Hello, everyone, thank you for joining us for Sportradar's earnings call for the Q4 and full year 2025. Please note that the slides we will reference during this presentation can be accessed via the webcast on our website at investors.sportradar.com and will be posted on our website at the conclusion of this call. A replay of today's call will also be available on our website. After our prepared remarks, we will open the call to questions from analysts and investors. In the interest of time, please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Please note that some of the information you will hear during our discussion today will consist of forward-looking statements, including, without limitation, those regarding revenue and future business outlook. These statements involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results or trends to differ materially from our forecast.
Speaker #2: A replay of today's call will also be available on our website. After our prepared remarks, we will open the call to questions from analysts and investors.
Speaker #2: In the interest of time, please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Please note that some of the information you will hear during our discussion today will consist of forward-looking statements, including without limitation those regarding revenue and future business outlook.
Speaker #2: These statements involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results or trends to differ materially from our forecast. For more information, please refer to the Risk Factors Discussed in our annual report on Form 20F and Form 6K filed with the SEC, along with the associated earnings release.
Jim Bombace: For more information, please refer to the risk factors discussed in our annual report on Form 20-F and Form 6-K filed with the SEC, along with the associated earnings release. We assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statements or information which speak as of their respective dates. Also, during today's call, we will present IFRS and non-IFRS financial measures and operating metrics. Additional disclosures regarding these measures and metrics, including a reconciliation of IFRS to non-IFRS measures, are included in the earnings release, supplemental slides in our filings with the SEC, each of which is posted to our investor relations website. We may also discuss certain forward-looking non-IFRS financial measures that cannot be reconciled from the most directly comparable IFRS financial measure without unreasonable efforts. Joining me today are Carsten Koerl, our CEO, and Gerard Griffin, our CFO. Now I'll turn the call over to Carsten.
Jim Bombace: For more information, please refer to the risk factors discussed in our annual report on Form 20-F and Form 6-K filed with the SEC, along with the associated earnings release. We assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statements or information which speak as of their respective dates. Also, during today's call, we will present IFRS and non-IFRS financial measures and operating metrics. Additional disclosures regarding these measures and metrics, including a reconciliation of IFRS to non-IFRS measures, are included in the earnings release, supplemental slides in our filings with the SEC, each of which is posted to our investor relations website. We may also discuss certain forward-looking non-IFRS financial measures that cannot be reconciled from the most directly comparable IFRS financial measure without unreasonable efforts. Joining me today are Carsten Koerl, our CEO, and Gerard Griffin, our CFO. Now I'll turn the call over to Carsten.
Speaker #2: We assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statements or information, which speak as of their respective dates. Also, during today's call, we will present IFRS and non-IFRS financial measures and operating metrics.
Speaker #2: Additional disclosures regarding these measures and metrics: including a reconciliation of IFRS to non-IFRS measures are included in the earnings release, supplemental slides, and our filings with the SEC, each of which is posted to our investor relations website.
Speaker #2: We may also discuss certain forward-looking non-IFRS financial measures that cannot be reconciled from the most directly comparable IFRS financial measure without unreasonable efforts. Joining me today are Carsten Koerl, our CEO, and Craig Felenstein, our CFO.
Speaker #2: And now I'll turn the call over to Carsten.
Speaker #3: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. In 2025, we delivered strong financial momentum across our business as we took important steps to further scale our business and enhance our industry-leading position. The strong results we delivered over the last several years set us up for sustained long-term success.
Carsten Koerl: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. In 2025, we delivered strong financial results while generating continued momentum across our business as we took important steps to further scale our business and enhance our industry-leading position. This progress builds on the strong results we've delivered over the last several years and sets us up for sustained long-term success. Early in 2025, at our Investor Day, we outlined our strategy and key growth pillars. Over the course of 2025, we delivered on this strategy both operationally and financially as we scaled the business in key areas, including our sports coverage, video streaming and visualizations, managed trading services, and our marketing and media businesses.
Carsten Koerl: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. In 2025, we delivered strong financial results while generating continued momentum across our business as we took important steps to further scale our business and enhance our industry-leading position. This progress builds on the strong results we've delivered over the last several years and sets us up for sustained long-term success. Early in 2025, at our Investor Day, we outlined our strategy and key growth pillars. Over the course of 2025, we delivered on this strategy both operationally and financially as we scaled the business in key areas, including our sports coverage, video streaming and visualizations, managed trading services, and our marketing and media businesses.
Speaker #3: Early in 2025, at our investor day, we outlined our strategy and key growth pillars. Over the course of 2025, we delivered on this strategy, both operationally and financially.
Speaker #3: As we scaled the business in key areas, including our sports coverage, we do streaming and visualizations, manage trading services, and our marketing and media businesses.
Speaker #3: We also completed our acquisition of IMG, demonstrating our financial discipline as well as our ability to integrate strategic sport rights and monetize them, like no one else, can give in our experience and scale.
Carsten Koerl: We also completed our acquisition of IMG, demonstrating our financial discipline as well as our ability to integrate strategic sport rights and monetize them like no one else can, given our experience and scale. Importantly, this operational success underpins our strong financial performance for the year. Craig will cover our financial results in a moment. In 2025, we performed ahead of the expectations we laid out at our Investor Day early in the year, achieving record revenue and Adjusted EBITDA while delivering significant margin expansion. Adjusted EBITDA margins have expanded approximately 400 basis points in the past two years. We see a long runway ahead for further expansion. We also continue to deliver increasing levels of free cash flow as we expand the free cash flow conversion to 56% on an annual basis. This cash flow further strengthened our balance sheet.
Carsten Koerl: We also completed our acquisition of IMG, demonstrating our financial discipline as well as our ability to integrate strategic sport rights and monetize them like no one else can, given our experience and scale. Importantly, this operational success underpins our strong financial performance for the year. Craig will cover our financial results in a moment. In 2025, we performed ahead of the expectations we laid out at our Investor Day early in the year, achieving record revenue and Adjusted EBITDA while delivering significant margin expansion. Adjusted EBITDA margins have expanded approximately 400 basis points in the past two years. We see a long runway ahead for further expansion. We also continue to deliver increasing levels of free cash flow as we expand the free cash flow conversion to 56% on an annual basis. This cash flow further strengthened our balance sheet.
Speaker #3: Importantly, this operational success underpinned our strong financial performance for the year. Craig will cover our financial results in a moment, but in 2025, we performed ahead of the expectations we laid out at our investor day early in the year, achieving record revenue and adjusted EBITDA.
Speaker #3: While delivering significant margin expansion, adjusted EBITDA margins have expanded approximately 400 basis points in the past two years, and we see a long runway ahead for further expansion.
Speaker #3: We also continue to deliver increasing levels of free cash flow, as we expand the free cash flow conversion to 56% on an annual basis.
Speaker #3: This cash flow further strengthens our balance sheet and, given the disconnect between our share price and the fundamental strength of our business, we used the opportunity to buy back a significant amount of stock over the last four months.
Carsten Koerl: Given the disconnect between our share price and the fundamental strength of our business, we used the opportunity to buy back a significant amount of stock over the last 4 months. To continue to capitalize on this disconnect, our board of directors has approved a significant increase in our share repurchase authorization, raising the total planned capacity from $300 million to a total of $1 billion. With this expanded authorization, we will continue to aggressively repurchase shares as the market provides an opportunity given the long-term value creation we see across our business. We have the balance sheet strength and free cash flow generation to take advantage of the current valuation gap without compromising our ability to invest in further growth initiatives. Turning to our key highlights in 2025. We closed the IMG acquisition in November.
Carsten Koerl: Given the disconnect between our share price and the fundamental strength of our business, we used the opportunity to buy back a significant amount of stock over the last 4 months. To continue to capitalize on this disconnect, our board of directors has approved a significant increase in our share repurchase authorization, raising the total planned capacity from $300 million to a total of $1 billion. With this expanded authorization, we will continue to aggressively repurchase shares as the market provides an opportunity given the long-term value creation we see across our business. We have the balance sheet strength and free cash flow generation to take advantage of the current valuation gap without compromising our ability to invest in further growth initiatives. Turning to our key highlights in 2025. We closed the IMG acquisition in November.
Speaker #3: To continue to capitalize on this disconnect, our board of directors has approved a significant increase in our share repurchase authorization, raising the total plan capacity from $300 million to a total of $1 billion.
Speaker #3: With this expanded authorization, we will continue to aggressively repurchase shares as the market provides an opportunity given the long-term value creation we see across our business.
Speaker #3: We have the balance sheet, strengths, and free cash flow generation to take advantage of the current valuation gap without compromising our ability to invest in further growth initiatives.
Speaker #3: Turning to our key highlights in 2025, we closed IMG acquisition in November. Thanks to our detailed pre-closing planning, we hit the ground running. Immediately making IMG content available to our client significant revenue synergies.
Carsten Koerl: Thanks to our detailed pre-closing planning, we hit the ground running, immediately making IMG content available to our client base, enabling us to unlock significant revenue synergies. Leveraging our global scale and distribution network across hundreds of operators, we generated immediate financial uplift in the quarter. The customer response has been strong with the majority of our clients, including all of the tier-one partners, having already signed on the IMG data ops, and AV products. This early and significant progress puts us firmly on track to unlock anticipated revenue synergies of 25% for IMG in 2026. On the product side, we have successfully integrated IMG content into our core product suite and are on track to expand it into our next-gen offerings, including 4Sight, Micro Markets, Player Props, and the Virtual Live Match Tracker over the course of the year.
Carsten Koerl: Thanks to our detailed pre-closing planning, we hit the ground running, immediately making IMG content available to our client base, enabling us to unlock significant revenue synergies. Leveraging our global scale and distribution network across hundreds of operators, we generated immediate financial uplift in the quarter. The customer response has been strong with the majority of our clients, including all of the tier-one partners, having already signed on the IMG data ops, and AV products. This early and significant progress puts us firmly on track to unlock anticipated revenue synergies of 25% for IMG in 2026. On the product side, we have successfully integrated IMG content into our core product suite and are on track to expand it into our next-gen offerings, including 4Sight, Micro Markets, Player Props, and the Virtual Live Match Tracker over the course of the year.
Speaker #3: Leveraging our global scale and distribution network across hundreds of operators, we generated immediate financial uplift in the quarter. The customer response has been strong, with the majority of our clients including all of the Tier 1 partners having already signed on the IMG data ops and AV products.
Speaker #3: This early and significant progress puts us firmly on track to unlock anticipated revenue synergies of 25% for IMG in 2026. On the product side, we have successfully integrated IMG content into our core product suite and are on track to expand it into our next-gen offerings, including Foresight, micro markets, player props, and the virtual live match tracker, over the course of the year.
Speaker #3: This rapid integration and uptake validates our flywheel. We can monetize this content across more customers and products to unlock significant accretive revenue growth. In terms of our sports coverage, we are unmatched in quality and depth.
Carsten Koerl: This rapid integration and uptake validates our flywheel. We can monetize this content across more customers and products to unlock significant accretive revenue growth. In terms of our sports coverage, we are unmatched in quality and depth. We cover more than 1 million matches annually, the scale of betting content and data powers more odds generation, helps scale our video streams, and grows our MTS trading liquidity. In addition to acquire over 70 sport rights in IMG acquisition during 2025, we also renewed our partnership with MLB, which provides for both expanded territories and media rights. The first season of our new MLB deal performed strongly, tracking ahead of plan. We recently strengthened our soccer rights by successfully renewing IMG's German DFB Cup rights through 2032.
Carsten Koerl: This rapid integration and uptake validates our flywheel. We can monetize this content across more customers and products to unlock significant accretive revenue growth. In terms of our sports coverage, we are unmatched in quality and depth. We cover more than 1 million matches annually, the scale of betting content and data powers more odds generation, helps scale our video streams, and grows our MTS trading liquidity. In addition to acquire over 70 sport rights in IMG acquisition during 2025, we also renewed our partnership with MLB, which provides for both expanded territories and media rights. The first season of our new MLB deal performed strongly, tracking ahead of plan. We recently strengthened our soccer rights by successfully renewing IMG's German DFB Cup rights through 2032.
Speaker #3: We cover more than 1 million matches annually, and this scale of betting content and data powers more odds generation, helps scale our video streams, and grows our MTS trading liquidity.
Speaker #3: In addition to acquiring over 70 sports rights in the IMG acquisition, during 2025, we also renewed our partnership with MLB, which provides for both expanded territories and media rights.
Speaker #3: The first season of our new MLB deal performed strongly, tracking ahead of plan. And we recently strengthened our soccer rights by successfully renewing IMG's German DFB Cup rights through 2032.
Speaker #3: We also continue to make great strides engaging sports fans, and we lead the shift toward a more personalized and interactive experience. We know sports fans and their behavior better than anybody, thanks to our unique data points that we collect, and we are continually looking for new ways to engage them and enhance the experience.
Carsten Koerl: We also continue to make great strides engaging sports fans. We lead the shift toward more personalized and interactive experience. We know sports fans and their behavior better than anybody, thanks to our unique data points that we collect, and we are continually looking for new ways to engage them and enhance their experience. That's why we recently upgraded our 4Sight streaming product to deliver deeper storytelling and contextual data-rich visualizations. Last quarter, we talked about one of the most exciting recent AI breakthroughs, the development of a generated foundation model for basketball, the first of its kind in sports. The model is based on a large transformer architecture which trains using billions of 3-D body pose data points from thousands of NBA games, allowing the model to understand player movement, decision-making, and game flow at an unprecedented level of detail.
Carsten Koerl: We also continue to make great strides engaging sports fans. We lead the shift toward more personalized and interactive experience. We know sports fans and their behavior better than anybody, thanks to our unique data points that we collect, and we are continually looking for new ways to engage them and enhance their experience. That's why we recently upgraded our 4Sight streaming product to deliver deeper storytelling and contextual data-rich visualizations. Last quarter, we talked about one of the most exciting recent AI breakthroughs, the development of a generated foundation model for basketball, the first of its kind in sports. The model is based on a large transformer architecture which trains using billions of 3-D body pose data points from thousands of NBA games, allowing the model to understand player movement, decision-making, and game flow at an unprecedented level of detail.
Speaker #3: That's why we recently upgraded our foresight streaming products to deliver deeper storytelling and contextual data-rich visualizations. Last quarter, we talked about one of the most exciting reasons AI breaks through: the development of a generative foundation model for basketball, a first of its kind in sports.
Speaker #3: The model is based on a large transformer architecture, which trains using billions of 3D body pose data points from thousands of NBA games, allowing the model to understand player movements, decision-making, and game flow at an unprecedented level of detail.
Speaker #3: This foundation model powers predictive insights in real-time and we are using it to enhance our foresight streaming product bringing richer, more interactive visualizations to live broadcasts.
Carsten Koerl: This foundation model powers predictive insights in real time, we are using it to enhance our 4Sight streaming product, bringing richer, more interactive visualizations to live broadcasts. We have plans to expand this foundation model to additional sports, including in soccer for the World Cup and tennis later this year. These innovations and the deeper engagement these products foster, combined with our increased sport coverage, are boosting our streaming activity. Last year, we streamed over 525,000 matches, which is 100,000 more than we streamed just two years ago. In 2026, we anticipate to stream over 700,000 matches across our global footprint. Switching to our managed trading services. We continue to scale this business in related markets around the globe, and we see continued strong momentum ahead.
Carsten Koerl: This foundation model powers predictive insights in real time, we are using it to enhance our 4Sight streaming product, bringing richer, more interactive visualizations to live broadcasts. We have plans to expand this foundation model to additional sports, including in soccer for the World Cup and tennis later this year. These innovations and the deeper engagement these products foster, combined with our increased sport coverage, are boosting our streaming activity. Last year, we streamed over 525,000 matches, which is 100,000 more than we streamed just two years ago. In 2026, we anticipate to stream over 700,000 matches across our global footprint. Switching to our managed trading services. We continue to scale this business in related markets around the globe, and we see continued strong momentum ahead.
Speaker #3: We have plans to expand this foundation model to additional sports, including in soccer, for the World Cup and tennis later this year. These innovations and the deeper engagement these products foster combined with our increased sports coverage are boosting our streaming activity.
Speaker #3: Last year, we streamed over 525,000 matches, which is 100,000 more than we streamed just two years ago. And in 2026, we anticipate to stream over 700,000 matches across our global footprint.
Speaker #3: Switching to our managed trading services, we continue to scale this business in related markets around the globe, and we see continued strong momentum ahead.
Speaker #3: Turnover for 2025 was up 26% year over year, to 52 billion dollars, making us a top bookmaker globally. Our proven AI-driven trading and risk management capabilities combined with the diversity of sports on our MTS platform enabled us to achieve a margin of nearly 11% for our clients in 2025.
Carsten Koerl: Turnover for 2025 was up 26% year-over-year to $52 billion, making us a top bookmaker globally. Our proven AI-driven trading and risk management capabilities, combined with the diversity of sports on our MTS platform, enabled us to achieve a margin of nearly 11% for our clients in 2025. Turning to our media and marketing segment. Our ads business delivered strong record volumes on our DSP for both the Q4 and the full year. In 2025, DSP volume grew 35% year-over-year, reflecting increased demand for our data-driven advertising solutions. We saw robust performance across multiple channels, which underscores both the strong ROI of our campaigns and the scalability of our platform based on our proprietary software development. At our global media business, we continue to see strong demand as sports viewership transitions from linear to digital and mobile streaming.
Carsten Koerl: Turnover for 2025 was up 26% year-over-year to $52 billion, making us a top bookmaker globally. Our proven AI-driven trading and risk management capabilities, combined with the diversity of sports on our MTS platform, enabled us to achieve a margin of nearly 11% for our clients in 2025. Turning to our media and marketing segment. Our ads business delivered strong record volumes on our DSP for both the Q4 and the full year. In 2025, DSP volume grew 35% year-over-year, reflecting increased demand for our data-driven advertising solutions. We saw robust performance across multiple channels, which underscores both the strong ROI of our campaigns and the scalability of our platform based on our proprietary software development. At our global media business, we continue to see strong demand as sports viewership transitions from linear to digital and mobile streaming.
Speaker #3: Turning to our media and marketing segment, our ads business delivered strong record volumes on our DSP for both the fourth quarter and the full year.
Speaker #3: In 2025, DSP volume grew 35% year over year, reflecting increased demand for our data-driven advertising solutions. We saw robust performance across multiple channels, which underscores both the strong ROI of our campaigns and the scalability of our platform based on our proprietary software development.
Speaker #3: At our global media business, we continue to see strong demand as sports viewership transitions from linear to digital and mobile streaming. Last quarter, we announced a partnership with NBC to develop a customized version of foresight for NBA basketball for Peacock's performance view.
Carsten Koerl: Last quarter, we announced a partnership with NBC to develop a customized version of 4Sight for NBA basketball for Peacock Performance View. This product has drawn rave reviews from sports fans, giving them real-time stats that break down the game, including where a player is most likely to score from next. We recently announced a partnership with NBC's regional sports networks to enhance their fan NBA viewing experience. By leveraging our AI capabilities, we are transforming live NBA player tracking data into on-air graphics, animated replays, and customized analytics to enhance the live game coverage and experience. GenAI companies are turning to our data and media APIs to power their sports experiences. We have secured agreements with a number of the GenAI leaders to provide their users with deeper insights and real-time updates.
Carsten Koerl: Last quarter, we announced a partnership with NBC to develop a customized version of 4Sight for NBA basketball for Peacock Performance View. This product has drawn rave reviews from sports fans, giving them real-time stats that break down the game, including where a player is most likely to score from next. We recently announced a partnership with NBC's regional sports networks to enhance their fan NBA viewing experience. By leveraging our AI capabilities, we are transforming live NBA player tracking data into on-air graphics, animated replays, and customized analytics to enhance the live game coverage and experience. GenAI companies are turning to our data and media APIs to power their sports experiences. We have secured agreements with a number of the GenAI leaders to provide their users with deeper insights and real-time updates.
Speaker #3: This product has drawn rave reviews from sports fans, giving them real-time stats that break down the game including where a player is most likely to score from next.
Speaker #3: And we recently announced a partnership with NBC's regional sports networks to enhance their fan NBA viewing experience. By leveraging our AI capabilities, we are transforming live NBA player tracking data into on-air graphics, animated replays, and customized athletics to enhance the live game coverage and experience.
Speaker #3: GenAI companies are turning to our data and media APIs to power their sports experiences. We have secured agreements with a number of the GenAI leaders to provide their users with deeper insights and real-time updates.
Speaker #3: At this platform's increasingly looked to engage their audiences by integrating live sports data and insights, demand for our content and capabilities continues to grow.
Carsten Koerl: As these platforms increasingly look to engage their audiences by integrating live sports data and insights, demand for our content and capabilities continues to grow. Now turning to prediction markets. This is a rapidly developing opportunity in the US and one where we are uniquely positioned to capitalize as the B2B leader in our industry with our premium sport rights portfolio and unmatched product suite. The prediction markets expands to Sportradar by opening up the US market and is naturally high-growth extension for our core business. Our focus is to monetize this opportunity while delivering the accuracy, integrity, and scale that the exchanges and market makers needs to grow responsibly. We have been working with the NHL, MLS, UFC, and other league partners to establish clear safeguards and standards that we will look to implement as part of any sports prediction market agreement.
Carsten Koerl: As these platforms increasingly look to engage their audiences by integrating live sports data and insights, demand for our content and capabilities continues to grow. Now turning to prediction markets. This is a rapidly developing opportunity in the US and one where we are uniquely positioned to capitalize as the B2B leader in our industry with our premium sport rights portfolio and unmatched product suite. The prediction markets expands to Sportradar by opening up the US market and is naturally high-growth extension for our core business. Our focus is to monetize this opportunity while delivering the accuracy, integrity, and scale that the exchanges and market makers needs to grow responsibly. We have been working with the NHL, MLS, UFC, and other league partners to establish clear safeguards and standards that we will look to implement as part of any sports prediction market agreement.
Speaker #3: Now turning to prediction markets, this is a rapidly developing opportunity in the US and one where we are uniquely positioned to capitalize as the B2B leader in our industry with our premium sports rights portfolio and unmatched product suite.
Speaker #3: The prediction markets expand the sports stem by opening up the US market and is naturally high growth extension for our core business. Our focus is to monetize this opportunity while delivering the accuracy, integrity, and scale that the exchanges and market makers need to grow responsibly.
Speaker #3: We have been working with the NHL, MLS, UFC, and other league partners to establish clear safeguards and standards that we will look to implement as part of any sport prediction market agreement.
Speaker #3: We are uniquely positioned to unlock meaningful commercial value. We have the ability to power this market and to end with our load agency official data AI-driven technology.
Carsten Koerl: We are uniquely positioned to unlock meaningful commercial value. We have the ability to power this market end-to-end with our low latency official data AI-driven technology to predict pricing and liquidity, fan engagement solutions, marketing services, and our industry-leading integrity services. We are already seeing strong demand from our marketing services from both major exchanges and our OSB clients as they look to us to help them to acquire customers. Prediction markets are an exciting new avenue of growth for our company, and we are currently in detailed commercial discussions with the key players and expect to announce more on this front soon. Now looking into 2026, we see continued strong momentum in our business as we execute on our growth strategy and as we leverage IMG's content across our larger customer base and broader product suites to realize significant revenue synergies.
Carsten Koerl: We are uniquely positioned to unlock meaningful commercial value. We have the ability to power this market end-to-end with our low latency official data AI-driven technology to predict pricing and liquidity, fan engagement solutions, marketing services, and our industry-leading integrity services. We are already seeing strong demand from our marketing services from both major exchanges and our OSB clients as they look to us to help them to acquire customers. Prediction markets are an exciting new avenue of growth for our company, and we are currently in detailed commercial discussions with the key players and expect to announce more on this front soon. Now looking into 2026, we see continued strong momentum in our business as we execute on our growth strategy and as we leverage IMG's content across our larger customer base and broader product suites to realize significant revenue synergies.
Speaker #3: To predict pricing and liquidity, fan engagement solutions, marketing services, and our industry-leading integrity services. We are already seeing strong demand for our marketing services from both major exchanges and our OSB clients, as they look to us to help them acquire customers.
Speaker #3: Prediction markets are an exciting new avenue of growth for our company, and we are currently in detailed commercial discussions with the key players. We expect to announce more on this front soon.
Speaker #3: Now looking into 2026, we see continued strong momentum in our business as we execute on our growth strategy and as we leverage IMG's content across our larger customer base and broader product suite to realize significant revenue synergies.
Speaker #3: The 2026 FIFA World Cup in June will be a meaningful opportunity for the betting industry and for our company. There are nearly double the teams compared to the last World Cup and over 100 matches.
Carsten Koerl: The 2026 FIFA World Cup in June will be a meaningful opportunity for the betting industry and for our company. There are nearly double the teams compared to the last World Cup and over 100 matches. With 200 live markets, 200 pre-match markets, and as well as Player Props and Micro Markets, volumes should easily exceed $35 billion of turnover in the last World Cup. With new avenues for growth emerging, including prediction markets, we expect to continue to generate robust growth in 2026 and continue to deliver on our long-term growth strategy and guidance. We are relentlessly about creating value for our partners and customers, and the uptake of our products and services is a clear demonstration that our investment in content, technology, and product innovation are paying off.
Carsten Koerl: The 2026 FIFA World Cup in June will be a meaningful opportunity for the betting industry and for our company. There are nearly double the teams compared to the last World Cup and over 100 matches. With 200 live markets, 200 pre-match markets, and as well as Player Props and Micro Markets, volumes should easily exceed $35 billion of turnover in the last World Cup. With new avenues for growth emerging, including prediction markets, we expect to continue to generate robust growth in 2026 and continue to deliver on our long-term growth strategy and guidance. We are relentlessly about creating value for our partners and customers, and the uptake of our products and services is a clear demonstration that our investment in content, technology, and product innovation are paying off.
Speaker #3: With 200 live markets, 200 pre-match markets, and as well as player props and micro markets, volumes should easily exceed 35 billion US dollars of turnover in the last World Cup.
Speaker #3: And with new avenues for growth emerging including prediction markets, we expect to continue to generate robust growth in 2026 and continue to deliver on our long-term growth strategy and guidance.
Speaker #3: We are a relentlessly about creating value for our partners and customers. And the uptake of our product and services is a clear demonstration that our investment in content, technology, and product innovation are paying off.
Speaker #3: Our unique position as a supplier and innovator is unmatched and we couldn't be more excited about the future. Thank you. I will now turn over to Greg, who will discuss our financial results in greater detail.
Carsten Koerl: Our unique position as a supplier and innovator is unmatched, and we couldn't be more excited about the future. Thank you. I will now turn over to Greg, who will discuss our financial results in greater detail.
Carsten Koerl: Our unique position as a supplier and innovator is unmatched, and we couldn't be more excited about the future. Thank you. I will now turn over to Greg, who will discuss our financial results in greater detail.
Speaker #2: Thanks, Carsten. And thank you, everyone, for joining us this morning. The strong financial results and operating momentum Sportradar generated throughout 2025 once again demonstrates the demand for the robust content and product portfolio we have built.
Gerard Griffin: Thanks, Carsten. Thank you everyone for joining us this morning. The strong financial results and operating momentum Sportradar generated throughout 2025 once again demonstrates the demand for the robust content and product portfolio we have built as we leverage it across an unmatched global customer base. The value we are creating for our sports, media, technology, and betting partners is translating into sustained top-line growth. Given our stable and predictable cost base, we are delivering significant margin expansion and cash flow generation. The opportunistic acquisition of IMG has further strengthened our competitive position, and in the two months following close, we have already begun delivering real revenue and cost synergies related to this content.
Gerard Griffin: Thanks, Carsten. Thank you everyone for joining us this morning. The strong financial results and operating momentum Sportradar generated throughout 2025 once again demonstrates the demand for the robust content and product portfolio we have built as we leverage it across an unmatched global customer base. The value we are creating for our sports, media, technology, and betting partners is translating into sustained top-line growth. Given our stable and predictable cost base, we are delivering significant margin expansion and cash flow generation. The opportunistic acquisition of IMG has further strengthened our competitive position, and in the two months following close, we have already begun delivering real revenue and cost synergies related to this content.
Speaker #2: As we leverage it across an unmatched global customer base, the value we are creating for our sports media, technology, and betting partners is translating into sustained top-line growth, and given our stable and predictable cost base, we are delivering significant margin expansion and cash flow generation.
Speaker #2: The opportunistic acquisition of IMG has further strengthened our competitive position, and in the two months following close, we have already begun delivering real revenue and cost synergies related to this content.
Speaker #2: I will provide additional color on these synergies later in my remarks, but before I focus on the fourth quarter performance, it is important to recognize the meaningful value that Sportradar created this past year.
Gerard Griffin: I will provide additional color on these synergies later in my remarks. Before I focus on the Q4 performance, it is important to recognize the meaningful value that Sportradar created this past year. Total company revenue for the full year of $1.3 billion increased $183 million or 17% compared with 2024, driven in large part by higher uptake from our existing partners, strong US market growth, record managed trading services turnover, and contributions related to IMG content. Our growth was broad-based with strength across our product portfolio, including betting and gaming content, managed trading services, and our marketing and media services business. We generated strong gains both in the US and globally, with the US up 23% year-over-year, now 25% of our total revenue, and the rest of the world up 15%.
Gerard Griffin: I will provide additional color on these synergies later in my remarks. Before I focus on the Q4 performance, it is important to recognize the meaningful value that Sportradar created this past year. Total company revenue for the full year of $1.3 billion increased $183 million or 17% compared with 2024, driven in large part by higher uptake from our existing partners, strong US market growth, record managed trading services turnover, and contributions related to IMG content. Our growth was broad-based with strength across our product portfolio, including betting and gaming content, managed trading services, and our marketing and media services business. We generated strong gains both in the US and globally, with the US up 23% year-over-year, now 25% of our total revenue, and the rest of the world up 15%.
Speaker #2: Total company revenue for the full year of $1.3 billion increased 183 million or 17% compared with 2024, driven in large part by higher uptake from our existing partners, strong US market growth, record managed trading services turnover, and contributions related to IMG content.
Speaker #2: Our growth was broad-based, with strength across our product portfolio, including betting and gaming content, managed trading services, and our marketing and media services business.
Speaker #2: We generated strong gains both in the US and globally, with the US up 23% year on year—now 25% of our total revenue—and the rest of the world up 15%.
Speaker #2: Importantly, the steps we have taken to align our cost base with the revenue opportunities are enabling us to deliver significant operating leverage. Record adjusted EBITDA of $297 million for the year increased $74 million, or 33%, compared with a year ago, and the company increased full-year adjusted EBITDA margins by over 290 basis points to 23%.
Gerard Griffin: Importantly, the steps we have taken to align our cost base with the revenue opportunities are enabling us to deliver significant operating leverage. Record Adjusted EBITDA of $297 million for the year increased $74 million or 33% compared with a year ago, and the company increased full year Adjusted EBITDA margins by over 290 basis points to 23%. The revenue, margin expansion, and cash flow we have generated this year puts us ahead of our year 1 expectations with regards to the 3-year targets we laid out at Investor Day, and we expect to build on this momentum in 2026. Turning to the Q4, Sportradar generated revenues of $369 million, an increase of $62 million or 20% compared with the Q4 a year ago.
Gerard Griffin: Importantly, the steps we have taken to align our cost base with the revenue opportunities are enabling us to deliver significant operating leverage. Record Adjusted EBITDA of $297 million for the year increased $74 million or 33% compared with a year ago, and the company increased full year Adjusted EBITDA margins by over 290 basis points to 23%. The revenue, margin expansion, and cash flow we have generated this year puts us ahead of our year 1 expectations with regards to the 3-year targets we laid out at Investor Day, and we expect to build on this momentum in 2026. Turning to the Q4, Sportradar generated revenues of $369 million, an increase of $62 million or 20% compared with the Q4 a year ago.
Speaker #2: The revenue, margin expansion, and cash flow we have generated this year put us ahead of our year-one expectations with regards to the three-year targets we laid out at Investor Day.
Speaker #2: And we expect to build on this momentum in 2026. Turning to the fourth quarter, Sportradar generated revenues of $369 million, an increase of 62 million or 20% compared with the fourth quarter a year ago, as we continue to outperform market growth by deepening our client relationships through cross-selling and upselling as demonstrated by our customer net retention rate of 109%, which excludes the contributions from IMG.
Gerard Griffin: As we continue to outperform market growth by deepening our client relationships through cross-selling and upselling, as demonstrated by our customer net retention rate of 109%, which excludes the contributions from IMG. As we have discussed previously, foreign currency movements, most notably due to the US dollar relative to the euro, continue to be a headwind and revenue growth in Q4 would have been approximately 22% on a constant currency basis. Looking at the individual product groupings, growth in the quarter was principally driven by our vetting technology and solutions products with revenue of $305 million growing 24% versus Q4 a year ago.
Gerard Griffin: As we continue to outperform market growth by deepening our client relationships through cross-selling and upselling, as demonstrated by our customer net retention rate of 109%, which excludes the contributions from IMG. As we have discussed previously, foreign currency movements, most notably due to the US dollar relative to the euro, continue to be a headwind and revenue growth in Q4 would have been approximately 22% on a constant currency basis. Looking at the individual product groupings, growth in the quarter was principally driven by our vetting technology and solutions products with revenue of $305 million growing 24% versus Q4 a year ago.
Speaker #2: As we have discussed previously, foreign currency movements most notably due to the US dollar relative to the euro continue to be a headwind, and revenue growth in the fourth quarter would have been approximately 22% on a constant currency basis.
Speaker #2: Looking at the individual product groupings, growth in the quarter was principally driven by our betting technology and solutions products, with revenue of $305 million growing 24% versus the fourth quarter a year ago.
Speaker #2: The increase was driven primarily by 29% growth in betting and gaming content including strong growth in both our streaming and betting engagement products as well as odds and live data products, which saw growth from existing and new customers.
Gerard Griffin: The increase was driven primarily by 29% growth in betting and gaming content, including strong growth in both our streaming and betting engagement products, as well as odds and live data products, which saw growth from existing and new customers. With regards to IMG, we are already delivering on a variety of revenue synergies with a significant number of Sportradar customers consuming IMG content, integration of IMG content into Sportradar's broader product suite, and the sale of additional Sportradar content to IMG customers. Managed betting services grew 5% in Q4, led by the sustained momentum in managed trading services, with higher volumes from our existing customer base partially offset by lower platform revenues due to one-time installation fees a year ago.
Gerard Griffin: The increase was driven primarily by 29% growth in betting and gaming content, including strong growth in both our streaming and betting engagement products, as well as odds and live data products, which saw growth from existing and new customers. With regards to IMG, we are already delivering on a variety of revenue synergies with a significant number of Sportradar customers consuming IMG content, integration of IMG content into Sportradar's broader product suite, and the sale of additional Sportradar content to IMG customers. Managed betting services grew 5% in Q4, led by the sustained momentum in managed trading services, with higher volumes from our existing customer base partially offset by lower platform revenues due to one-time installation fees a year ago.
Speaker #2: With regards to IMG, we are already delivering on a variety of revenue synergies, with a significant number of Sportradar customers consuming IMG content, integration of IMG content into Sportradar's broader product suite, and the sale of additional Sportradar content to IMG customers.
Speaker #2: Managed betting services grew 5% in Q4, led by the sustained momentum in managed trading services, with higher volumes from our existing customer base partially offset by lower platform revenues due to a one-time installation fee a year ago.
Speaker #2: Moving to our other product group, sports content, technology, and services delivered revenues of $63 million increasing 5% year on year led by a 13% increase in marketing and media services, primarily from increased uptake from technology and media companies and from contributions related to our expanded affiliate marketing capabilities.
Gerard Griffin: Moving to our other product group, sports content, technology, and services delivered revenues of $63 million, increasing 5% year-on-year, led by a 13% increase in marketing and media services, primarily from increased uptake from technology and media companies and from contributions related to our expanded affiliate marketing capabilities. Sports performance declined year-on-year in the quarter, primarily due to the timing of revenue, with full-year sports performance revenue growth accelerating to 8%. Similar to the full year, our growth in the quarter was geographically broad-based, with US revenue up 11% and rest of world revenue up 23%. Headwinds from foreign currency movements, and to a lesser extent, the timing of sports performance revenues, significantly impacted US reported revenue. On a constant currency basis, the US revenue growth in the Q4 would have been approximately 18%.
Gerard Griffin: Moving to our other product group, sports content, technology, and services delivered revenues of $63 million, increasing 5% year-on-year, led by a 13% increase in marketing and media services, primarily from increased uptake from technology and media companies and from contributions related to our expanded affiliate marketing capabilities. Sports performance declined year-on-year in the quarter, primarily due to the timing of revenue, with full-year sports performance revenue growth accelerating to 8%. Similar to the full year, our growth in the quarter was geographically broad-based, with US revenue up 11% and rest of world revenue up 23%. Headwinds from foreign currency movements, and to a lesser extent, the timing of sports performance revenues, significantly impacted US reported revenue. On a constant currency basis, the US revenue growth in the Q4 would have been approximately 18%.
Speaker #2: Sports performance declined year on year in the quarter, primarily due to the timing of revenue, with full-year sports performance revenue growth accelerating to our growth in the quarter was geographically broad-based with US revenue up 11% and rest of world revenue up 23%.
Speaker #2: Headwinds from foreign currency movements and to a lesser extent the timing of sports performance revenues significantly impacted US reported revenue. On a constant currency basis, US revenue growth in the fourth quarter would have been approximately 18%.
Speaker #2: The strong revenue growth translated into significant adjusted EBITDA growth in the fourth quarter, with adjusted EBITDA of $89 million increasing 48% year on year.
Gerard Griffin: The strong revenue growth translated into significant Adjusted EBITDA growth in Q4, with Adjusted EBITDA of $89 million, increasing 48% year-over-year. Our continued focus on cost efficiencies, combined with our stable sports rights costs, enabled us to deliver significant operating leverage with our Adjusted EBITDA margin expanding approximately 450 basis points to 24.2%. Please note that, as anticipated, the acquisition of IMG was margin accretive for both the Q4 and year, and we have already begun to realize some of the cost synergies identified as part of the transaction, including efficiencies in scouting, audiovisual production, and general corporate overhead. Looking at the individual cost buckets, I will be speaking to adjusted expenses to provide a breakdown of the expenses that impact Adjusted EBITDA.
Gerard Griffin: The strong revenue growth translated into significant Adjusted EBITDA growth in Q4, with Adjusted EBITDA of $89 million, increasing 48% year-over-year. Our continued focus on cost efficiencies, combined with our stable sports rights costs, enabled us to deliver significant operating leverage with our Adjusted EBITDA margin expanding approximately 450 basis points to 24.2%. Please note that, as anticipated, the acquisition of IMG was margin accretive for both the Q4 and year, and we have already begun to realize some of the cost synergies identified as part of the transaction, including efficiencies in scouting, audiovisual production, and general corporate overhead. Looking at the individual cost buckets, I will be speaking to adjusted expenses to provide a breakdown of the expenses that impact Adjusted EBITDA.
Speaker #2: Our continued focus on cost efficiencies, combined with our stable sports rights costs, enabled us to deliver significant operating leverage, with our adjusted EBITDA margin expanding approximately 450 basis points to 24.2%.
Speaker #2: Please note that as anticipated, the acquisition of IMG was margin accretive for both the quarter and year, and we have already begun to realize some of the cost synergies identified as part of the transaction.
Speaker #2: Including efficiencies in scouting, audio-visual production, and general corporate overhead. Looking at the individual cost buckets, I will be speaking to adjusted expenses to provide a breakdown of the expenses that impact adjusted EBITDA.
Speaker #2: We have detailed in the earnings release and the financial section of the earnings presentation the bridge from IFRS amounts. This past quarter, sports rights expense increased 18% year on year to $122 million, due primarily to the addition of the IMG premium rights and the continued success of ATP.
Gerard Griffin: We have detailed in the earnings release and the financial section of the earnings presentation the bridge from IFRS amounts. This past quarter, sports rights expense increased 18% year-over-year to $122 million, due primarily to the addition of the IMG premium rights and the continued success of ATP. We will remain disciplined and strategic with regard to any additional rights we acquire. With all of our major rights deals locked in long term, we have significant visibility on sports rights costs moving forward. This visibility gives us confidence in our ability to drive operating leverage across our sports portfolio as we capitalize on the value of our high demand sports content and the premium products we have developed for our global customer base.
Gerard Griffin: We have detailed in the earnings release and the financial section of the earnings presentation the bridge from IFRS amounts. This past quarter, sports rights expense increased 18% year-over-year to $122 million, due primarily to the addition of the IMG premium rights and the continued success of ATP. We will remain disciplined and strategic with regard to any additional rights we acquire. With all of our major rights deals locked in long term, we have significant visibility on sports rights costs moving forward. This visibility gives us confidence in our ability to drive operating leverage across our sports portfolio as we capitalize on the value of our high demand sports content and the premium products we have developed for our global customer base.
Speaker #2: We will remain disciplined and strategic with regard to any additional rights we acquire, and with all of our major rights deals locked in long-term, we have significant visibility on sports rights costs moving forward.
Speaker #2: This visibility gives us confidence in our ability to drive operating leverage across our sports portfolio, as we capitalize on the value of our high-demand sports content and the premium products we have developed for our global customer base.
Speaker #2: Adjusted personnel expenses were $79 million in the quarter, up 9% year on year, driven primarily by IMG costs and, to a lesser extent, increased headcount to support growth opportunities.
Gerard Griffin: Adjusted personnel expenses were $79 million in the quarter, up 9% year-on-year, driven primarily by IMG costs and, to a lesser extent, increased headcount to support growth opportunities. We did benefit during the quarter from a lower bonus accrual versus a year ago. Importantly, our Adjusted personnel expenses continued to decline as a percentage of revenue, down over 220 basis points versus last year as we closely manage headcount, focusing talent and resources on the most profitable growth opportunities. Adjusted purchase services of $45 million in the quarter increased only 2% versus last year, driven by higher cloud and traffic costs. Overall, Adjusted purchase services declined by over 220 basis points as a percentage of revenue as we further leverage our existing infrastructure.
Gerard Griffin: Adjusted personnel expenses were $79 million in the quarter, up 9% year-on-year, driven primarily by IMG costs and, to a lesser extent, increased headcount to support growth opportunities. We did benefit during the quarter from a lower bonus accrual versus a year ago. Importantly, our Adjusted personnel expenses continued to decline as a percentage of revenue, down over 220 basis points versus last year as we closely manage headcount, focusing talent and resources on the most profitable growth opportunities. Adjusted purchase services of $45 million in the quarter increased only 2% versus last year, driven by higher cloud and traffic costs. Overall, Adjusted purchase services declined by over 220 basis points as a percentage of revenue as we further leverage our existing infrastructure.
Speaker #2: We did benefit during the quarter from a lower bonus accrual versus a year ago. Importantly, our adjusted personnel expenses continued to decline as the percentage of revenue, down over 220 basis points versus last year.
Speaker #2: As we closely manage headcount, focusing talent and resources on the most profitable growth opportunities. Adjusted purchased services of $45 million in the quarter increased only 2% versus last year, driven by higher cloud and traffic costs.
Speaker #2: Overall, adjusted purchased services declined by over 220 basis points as the percentage of revenue, as we further leverage our existing infrastructure. Adjusted other operating expenses of $34 million in the quarter were up 25%, primarily due to costs associated with the Brazilian market and IMG.
Gerard Griffin: Adjusted to other operating expenses of $34 million in the quarter were up 25%, primarily due to costs associated with the Brazilian market and IMG. Overall, we achieved significant operating leverage in 2025, and we continue to see meaningful opportunity to deliver sustained margin expansion over the long term given the inherent scale we have in our business and our long-term cost visibility. As we drive further revenue opportunities, including scaling IMG, we will continue to closely manage our cost structure and realize the benefits of sports rights being amortized on a straight line basis over the life of these contracts. Delivering more of every dollar of revenue to our bottom line.
Gerard Griffin: Adjusted to other operating expenses of $34 million in the quarter were up 25%, primarily due to costs associated with the Brazilian market and IMG. Overall, we achieved significant operating leverage in 2025, and we continue to see meaningful opportunity to deliver sustained margin expansion over the long term given the inherent scale we have in our business and our long-term cost visibility. As we drive further revenue opportunities, including scaling IMG, we will continue to closely manage our cost structure and realize the benefits of sports rights being amortized on a straight line basis over the life of these contracts. Delivering more of every dollar of revenue to our bottom line.
Speaker #2: Overall, we achieved significant operating leverage in 2025, and we continue to see meaningful opportunity to deliver sustained margin expansion over the long-term given the inherent scale we have in our business and our long-term cost visibility.
Speaker #2: As we drive further revenue opportunities, including scaling IMG, we will continue to closely manage our cost structure and realize the benefits of sports rights being amortized on a straight-line basis over the life of these contracts, delivering more of every dollar of revenue to our bottom line.
Speaker #2: Looking at the full P&L, we generated a profit for the quarter of $4,000,000 versus a loss of $1,000,000 in the same period a year ago.
Gerard Griffin: Looking at the full P&L, we generated a profit for the quarter of $4 million versus a loss of $1 million in the same period a year ago, driven by strong operating results as well as a $35 million lower unrealized foreign currency loss, primarily associated with our US dollar-denominated sports rights. The current quarter also included an income tax benefit of $6 million as compared to $20 million last year, driven primarily by the recognition of deferred tax assets as well as M&A and non-routine litigation costs this quarter. Turning to the balance sheet, we continue to be in a strong liquidity position, closing the quarter with $365 million in cash and cash equivalents and no debt outstanding.
Gerard Griffin: Looking at the full P&L, we generated a profit for the quarter of $4 million versus a loss of $1 million in the same period a year ago, driven by strong operating results as well as a $35 million lower unrealized foreign currency loss, primarily associated with our US dollar-denominated sports rights. The current quarter also included an income tax benefit of $6 million as compared to $20 million last year, driven primarily by the recognition of deferred tax assets as well as M&A and non-routine litigation costs this quarter. Turning to the balance sheet, we continue to be in a strong liquidity position, closing the quarter with $365 million in cash and cash equivalents and no debt outstanding.
Speaker #2: Driven by strong operating results as well as a $35,000,000 lower unrealized foreign currency loss, primarily associated with our US dollar-denominated sports rights. The current quarter also included an income tax benefit of $6,000,000 as compared to $20,000,000 last year, driven primarily by the recognition of deferred tax assets as well as M&A and non-routine litigation costs this quarter.
Speaker #2: Turning to the balance sheet, we continue to be in a strong liquidity position, closing the quarter with $365 million in cash and cash equivalents and no debt outstanding.
Speaker #2: For the full year, we generated free cash flow of $167,000,000 or a free cash flow conversion rate of 56% compared to free cash flow of $118,000,000 or a 53% conversion rate in 2024.
Gerard Griffin: For the full year, we generated free cash flow of $167 million or a free cash flow conversion rate of 56% compared to free cash flow of $118 million or a 53% conversion rate in 2024. The increase in free cash flow was driven by strong operating cash flow, partially offset by higher sports rights payments. Cash and cash equivalents increased $17 million since the end of 2024 as the strong free cash flow generation was partially offset primarily by share repurchases, including $91 million under our share repurchase plan with $25 million acquired during Q4. As Carsten mentioned, given the disconnect between our share price and the fundamental strength of our business, we continue to opportunistically repurchase shares and have already acquired an additional $60 million of stock in the first two months of 2026.
Gerard Griffin: For the full year, we generated free cash flow of $167 million or a free cash flow conversion rate of 56% compared to free cash flow of $118 million or a 53% conversion rate in 2024. The increase in free cash flow was driven by strong operating cash flow, partially offset by higher sports rights payments. Cash and cash equivalents increased $17 million since the end of 2024 as the strong free cash flow generation was partially offset primarily by share repurchases, including $91 million under our share repurchase plan with $25 million acquired during Q4. As Carsten mentioned, given the disconnect between our share price and the fundamental strength of our business, we continue to opportunistically repurchase shares and have already acquired an additional $60 million of stock in the first two months of 2026.
Speaker #2: The increase in free cash flow, which is driven by strong operating cash flow, partially offset by higher sports rights payments. Cash and cash equivalents increased $17,000,000 since the end of 2024 as the strong free cash flow generation was partially offset primarily by share repurchases including $91,000,000 under our share repurchase plan with $25,000,000 acquired during the fourth quarter.
Speaker #2: As Carsten mentioned, given the disconnect between our share price and the fundamental strength of our business, we continue to opportunistically repurchase shares and have already acquired an additional $60 million of stock in the first two months of 2026.
Speaker #2: Given the continued discount we see in our shares, the significant momentum in the business, and the value we are creating, the board has approved another significant increase in our share repurchase program, raising the total plan by an additional $700,000,000 to bring the total authorization to $1,000,000,000.
Gerard Griffin: Given the continued discount we see in our shares, the significant momentum in the business and the value we are creating, the board has approved another significant increase in our share repurchase program, raising the total plan by an additional $700 million to bring the total authorization to $1 billion. In total, we have already purchased over $170 million of stock, leaving approximately $830 million remaining under the plan. Turning to our expectations for the year, given the sustained operating momentum we are seeing across our business and the significant synergies we are generating related to IMG, we anticipate an acceleration in growth in 2026.
Gerard Griffin: Given the continued discount we see in our shares, the significant momentum in the business and the value we are creating, the board has approved another significant increase in our share repurchase program, raising the total plan by an additional $700 million to bring the total authorization to $1 billion. In total, we have already purchased over $170 million of stock, leaving approximately $830 million remaining under the plan. Turning to our expectations for the year, given the sustained operating momentum we are seeing across our business and the significant synergies we are generating related to IMG, we anticipate an acceleration in growth in 2026.
Speaker #2: In total, we have already purchased over $170,000,000 of stock, leaving approximately $830,000,000 remaining under the plan. Turning to our expectations for the year, given the sustained operating momentum, we are seeing across our business and a significant synergies we are generating related to IMG, we anticipate an acceleration in growth in 2026.
Speaker #2: As we initially indicated on last quarter's earnings call, for the full year 2026, we anticipate total company revenue growth to be in the range of $23 million to $25 million on a constant currency basis, as we outperform the global market and further capitalize on our content portfolio and product suite, including further scaling the opportunity that IMG provides.
Gerard Griffin: As we initially indicated on last quarter's earnings call, for the full year 2026, we anticipate total company revenue growth to be in the range of 23% to 25% on a constant currency basis as we outperform the global market and further capitalize on our content portfolio and product suite, including further scaling the opportunity that IMG provides. Foreign currency will be a headwind at current rates, and as a result, we anticipate revenue of $1.56 billion to $1.58 billion. We anticipate delivering significant operating leverage on this revenue growth and the forecast Adjusted EBITDA growth to be in the range of 34% to 37% on a constant currency basis.
Gerard Griffin: As we initially indicated on last quarter's earnings call, for the full year 2026, we anticipate total company revenue growth to be in the range of 23% to 25% on a constant currency basis as we outperform the global market and further capitalize on our content portfolio and product suite, including further scaling the opportunity that IMG provides. Foreign currency will be a headwind at current rates, and as a result, we anticipate revenue of $1.56 billion to $1.58 billion. We anticipate delivering significant operating leverage on this revenue growth and the forecast Adjusted EBITDA growth to be in the range of 34% to 37% on a constant currency basis.
Speaker #2: Foreign currency will be a headwind at current rates, and as a result, we anticipate revenue of $1.56 billion to $1.58 billion. We anticipate delivering significant operating leverage on this revenue growth, and the forecast adjusted EBITDA growth to be in the range of 34% to 37% on a constant currency basis.
Speaker #2: After factoring in foreign currency headwinds, we anticipate adjusted EBITDA of $390,000,000 to $400,000,000 and approximately $200,000,000 to $225,000,000 basis points of margin expansion in 2026.
Gerard Griffin: After factoring in foreign currency headwinds, we anticipate Adjusted EBITDA of $390 million to 400 million and approximately 200 to 225 basis points of margin expansion in 2026. At the same time, we will continue to focus on converting more of every dollar into cash flow and anticipate growing our free cash flow conversion rate above the 56% we delivered in 2025. Please note that given the timing of sporting events, including IMG content, we anticipate the strongest revenue growth in Q2 and Q3 of this year. Additionally, given the weakening of the US dollar throughout 2025, at current currency rates, the FX headwinds will be most significant in Q1 and to a lesser extent, Q2.
Gerard Griffin: After factoring in foreign currency headwinds, we anticipate Adjusted EBITDA of $390 million to 400 million and approximately 200 to 225 basis points of margin expansion in 2026. At the same time, we will continue to focus on converting more of every dollar into cash flow and anticipate growing our free cash flow conversion rate above the 56% we delivered in 2025. Please note that given the timing of sporting events, including IMG content, we anticipate the strongest revenue growth in Q2 and Q3 of this year. Additionally, given the weakening of the US dollar throughout 2025, at current currency rates, the FX headwinds will be most significant in Q1 and to a lesser extent, Q2.
Speaker #2: At the same time, we will continue to focus on converting more of every dollar to cash flow and anticipate growing our free cash flow conversion rate above the 56% we delivered in 2025.
Speaker #2: Please note that, given the timing of sporting events, including IMG content, we anticipate the strongest revenue growth in Q2 and Q3 of this year.
Speaker #2: Additionally, given the weakening of the US dollar throughout 2025, at current currency rates, the FX headwinds will be most significant in Q1 and to a lesser extent Q2.
Speaker #2: Overall, the integration of IMG and the investments we are making in our products and technology positions us to capture additional opportunities in an expanding global market.
Gerard Griffin: Overall, the integration of IMG and the investments we are making in our products and technology positions us to capture additional opportunities in an expanding global market. We are confident in our ability to deliver durable revenue growth and with a cost structure that has strong visibility and inherent operating leverage, we will continue to ramp free cash flow generation and build shareholder value moving forward. Thank you for your time this morning, and now Carsten and I will be happy to answer any questions you may have.
Gerard Griffin: Overall, the integration of IMG and the investments we are making in our products and technology positions us to capture additional opportunities in an expanding global market. We are confident in our ability to deliver durable revenue growth and with a cost structure that has strong visibility and inherent operating leverage, we will continue to ramp free cash flow generation and build shareholder value moving forward. Thank you for your time this morning, and now Carsten and I will be happy to answer any questions you may have.
Speaker #2: We are confident in our ability to deliver durable revenue growth and with a cost structure that has strong visibility and inherent operating leverage, we will continue to ramp free cash flow generation and build shareholder value moving forward.
Speaker #2: Thank you for your time this morning, and now Carsten and I will be happy to answer any questions you may have.
Speaker #1: We'll now begin the question and answer session. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. If you would like to ask a question, please raise your hand now.
Operator: We'll now begin the question-and-answer session. Please limit yourself to 1 question and 1 follow-up. If you would like to ask a question, please raise your hand now. If you have dialed in to today's call, please press star 9 on your telephone keypad to raise your hand and star 6 to unmute. As a kind reminder to please remove yourself from speakerphone and lift your handset when asking a question. Please ensure you are unmuted locally when you are asking your question. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Ryan Sigdahl with Craig-Hallum Capital Group. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Operator: We'll now begin the question-and-answer session. Please limit yourself to 1 question and 1 follow-up. If you would like to ask a question, please raise your hand now. If you have dialed in to today's call, please press star 9 on your telephone keypad to raise your hand and star 6 to unmute. As a kind reminder to please remove yourself from speakerphone and lift your handset when asking a question. Please ensure you are unmuted locally when you are asking your question. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Ryan Sigdahl with Craig-Hallum Capital Group. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker #1: If you have dialed in to today's call, please press *9 on your telephone keypad to raise your hand. And *6 to unmute. As a kind reminder, please remove yourself from speakerphone and lift your handset when asking a question.
Speaker #1: Please ensure you are unmuted locally when you are asking your question. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Ryan Sigdal, with Craig Hallam, Capital Group.
Speaker #1: Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Ryan Sigdahl: Good day, Carsten, Craig. Congrats on the strong business momentum and financials. Want to start with IMG Arena. It's now been four months since the close of Endeavor's gift of that rights portfolio to you guys, plus some cash. I know you mentioned trending ahead of the medium-term financial targets. Curious if that's IMG that's contributing to that or the core business? You also mentioned, you know, good, strong synergy realization thus far, but curious if you can elaborate on specifically kind of how those customer conversations are going, if there's anything positive, negative, anything you've learned now that the deal is closed?
Ryan Sigdahl: Good day, Carsten, Craig. Congrats on the strong business momentum and financials. Want to start with IMG Arena. It's now been four months since the close of Endeavor's gift of that rights portfolio to you guys, plus some cash. I know you mentioned trending ahead of the medium-term financial targets. Curious if that's IMG that's contributing to that or the core business? You also mentioned, you know, good, strong synergy realization thus far, but curious if you can elaborate on specifically kind of how those customer conversations are going, if there's anything positive, negative, anything you've learned now that the deal is closed?
Speaker #3: Craig. Congrats on the strong business momentum and financials. I want to start with IMG Arena. It's now been four months since the close of Endeavor's gift of that rights portfolio that you guys, plus some cash.
Speaker #3: I know you mentioned trending ahead of the medium-term financial targets. Curious if that's IMG that's contributing to that or the core business. And then you also mentioned good, strong synergy realization thus far.
Speaker #3: But curious if you can elaborate on specifically kind of how those customer conversations are going, if there's anything positive, negative, anything you've learned now that the deal is closed.
Speaker #4: Hi, Ryan, Carsten here. I like this term of gift. So well, there is a hard work in the gift. We have a very capable team on this, and we are working now since many months and this work is paying off.
Carsten Koerl: Hi, Ryan. Carsten here. I like this term of gift. Well, there is a hard work in the gift. We have a very capable team on this, and we are working now since many months, and this work is paying off. We hit the ground running. All the tier one operators are now converted to this content. Let me remind you, the scheme here is we get content, we put this content into our engine, and this engine has a much broader distribution. Comparing it from IMG, from 50, 60 operators to us with 600 operators or 800 if we expand that scope. We have products based on this content. Most of those products have been not able or IMG was not able to distribute them, managed trading services, visualization products, et cetera, PP.
Carsten Koerl: Hi, Ryan. Carsten here. I like this term of gift. Well, there is a hard work in the gift. We have a very capable team on this, and we are working now since many months, and this work is paying off. We hit the ground running. All the tier one operators are now converted to this content. Let me remind you, the scheme here is we get content, we put this content into our engine, and this engine has a much broader distribution. Comparing it from IMG, from 50, 60 operators to us with 600 operators or 800 if we expand that scope. We have products based on this content. Most of those products have been not able or IMG was not able to distribute them, managed trading services, visualization products, et cetera, PP.
Speaker #4: So we hit the ground running. All the Tier 1 operators are now converted to this content and that really reminds you the scheme here is that we get content, we put this content into our engine, and this engine has a much broader distribution, so comparing it from IMG from 50, 60 operators to us with a 600 operators or 800 if we extend that scope.
Speaker #4: And we have products based on this content. Most of those products have not been able, or IMG was not able, to distribute them—managed trading services, visualization products, etc.
Speaker #4: So we see a strong pickup here. We are trending a little bit better than the plan. And our main focus here is the revenue synergies.
Carsten Koerl: We see a strong pickup here. We are trending a little bit better than the plan, and our main focus here is the revenue synergies. We measure the revenue synergies. How much can we achieve here by this bigger engine and the more products? That's the second part of your question. We are a little bit ahead of the target. The target is a 25%, and we gave the number of $140 million already earlier, which includes that 25% revenue synergies. I hope that answers your question.
Carsten Koerl: We see a strong pickup here. We are trending a little bit better than the plan, and our main focus here is the revenue synergies. We measure the revenue synergies. How much can we achieve here by this bigger engine and the more products? That's the second part of your question. We are a little bit ahead of the target. The target is a 25%, and we gave the number of $140 million already earlier, which includes that 25% revenue synergies. I hope that answers your question.
Speaker #4: So we measure the revenue synergies. How much can we achieve here by this bigger engine and the more products? And that's the second part of your question.
Speaker #4: We are a little bit ahead of the target. The target is a 25%. And we gave the number of 140 million already earlier, which includes that 25% revenue synergies.
Speaker #4: I hope that answers your question.
Speaker #3: Yeah. Helpful. Second question, just it won't be a conference call if prediction markets wasn't asked about. So Chairman Selig, he's certainly out defending the CFTC's authority over predictive markets.
[Analyst] (Craig-Hallum Capital Group): Yeah, helpful. Second question, just it wouldn't be a conference call if prediction markets wasn't asked about. Chairman Cilig, he's certainly out defending the CFTC's authority over predictive markets. You have your big customers, DraftKings and FanDuel, that are aggressively entering here. You have MLS, NHL doing marketing deals. My question is, you guys have done very well on the integrity side of signing deals thus far. Curious what you need to happen and kind of the next steps to get more direct partnerships on the data side for you guys in the prediction markets.
Ryan Sigdahl: Yeah, helpful. Second question, just it wouldn't be a conference call if prediction markets wasn't asked about. Chairman Cilig, he's certainly out defending the CFTC's authority over predictive markets. You have your big customers, DraftKings and FanDuel, that are aggressively entering here. You have MLS, NHL doing marketing deals. My question is, you guys have done very well on the integrity side of signing deals thus far. Curious what you need to happen and kind of the next steps to get more direct partnerships on the data side for you guys in the prediction markets.
Speaker #3: You have your big customers, DraftKings and FanDuel, that are aggressively entering here. You have MLS and NHL doing marketing deals. My question is, you guys have done very well on the integrity side of signing deals thus far.
Speaker #3: Curious what you need to happen and kind of the next steps to get more direct partnerships on the data side for you guys in the prediction markets.
Carsten Koerl: I just lost my bet, Ryan, with Greg. The bet was this is the first question for today with prediction markets. Greg has something good on my side. Look, there is we are working here on a clear scheme. We always said the two things which are most important is player protection and the integrity of the sports. For the integrity of the sports, like you said, we made good progress. You saw also lately our FIFA announcement that we cover now all the federations and confederations there. We are very proud of what we established with the integrity service, and all of this is AI-based, but we have now knowledge of more than 15 years in a very complex environment here.
Speaker #4: I just lost my bed, Ryan, with Craig. The bet was this is the first question for today with prediction markets. So Craig has something good on my side.
Carsten Koerl: I just lost my bet, Ryan, with Greg. The bet was this is the first question for today with prediction markets. Greg has something good on my side. Look, there is we are working here on a clear scheme. We always said the two things which are most important is player protection and the integrity of the sports. For the integrity of the sports, like you said, we made good progress. You saw also lately our FIFA announcement that we cover now all the federations and confederations there. We are very proud of what we established with the integrity service, and all of this is AI-based, but we have now knowledge of more than 15 years in a very complex environment here.
Speaker #4: Look, there is we are working here on a clear scheme. We always said the two things which are most important is player protection and the integrity of the sports.
Speaker #4: For the integrity of the sports, like you said, we made good progress. You saw also lately our FIFA announcement that we cover now all the federations and confederations there.
Speaker #4: So, we are very proud of what we established with the Integrity Service, and all of this is AI-based. But we have now knowledge of more than 15 years in a very complex environment here.
Speaker #4: And of course, we are happy to contribute with our knowledge to make the sport safer and also with the prediction markets to install safeguards which are requested and demanded by sports.
Carsten Koerl: Of course, we are happy to contribute with our knowledge to make the sport safer and also with the prediction markets to install safeguards which are requested and demanded by sports. From a player protection side, we can't do this. That's about underage gaming, money laundering, insider trading, all these topics which are relevant and which are important. Sport is caring about this, and we have now three of our partners, NHL, Major League Soccer, and UFC, which established a framework with the exchanges. That enables us from the next couple of weeks onwards, that we can supply the official data, and that is our scheme. If our partner finds a satisfying framework from a player protection and integrity where we happily contribute, we are ready to deploy the official data.
Carsten Koerl: Of course, we are happy to contribute with our knowledge to make the sport safer and also with the prediction markets to install safeguards which are requested and demanded by sports. From a player protection side, we can't do this. That's about underage gaming, money laundering, insider trading, all these topics which are relevant and which are important. Sport is caring about this, and we have now three of our partners, NHL, Major League Soccer, and UFC, which established a framework with the exchanges. That enables us from the next couple of weeks onwards, that we can supply the official data, and that is our scheme. If our partner finds a satisfying framework from a player protection and integrity where we happily contribute, we are ready to deploy the official data.
Speaker #4: Now, from a player protection side, we can't do this. So that's about underage gaming, money laundering, insider trading—all these topics which are relevant and which are important.
Speaker #4: Sport is caring about this, and we have now three of our partners, NHL, Major League Soccer, and UFC, which established a framework with the exchanges.
Speaker #4: So that enables us from the next couple of weeks onwards that we can supply the official data. And that is our scheme. So if our partner finds a satisfying framework from a player protection and integrity where we happily contribute, we are ready to deploy the official data.
Speaker #4: And if we are looking now a little bit deeper here, there are two things. There is the exchange, and there is the market maker.
Carsten Koerl: If we are looking now a little bit deeper here, there are two things. There is the exchange and there is the market maker. Maybe I get another question about the market makers, where I'm happy to go a little bit deeper, but that's the general scheme to answer your question.
Carsten Koerl: If we are looking now a little bit deeper here, there are two things. There is the exchange and there is the market maker. Maybe I get another question about the market makers, where I'm happy to go a little bit deeper, but that's the general scheme to answer your question.
Speaker #4: Maybe I get another question about the market makers where I'm happy to go a little bit deeper, but that's a general scheme to answer your question.
Speaker #3: Thanks, Carsten. Good luck, guys. Thanks, Ryan.
[Analyst] (Craig-Hallum Capital Group): Thanks, Carsten. Good luck, guys.
Ryan Sigdahl: Thanks, Carsten. Good luck, guys.
Carsten Koerl: Thank you. Thanks, Ryan.
Carsten Koerl: Thank you. Thanks, Ryan.
Speaker #1: Your next question comes from the line of Chad Baynon with McQuarrie Capital. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Chad Beynon with Macquarie Capital. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Chad Beynon with Macquarie Capital. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker #4: Chad, we can't hear you if you're speaking.
Gerard Griffin: Chad, we can't hear you if you're speaking.
Gerard Griffin: Chad, we can't hear you if you're speaking.
Speaker #1: As a kind reminder, please press star six on your telephone keypad to unmute.
Operator: As a kind reminder, please press star 6 on your telephone keypad to unmute.
Operator: As a kind reminder, please press star 6 on your telephone keypad to unmute.
Speaker #5: Operator, why don't we go to our next questioner? We'll circle back to Chad.
Carsten Koerl: Operator, why don't we go to our next question and we'll circle back to Chad.
Carsten Koerl: Operator, why don't we go to our next question and we'll circle back to Chad.
Speaker #3: Can you hear me now?
Gerard Griffin: Can you hear me now?
Chad Beynon: Can you hear me now?
Speaker #5: Yep. We got you. Yep.
Carsten Koerl: Yep, we got you. Yep.
Carsten Koerl: Yep, we got you. Yep.
Speaker #3: Okay. Sorry about that. Hit the star six. So just thinking about the guidance for 26, it's kind of what you laid out last quarter.
[Analyst] (Craig-Hallum Capital Group): Okay. Sorry about that. Hit those star six. Just thinking about the guidance for 26, it's kind of what you laid out last quarter. You know, some small moves in Q4 with betting technology and solutions versus the sports content. As we think about the guide for this year versus how you're thinking about this before, given what we've heard from some of your partners out there, has there been any changes just given, you know, some of the reduction in volume that we've seen out there and differences in hold rates, just as you think of the makeup of how you get to that revenue guidance? Thank you.
Chad Beynon: Okay. Sorry about that. Hit those star six. Just thinking about the guidance for 26, it's kind of what you laid out last quarter. You know, some small moves in Q4 with betting technology and solutions versus the sports content. As we think about the guide for this year versus how you're thinking about this before, given what we've heard from some of your partners out there, has there been any changes just given, you know, some of the reduction in volume that we've seen out there and differences in hold rates, just as you think of the makeup of how you get to that revenue guidance? Thank you.
Speaker #3: Some small moves in the fourth quarter with betting technology and solutions versus the sports content. But as we think about the guide for this year versus how you're thinking about this before, given what we've heard from some of your partners out there, has there been any changes just given some of the reduction in volume that we've seen out there and differences in hold rates, just as you think of the makeup of how you get to that revenue guidance?
Speaker #3: Thank you.
Speaker #5: Sure. Thanks, Chad. It really has not been a change from what we talked about when we reported our third-quarter results in early November. Really, the only significant change, and I wouldn't even call it significant, but the only change that has happened is that the US dollar has weakened further versus the euro over the last several months.
Gerard Griffin: Sure. Thanks, Chad. There really has not been a change from what we talked about when we re-reported our Q3 results in early November. Really, the only significant change, I wouldn't even call it significant, but the only change that has happened is that the US dollar has weakened further versus the euro over the last several months. Because of that, the reported numbers get hit a little bit from a guidance perspective. In terms of the business itself, the business continues to operate exactly as we had planned when we reported our results in the Q3.
Gerard Griffin: Sure. Thanks, Chad. There really has not been a change from what we talked about when we re-reported our Q3 results in early November. Really, the only significant change, I wouldn't even call it significant, but the only change that has happened is that the US dollar has weakened further versus the euro over the last several months. Because of that, the reported numbers get hit a little bit from a guidance perspective. In terms of the business itself, the business continues to operate exactly as we had planned when we reported our results in the Q3.
Speaker #5: And because of that, the reported numbers get hit a little bit from a guidance perspective. But in terms of the business itself, the business continues to operate exactly as we had planned when we reported our results in the third quarter.
Speaker #3: Okay. Great. And then secondly, just shifting to iGaming opportunities this year, that seems to remain a bright spot for everybody. Can you just kind of update us in terms of your approach to growing that business and how that looks as we look throughout the year?
[Analyst] (Craig-Hallum Capital Group): Okay, great. Secondly, just shifting to iGaming opportunities this year, that seems to remain a bright spot for everybody. Can you just kind of update us in terms of?
Chad Beynon: Okay, great. Secondly, just shifting to iGaming opportunities this year, that seems to remain a bright spot for everybody. Can you just kind of update us in terms of?
[Analyst] (Macquarie Capital): You know, your approach to growing that business and how that looks, as we look throughout the year. Thank you.
Chad Beynon: You know, your approach to growing that business and how that looks, as we look throughout the year. Thank you.
Speaker #3: Thank you.
Speaker #5: Past the year. So from an iGaming perspective, like we laid out, we chose Brazil as our test market. And the thesis here is how can we connect live betting and live betting activities and iGaming?
Carsten Koerl: Carsten here. From an iGaming perspective, like we laid out, we chose Brazil as our test market. The thesis here is, how can we connect live betting and live betting activities and iGaming? We believe this is a huge playing field and a big opportunity for us. In live betting, we know about the latency, we know about who is sitting on the other side because we have our iPlayer installed on more than 600 betting sites. Nothing easier than this to match now the live content on the iPlayer together with something which is visualizing the iGaming opportunity. Let's make this very simple. Our new partner, PGA, we had our board meeting there last week, and we discussed solutions like it was in TPC Sawgrass. If you are a golfer, you know hole number 17.
Carsten Koerl: Carsten here. From an iGaming perspective, like we laid out, we chose Brazil as our test market. The thesis here is, how can we connect live betting and live betting activities and iGaming? We believe this is a huge playing field and a big opportunity for us. In live betting, we know about the latency, we know about who is sitting on the other side because we have our iPlayer installed on more than 600 betting sites. Nothing easier than this to match now the live content on the iPlayer together with something which is visualizing the iGaming opportunity. Let's make this very simple. Our new partner, PGA, we had our board meeting there last week, and we discussed solutions like it was in TPC Sawgrass. If you are a golfer, you know hole number 17.
Speaker #5: We believe this is a huge playing field in the big opportunity for us. In live betting, we know about the latency. We know about who is sitting on the other side because we have our e-player installed on more than 600 betting sites.
Speaker #5: Nothing easier than this to match now the live content on the e-player together with something which is visualizing the iGaming opportunity. Let's make this very simple.
Speaker #5: Our new partner, PGA, we have our board meeting there last week. And we discussed solutions like it was in TPC Soccer. If you're a golfer, you know hole number 17.
Speaker #5: Put a hexagon grid over this hole number 17. You have 36 fields. And make the flag the green one. And then you can visually overlay to the live broadcast this iGaming opportunity.
Carsten Koerl: Put a hexagon grid over this hole number 17, you have 36 fields, and make the flag the green one. Then you can visually overlay to the live broadcast this iGaming opportunity. This is something which we promoted now first time in ICE Barcelona. That's the biggest gaming show, and the pickup was enormous on this. This is exactly the opportunity which we take because we see we have the distribution, we have the iPlayer, we have the live scores, we have the match trackers on the bookmaker side, and we can connect this and convert. Like we all know and like we see it in the handle numbers, a client gets roughly around about 4 times the value for an iGaming player comparing it to a sports bettor.
Carsten Koerl: Put a hexagon grid over this hole number 17, you have 36 fields, and make the flag the green one. Then you can visually overlay to the live broadcast this iGaming opportunity. This is something which we promoted now first time in ICE Barcelona. That's the biggest gaming show, and the pickup was enormous on this. This is exactly the opportunity which we take because we see we have the distribution, we have the iPlayer, we have the live scores, we have the match trackers on the bookmaker side, and we can connect this and convert. Like we all know and like we see it in the handle numbers, a client gets roughly around about 4 times the value for an iGaming player comparing it to a sports bettor.
Speaker #5: This is something which we promoted now first time in Barcelona, ICE. That's the biggest gaming show. And the pickup was enormous on this. And this is exactly the opportunity which we pick because we see we have the distribution.
Speaker #5: We have the iPlayer. We have the live scores. We have the match trackers on the bookmaker side. And we can connect this and convert and, like we all know, and like we see it in the handle numbers, a client gets roughly around about four times the value for an iGaming player, comparing it to a sports bettor.
Speaker #5: But sports betting is used as the acquisition channel. And here, it closes to the 360-degree because we hook it up with our ads for the acquisition.
Carsten Koerl: Sports betting is used as the acquisition channel, and here it closes to the 360 degree because we hook it up with our ads for the acquisition. That's the scheme.
Carsten Koerl: Sports betting is used as the acquisition channel, and here it closes to the 360 degree because we hook it up with our ads for the acquisition. That's the scheme.
Speaker #5: That's scheme.
Speaker #3: Very helpful. Thanks, Carsten. Appreciate it.
[Analyst] (Macquarie Capital): Very helpful. Thanks, Carsten. Appreciate it.
Chad Beynon: Very helpful. Thanks, Carsten. Appreciate it.
Speaker #5: Thank you.
Carsten Koerl: Thank you.
Carsten Koerl: Thank you.
Speaker #1: Your next question comes from the line of Sean Kelly with Bank of America. A kind reminder to unmute yourself locally if you have dialed in.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Shaun Kelley with Bank of America. A kind reminder to unmute yourself locally. If you have dialed in, please press star six to unmute. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Shaun Kelley with Bank of America. A kind reminder to unmute yourself locally. If you have dialed in, please press star six to unmute. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker #1: Please press star six to unmute. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker #6: Hey, everyone. Can you hear me okay?
Shaun Kelley: Hey, everyone. Can you hear me okay?
Shaun Kelley: Hey, everyone. Can you hear me okay?
Speaker #5: Yep. Oh, yes.
Carsten Koerl: Yep.
Carsten Koerl: Yep.
[Analyst] (Macquarie Capital): Oh, yes.
Chad Beynon: Oh, yes.
Shaun Kelley: Great. Really appreciate it. You know, Carsten, you gave a little bit of a teaser around the prediction market piece. Maybe to go a little deeper, I think as we think about the different opportunities here, we kind of think about a broker layer, an exchange layer, as you kind of alluded to, and a market maker layer. You know, just having had a few months to work on it and starting to talk to partnerships or partners in the space, could you just talk to us a little bit more clearly about how you would maybe see or envision Sportradar participating at kind of each of those three layers? I think that'd be really helpful for everyone. Thanks.
Speaker #6: Great. Really appreciate teaser around the prediction market about a broker layer and exchange layer as you kind of alluded to in a market maker layer.
Shaun Kelley: Great. Really appreciate it. You know, Carsten, you gave a little bit of a teaser around the prediction market piece. Maybe to go a little deeper, I think as we think about the different opportunities here, we kind of think about a broker layer, an exchange layer, as you kind of alluded to, and a market maker layer. You know, just having had a few months to work on it and starting to talk to partnerships or partners in the space, could you just talk to us a little bit more clearly about how you would maybe see or envision Sportradar participating at kind of each of those three layers? I think that'd be really helpful for everyone. Thanks.
Speaker #6: Just having had a few months to work on it and starting to talk to partnerships or partners in the space, could you just talk to us a little bit more clearly about how you would maybe see or envision SportRadar participating at kind of each of those three layers?
Speaker #6: I think that'd be really helpful for everyone. Thanks.
Carsten Koerl: Hi, Shaun. Carsten here. The real interesting thing is the live development in that sector. In-play parlays, live opportunities, that needs real-time data. Like we all know, this is where we can monetize best with the real-time data. The market maker segment is specifically interesting because they need real-time data to price this, and they need the models to lay the liquidity there. The real goal is, can we predict the next movement better than anybody else? We can, because we are sitting on this huge knowledge, we're sitting on the liquidity, and we're sitting on the deep data in real time.
Speaker #4: Hi, Sean. Carsten here. So at the real interesting thing is the live development in that sector. In-play parties, live opportunities, that needs real-time data.
Carsten Koerl: Hi, Shaun. Carsten here. The real interesting thing is the live development in that sector. In-play parlays, live opportunities, that needs real-time data. Like we all know, this is where we can monetize best with the real-time data. The market maker segment is specifically interesting because they need real-time data to price this, and they need the models to lay the liquidity there. The real goal is, can we predict the next movement better than anybody else? We can, because we are sitting on this huge knowledge, we're sitting on the liquidity, and we're sitting on the deep data in real time.
Speaker #4: And like we all know, this is where we can monetize best with the real-time data. So the market maker segment is specifically interesting because they need real-time data to price this and they need the models to lay the liquidity there.
Speaker #4: And even more at the real gold is, can we predict the next movement better than anybody else? And we can. Because we are sitting on this huge knowledge.
Speaker #4: We're sitting on the liquidity. And we're sitting on the deep data in real-time. So our investment here, for example, in the foundation model where we can predict the next pixel, the next pixel, and we do this now seven seconds or an MBA match, is super helpful to predict potential moves.
Carsten Koerl: Our investment here, for example, in the foundation model, where we can predict the next pixel, and we do this now 7 seconds for an NBA match, is super helpful to predict potential moves and to underlie them with liquidity. That's exactly where the sweet spot is. As you hear, that makes us very optimistic that we can help the market makers with a very superior product. At the moment, we are ready to click the button that we can distribute the live data for doing the settlement. We can do this for the exchanges. Of course, we can do this also with the deeper data for the market makers. For both, we are aiming to strike a revenue share model, based on the take rate.
Carsten Koerl: Our investment here, for example, in the foundation model, where we can predict the next pixel, and we do this now 7 seconds for an NBA match, is super helpful to predict potential moves and to underlie them with liquidity. That's exactly where the sweet spot is. As you hear, that makes us very optimistic that we can help the market makers with a very superior product. At the moment, we are ready to click the button that we can distribute the live data for doing the settlement. We can do this for the exchanges. Of course, we can do this also with the deeper data for the market makers. For both, we are aiming to strike a revenue share model, based on the take rate.
Speaker #4: And to underlie them with liquidity. That's exactly where the sweet spot sits. So, as you hear, that makes us very optimistic that we can help the market makers with a very superior product.
Speaker #4: At the moment, we are ready to click the button that we can distribute the live data for doing the settlement. We can do this for the exchanges.
Speaker #4: But of course, we can do this also with the deeper data for the market makers. For both, we are aiming to strike a revenue share model based on the take rate.
Speaker #4: We have at the moment the negotiations around the three properties where we got the clearing from the leagues. That's NHL, Major League Soccer, and UFC.
Carsten Koerl: We have at the moment the negotiations around the three properties where we got the clearing from the leagues. That's NHL, Major League Soccer, and UFC. Like I said, you will be very soon hear about some deals in that space.
Carsten Koerl: We have at the moment the negotiations around the three properties where we got the clearing from the leagues. That's NHL, Major League Soccer, and UFC. Like I said, you will be very soon hear about some deals in that space.
Speaker #4: And like I said, you will be very soon hear about some deals in that space.
Speaker #6: Super encouraging. And then if I could, just as my follow-up, Carsten, there was a big NBA event hosted, I think, on the front end of the All-Star Game weekend.
Shaun Kelley: Super encouraging. If I could, just as my follow-up. Carsten, there was a big NBA event hosted, I think, on the front end of the All-Star Game weekend. Obviously they're a huge partner of yours, and I think you were there as well as a bunch of other people. Just any kind of key takeaways, because it was quite interesting that a couple of the prediction market platforms, were, you know, kind of were present at that. We, you know, kind of are curious on what was the league's message kind of back to you or to other constituents as it relates to maybe sort of technology developments, because it sounds like it was quite interesting. Thanks.
Shaun Kelley: Super encouraging. If I could, just as my follow-up. Carsten, there was a big NBA event hosted, I think, on the front end of the All-Star Game weekend. Obviously they're a huge partner of yours, and I think you were there as well as a bunch of other people. Just any kind of key takeaways, because it was quite interesting that a couple of the prediction market platforms, were, you know, kind of were present at that. We, you know, kind of are curious on what was the league's message kind of back to you or to other constituents as it relates to maybe sort of technology developments, because it sounds like it was quite interesting. Thanks.
Speaker #6: And obviously, they're a huge partner of yours. And I think you were there, as well as a bunch of other people. Just any kind of key takeaways?
Speaker #6: Because it was quite interesting that a couple of the prediction market platforms were kind of present at that. But we kind of are curious on what was the league's message kind of back to you or to other constituents as it relates to maybe sort of technology developments?
Speaker #6: Because it sounds like it was quite interesting. Thanks.
Speaker #5: Yeah. I heard from this panel it was eight players. The only Swiss guy on the panel was trying to moderate the temper which heated up a little bit on the panel.
Carsten Koerl: Yeah. I heard from this panel with 8 players. The only Swiss guy on the panel was trying to moderate the temper, which heated up a little bit on the panel. I think it shows how big the opportunity is. I think the whole panel, which was Kalshi, Polymarket, the founders, we had of course, FanDuel and DraftKings sitting on there, and BetMGM. The whole panel was agreeing this is a huge opportunity, but we all agreed finally we need to put the radars in place to protect the players and the integrity. That is uniting everybody. The rest is kind of controversial. You know, it's about sport need to pave the way. I think that was the final conclusion from the panel saying, We all want to help sport.
Carsten Koerl: Yeah. I heard from this panel with 8 players. The only Swiss guy on the panel was trying to moderate the temper, which heated up a little bit on the panel. I think it shows how big the opportunity is. I think the whole panel, which was Kalshi, Polymarket, the founders, we had of course, FanDuel and DraftKings sitting on there, and BetMGM. The whole panel was agreeing this is a huge opportunity, but we all agreed finally we need to put the radars in place to protect the players and the integrity. That is uniting everybody. The rest is kind of controversial. You know, it's about sport need to pave the way. I think that was the final conclusion from the panel saying, We all want to help sport.
Speaker #5: I think it shows how big the opportunity is. And I think the whole panel, which was Kaji, Polymarket, the founders, we had, of course, Banduel and DraftKings sitting on there.
Speaker #5: And BetMGM. So the whole panel was agreeing this is a huge opportunity. But we all agreed, finally, we need to put the rail guards in place to protect the players and the integrity.
Speaker #5: That is uniting everybody. The rest is kind of controversial. But it's about sport. And sport needs to pave the way. And I think that was then the final conclusion from the panel saying we all want to help sport.
Speaker #5: We see an uplift opportunity. And sport by itself and the NBA by itself, I think they're pretty positive. Once there is the player protection and the integrity put in place, we see already three other leagues which have been granting us the rights that we can sell the official data.
Carsten Koerl: We see an uplift opportunity and sport by itself and the NBA by itself, I think they are pretty positive once there is the player protection and the integrity put in place. We see already three other leagues which have been granting us the rights that we can sell the official data and the products to the downstream market.
Carsten Koerl: We see an uplift opportunity and sport by itself and the NBA by itself, I think they are pretty positive once there is the player protection and the integrity put in place. We see already three other leagues which have been granting us the rights that we can sell the official data and the products to the downstream market.
Speaker #5: And the products to the downstream market.
Speaker #6: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you.
Speaker #1: Your next question comes from the line of Robin Farley with UBS. A kind reminder to press star six to unmute. Your line is open.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Robin Farley with UBS. A kind reminder to press star six to unmute. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Robin Farley with UBS. A kind reminder to press star six to unmute. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker #1: Please go ahead.
Speaker #7: Hi. Hopefully, you can hear me okay. Had a follow-up question on your comment that in the next few weeks, we may hear something about you selling data to some of the league data to prediction markets.
Robin Farley: Hi. Hopefully, you can hear me okay. Had a follow-up question on your comment that in the next few weeks we may hear something about you selling data to some of the league data to prediction markets. Is that included in your guidance already or would that change your guidance?
Robin Farley: Hi. Hopefully, you can hear me okay. Had a follow-up question on your comment that in the next few weeks we may hear something about you selling data to some of the league data to prediction markets. Is that included in your guidance already or would that change your guidance?
Speaker #7: Is that included in your guidance already? Or would that change your guidance?
Speaker #5: Sure. So hey, Robin, it's Craig. Thanks for the question. We do have some minor contributions from prediction markets in our 2026 guidance. Predominantly from things like customer acquisition, fan engagement tools, and a little bit of data that we would be providing.
Gerard Griffin: Sure. Hey, Robyn, it's Craig. Thanks for the question. We do have some minor contributions from prediction markets in our 2026 guidance, predominantly from things like customer acquisition, fan engagement tools, and a little bit of data that we would be providing. For the most part, any significant deal associated with prediction markets is not included in that guidance.
Gerard Griffin: Sure. Hey, Robyn, it's Craig. Thanks for the question. We do have some minor contributions from prediction markets in our 2026 guidance, predominantly from things like customer acquisition, fan engagement tools, and a little bit of data that we would be providing. For the most part, any significant deal associated with prediction markets is not included in that guidance.
Speaker #5: But for the most part, any significant deal associated with prediction markets is not included in that guidance.
Speaker #7: Okay. Great. Thank you. And then my other question, and I apologize if I had a conflicting earnings call. So if you covered this already, you can go on to the next question.
Robin Farley: Okay, great. Thank you. My other question, I apologize if this. I had a conflicting earnings call, if you covered this already, you can go on to the next question. With the IMG Arena contribution that, you know, officially closed in Q4, did you indicate or you mentioned you're able to sell that data to many more operators than IMG had. Is there a ramp? Does that take time or is that something you're pretty much able to do? Like that's, you know, that's now going into all those additional sports books by now, or is that something we would expect to ramp through the year? Again, sorry if you covered that already. Thanks.
Robin Farley: Okay, great. Thank you. My other question, I apologize if this. I had a conflicting earnings call, if you covered this already, you can go on to the next question. With the IMG Arena contribution that, you know, officially closed in Q4, did you indicate or you mentioned you're able to sell that data to many more operators than IMG had. Is there a ramp? Does that take time or is that something you're pretty much able to do? Like that's, you know, that's now going into all those additional sports books by now, or is that something we would expect to ramp through the year? Again, sorry if you covered that already. Thanks.
Speaker #7: But just with the IMG Arena contribution that officially closed in Q4, did you indicate—you mentioned you're able to sell that data to many more operators than IMG had.
Speaker #7: Is there a ramp? Does that take time? Or is that something you're pretty much able to do? That's now going into all those additional sports books by now.
Speaker #7: Or is that something we would expect to ramp through the year? And again, sorry if you covered that already. Thanks.
Speaker #4: Hi, Robin. Yes, you guessed it right. We covered this already. So next time, we have to make sure that you have no conflicting calls at the time.
Carsten Koerl: Hi, Robyn. Yes, you guessed it right. We covered this already. Next time we have to look that you have no conflicting calls at the time. To go a little bit deeper, the main important one for us in the first two months was November and December of the last year, that we get the tier one operators on the content. Of course, we enabled for a grace period the services that everybody can test this, and that was very successful. This plan and the execution here to get very quickly a pickup, that was our main target. Not so much initially the focus on the revenues. It was very important for us that we get this content distributed to the market, that we can then continue to build on this.
Carsten Koerl: Hi, Robyn. Yes, you guessed it right. We covered this already. Next time we have to look that you have no conflicting calls at the time. To go a little bit deeper, the main important one for us in the first two months was November and December of the last year, that we get the tier one operators on the content. Of course, we enabled for a grace period the services that everybody can test this, and that was very successful. This plan and the execution here to get very quickly a pickup, that was our main target. Not so much initially the focus on the revenues. It was very important for us that we get this content distributed to the market, that we can then continue to build on this.
Speaker #4: And we have to run it. But to go a little bit deeper, the main important one was for us in the first two months is so November and December.
Speaker #4: Of the last year, that we get the tier one operators on the content. Of course, we enabled for grace period the services that everybody can test this.
Speaker #4: And that was very successful. So this plan and the execution here to get very quickly a pickup that was our main target. Not so much initially the focus on the revenues.
Speaker #4: It was very important for us. That we get this content distributed to the markets that we can then continue to build on this. But that was very successful.
Carsten Koerl: That was very successful.
Carsten Koerl: That was very successful.
Speaker #7: Okay. Great. Thank you. Thanks for the recap. Thanks.
Robin Farley: Okay, great. Thank you. Thanks for the recap. Thanks.
Robin Farley: Okay, great. Thank you. Thanks for the recap. Thanks.
Speaker #5: Thank you.
Carsten Koerl: Yeah.
Carsten Koerl: Yeah.
Speaker #1: Your next question comes from the line of Barry Jonas with Truist Securities, a kind reminder, please unmute yourself locally or press star six to unmute.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Barry Jonas with Truist Securities. A kind reminder, please unmute yourself locally or press star six to unmute. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Barry Jonas with Truist Securities. A kind reminder, please unmute yourself locally or press star six to unmute. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker #1: Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker #8: Hey, guys. Can you hear me?
Barry Jonas: Hey, guys. Can you hear me?
Barry Jonas: Hey, guys. Can you hear me?
Speaker #5: Yep.
Carsten Koerl: Yep.
Carsten Koerl: Yep.
Speaker #4: Yes.
Gerard Griffin: Yes.
Gerard Griffin: Yes.
Speaker #8: Okay. Great. Your quote was competitor announced a large-scale M&A transaction recently. Did you look at that deal? And maybe how are you thinking about M&A in general here?
Barry Jonas: Okay, great. Your closest competitor announced a large-scale M&A transaction recently. Did you look at that deal, and maybe how are you thinking about M&A in general here? Thanks.
Barry Jonas: Okay, great. Your closest competitor announced a large-scale M&A transaction recently. Did you look at that deal, and maybe how are you thinking about M&A in general here? Thanks.
Speaker #8: Thanks.
Carsten Koerl: We are constantly looking that we have what opportunities we have. You know that we laid out on the Investor Day our strategy with adjacent markets. One is, of course, advertising and our products and programmatic advertising opportunities which we see around this. iGaming is such an opportunity, of course, we're looking into it. We're looking from a clear scheme. Is it accretive for us to buy such a business? Does the growth rate fit? Does it fit to our EBITDA profile? We're deciding on this. In this case, I think the answer is clear. We didn't do a deal here. We believe that at the moment it's the best for the capital which we have to increase our ROIC.
Speaker #4: We are constantly looking that we have good opportunities we have. You know that we laid out on the investor day our strategy with adjacent markets.
Carsten Koerl: We are constantly looking that we have what opportunities we have. You know that we laid out on the Investor Day our strategy with adjacent markets. One is, of course, advertising and our products and programmatic advertising opportunities which we see around this. iGaming is such an opportunity, of course, we're looking into it. We're looking from a clear scheme. Is it accretive for us to buy such a business? Does the growth rate fit? Does it fit to our EBITDA profile? We're deciding on this. In this case, I think the answer is clear. We didn't do a deal here. We believe that at the moment it's the best for the capital which we have to increase our ROIC.
Speaker #4: One is, of course, advertising and our products and programmatic advertising, the opportunities which we see around this. iGaming is such an opportunity. And of course, we're looking into it.
Speaker #4: We're looking from a clear scheme. Is it a creative for us to buy such a business? Does the growth rate fit? Does it fit to our EBITDA profile?
Speaker #4: And then we're deciding on this. So and in this case, I think the answer is clear. We didn't do a deal here. We believe that at the moment, it's the best for the capital which we have, to increase our buyback.
Speaker #8: Great. And then just for my follow-up, it's looking like there could be a lockout for the 2027 MLB season. Can you just remind us what impact, if any, that would have on you?
Barry Jonas: Great. Then just for my follow-up, you know, it's looking like there could be a lockout for the 2027 MLB season. Can you just remind us what impact, if any, that would have on you? Thank you.
Barry Jonas: Great. Then just for my follow-up, you know, it's looking like there could be a lockout for the 2027 MLB season. Can you just remind us what impact, if any, that would have on you? Thank you.
Speaker #8: Thank you.
Carsten Koerl: First, let's hope that Rob is solving the lockout issue, that the party is coming to term, that we see a nice gentle start of the baseball season. I think we all hope for this. If it's not happening, for us, the first thing is, do we have at this time good replacement content in the tier one category? We do. We have PGA, we have the WNBA, we have a lot of ATP matches which can cover that gap which we have with missing MLB matches. Of course, we have contract provisions and protections in place for this situation. Still, we all hope in favor of the sport that it doesn't happen. For us, the impact will be very limited if there is impact.
Speaker #4: First, let's hope that Rob is solving the lockout issue. And that the party is coming to term, that we see a nice, gentle start of the baseball season.
Carsten Koerl: First, let's hope that Rob is solving the lockout issue, that the party is coming to term, that we see a nice gentle start of the baseball season. I think we all hope for this. If it's not happening, for us, the first thing is, do we have at this time good replacement content in the tier one category? We do. We have PGA, we have the WNBA, we have a lot of ATP matches which can cover that gap which we have with missing MLB matches. Of course, we have contract provisions and protections in place for this situation. Still, we all hope in favor of the sport that it doesn't happen. For us, the impact will be very limited if there is impact.
Speaker #4: I think we all hope for this. If it's not happening for us, the first thing is do we have at this time good replacement content in the tier one category?
Speaker #4: And we do. So we have PGA. We have the WNBA. We have a lot of ATP matches, which can cover that gap which we have with missing MLB matches.
Speaker #4: And of course, we have contract provisions and protections in place. For this situation, still, we all hope in favor of the sport that it doesn't happen for us.
Speaker #4: The impact will be very limited if there is an impact.
Speaker #8: Great. Thank you.
Barry Jonas: Great. Thank you.
Barry Jonas: Great. Thank you.
Speaker #1: Your next question comes from the line of Jordan Bender. Kind reminder to unmute yourself locally using star six. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Jordan Bender. Kind reminder to unmute yourself locally when using star six. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Jordan Bender. Kind reminder to unmute yourself locally when using star six. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker #8: Hi, everyone. Good morning. And thanks for the question. Looking at the guidance, it looks like you're operating leverage or your flow-through does kind of pull back in 26 or the implied number.
Jordan Bender: Hi, everyone. Good morning, and thanks for the question. Looking at the guidance, it looks like your operating leverage or your flow through does kind of pull back in 26 or the implying number. Is there any incremental investment that's going into IMG, or is there anything that you can kind of help us with or unpack, you know, just some of those dynamics at play? Thank you.
Jordan Bender: Hi, everyone. Good morning, and thanks for the question. Looking at the guidance, it looks like your operating leverage or your flow through does kind of pull back in 26 or the implying number. Is there any incremental investment that's going into IMG, or is there anything that you can kind of help us with or unpack, you know, just some of those dynamics at play? Thank you.
Speaker #8: Is there any incremental investment that's going into IMG? Or is there anything that you can kind of help us with or unpack—just some of those dynamics at play?
Speaker #8: Thank you.
Gerard Griffin: Sure. Thanks, Jordan. A couple of things with regards to EBITDA flow through when you look at 2026 versus 2025. First and foremost, the biggest reason for the what I would say is lower flow through is that we are now fully incorporating IMG as if it's new revenue, right? That revenue comes at, what I would say is a margin that's higher than our base margin, but lower than our incremental margins, right? The incremental margins of our base business are well over 40%, and the actual margins that we're taking IMG in out are close to our, I would say, space business margin, which is someplace in the, in the mid-20% range. That would be the first thing.
Gerard Griffin: Sure. Thanks, Jordan. A couple of things with regards to EBITDA flow through when you look at 2026 versus 2025. First and foremost, the biggest reason for the what I would say is lower flow through is that we are now fully incorporating IMG as if it's new revenue, right? That revenue comes at, what I would say is a margin that's higher than our base margin, but lower than our incremental margins, right? The incremental margins of our base business are well over 40%, and the actual margins that we're taking IMG in out are close to our, I would say, space business margin, which is someplace in the, in the mid-20% range. That would be the first thing.
Speaker #5: Sure. Thanks, Jordan. So a couple of things with regards to EBITDA flow-through. When you look at 2026 versus 2025, first and foremost, the biggest reason for the, I would say, lower flow-through is that we are now fully incorporating IMG as if it's new revenue, right?
Speaker #5: And that revenue comes at what I would say is a margin that's higher than our base margin, but lower than our incremental margins, right?
Speaker #5: So the incremental margins of our base business are well over 40%. And the actual margins that we're taking IMG in are close to our, I would say, base business margin, which is someplace in the mid-20% range.
Speaker #5: So that would be the first thing. The second thing that I would say is when you look at the margin expansion that we had in the fourth quarter of 2025, there were some significant savings that happened in the fourth quarter.
Gerard Griffin: The second thing that I would say is when you look at the margin expansion that we had in Q4 of 2025, there were some significant savings that happened in Q4, some of which will, I would say, move into Q1 and some of which won't repeat. You had things like lower bonus accrual in Q4. You had some IT development spend in Q4 that was pushed to Q1 of 2026. It really comes down to a timing issue more than anything else. When you look at the 450 basis points of margin expansion that we delivered in Q4, that's primarily the driver of why the margin expansion in 2026 is a little bit less.
Gerard Griffin: The second thing that I would say is when you look at the margin expansion that we had in Q4 of 2025, there were some significant savings that happened in Q4, some of which will, I would say, move into Q1 and some of which won't repeat. You had things like lower bonus accrual in Q4. You had some IT development spend in Q4 that was pushed to Q1 of 2026. It really comes down to a timing issue more than anything else. When you look at the 450 basis points of margin expansion that we delivered in Q4, that's primarily the driver of why the margin expansion in 2026 is a little bit less.
Speaker #5: Some of which will, I would say, move into the first quarter. And some of which won't repeat. So you had things like lower bonus accrual in the fourth quarter.
Speaker #5: You had some IT development spend in the fourth quarter that was pushed to the first quarter of 2026. So it really comes down to a timing issue more than anything else.
Speaker #5: And when you look at the 450 basis points of margin expansion that we delivered in the fourth quarter, that's primarily the driver of why the margin expansion in 2026 is a little bit less.
Speaker #8: Perfect. Thank you. And then, Craig, I'll stick with you on the fall. On the buyback, good to see kind of that stepping up by quite a bit.
Jordan Bender: Perfect. Thank you. Craig, I'll stick with you on the follow-up. On the buyback, you know, good to see kind of that stepping up by quite a bit. You know, how should we think about that either on a quarterly basis, on an annual basis, just with where the stock trades today?
Jordan Bender: Perfect. Thank you. Craig, I'll stick with you on the follow-up. On the buyback, you know, good to see kind of that stepping up by quite a bit. You know, how should we think about that either on a quarterly basis, on an annual basis, just with where the stock trades today?
Speaker #8: How should we think about that? Either on a quarterly basis, on an annual basis, just with where the stock trades today?
Speaker #5: Sure, Jordan. So Carsten could add a little bit more here if you want. But when you think about how we buy back our shares, we predominantly buy back according to a grid.
Gerard Griffin: Sure, Jordan. Carsten can add a little bit more here if he wants. When you think about how we buy back our shares, we predominantly buy back according to a grid. We've done that historically. We are opportunistic on top of that, like we were with our secondary buyback in the middle of last year. Predominantly, we buy according to a grid that allows us to be much more aggressive at lower rates and pull back a little bit at higher rates. Given where the stock is today versus the value that we're creating at our company, both in the short term and the long term, we certainly see an opportunity to continue to buy back aggressively at current levels.
Gerard Griffin: Sure, Jordan. Carsten can add a little bit more here if he wants. When you think about how we buy back our shares, we predominantly buy back according to a grid. We've done that historically. We are opportunistic on top of that, like we were with our secondary buyback in the middle of last year. Predominantly, we buy according to a grid that allows us to be much more aggressive at lower rates and pull back a little bit at higher rates. Given where the stock is today versus the value that we're creating at our company, both in the short term and the long term, we certainly see an opportunity to continue to buy back aggressively at current levels.
Speaker #5: We've done that historically. We are opportunistic on top of that. We were with our secondary buyback in the middle of last year. But predominantly, we buy according to a grid that allows us to be much more aggressive at lower rates and pull back a little bit at higher rates.
Speaker #5: And given where the stock is today versus the value that we're creating at our company, both in the short term and the long term, we certainly see an opportunity to continue to buy back aggressively at current levels.
Speaker #8: Understood. Thank you very much.
Jordan Bender: Understood. Thank you very much.
Jordan Bender: Understood. Thank you very much.
Speaker #4: I'll have to add maybe from Carsten. Yes, I think we are now ready for a more opportunistic approach if that gap is increasing, which we see.
Carsten Koerl: To add maybe from Carsten, yes, I think, we are now ready for a more opportunistic approach if that gap is increasing, which we see.
Carsten Koerl: To add maybe from Carsten, yes, I think, we are now ready for a more opportunistic approach if that gap is increasing, which we see.
Speaker #1: Your next question comes from the line of Clark Lampen with BTIG. A kind reminder to please unmute yourself locally when pressing star six. Your line is open.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Clark Lampen with BTIG. A kind reminder to please unmute yourself locally by pressing star six. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Clark Lampen with BTIG. A kind reminder to please unmute yourself locally by pressing star six. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker #1: Please go ahead.
Speaker #4: Hopefully, you guys can hear me. Okay. Perfect. Maybe, I guess, just first question, sort of a point of clarification. Carsten, for the lead partners that haven't yet granted you the right to explore or strike partnerships with some of the prediction constituents that were mentioned already, is the hurdler consideration set any different than we've talked about so far last quarter and today?
Clark Lampen: Hopefully you guys can hear me.
Clark Lampen: Hopefully you guys can hear me.
Gerard Griffin: Yep.
Gerard Griffin: Yep.
Clark Lampen: Okay, perfect. Maybe, I guess just first question, sort of a point of clarification. Carsten, for the lead partners that haven't yet granted you the right to explore or strike partnerships with some of the prediction constituents that were mentioned already, is the hurdler consideration set any different, you know, than we talked about so far last quarter? You know, today you highlighted the regulatory aspect of this. I'm just curious if, I guess, for some of the partners that you didn't mention earlier, whether they're looking for something different or maybe their review process is just a little bit more stringent. Any clarification that you can provide would be appreciated. Then the second question, just on the MTS business.
Clark Lampen: Okay, perfect. Maybe, I guess just first question, sort of a point of clarification. Carsten, for the lead partners that haven't yet granted you the right to explore or strike partnerships with some of the prediction constituents that were mentioned already, is the hurdler consideration set any different, you know, than we talked about so far last quarter? You know, today you highlighted the regulatory aspect of this. I'm just curious if, I guess, for some of the partners that you didn't mention earlier, whether they're looking for something different or maybe their review process is just a little bit more stringent. Any clarification that you can provide would be appreciated. Then the second question, just on the MTS business.
Speaker #4: You highlighted the regulatory aspect of this. I'm just curious if, I guess, for some of the partners that you didn't mention earlier, whether they're looking for something different or maybe their review process is just a little bit more stringent.
Speaker #4: Any clarification that you can provide would be appreciated. And then the second question, just on the MTS business, you highlighted this last quarter. As a key area for upsell and cross-sell efforts with IMG, I'm just curious if you could provide a little bit more sort of guardrails around what we might expect for this piece of the business in 2026.
Clark Lampen: You highlighted this last quarter, as a key area for upsell and cross-sell efforts with IMG. I'm just curious if you could provide a little bit more, you know, sort of guardrails around what we might expect for this piece of the business in 2026. Is this where the vast majority of the incremental 25% is gonna show up, or has the expectation set, I guess, moved at all? Thank you, guys.
Clark Lampen: You highlighted this last quarter, as a key area for upsell and cross-sell efforts with IMG. I'm just curious if you could provide a little bit more, you know, sort of guardrails around what we might expect for this piece of the business in 2026. Is this where the vast majority of the incremental 25% is gonna show up, or has the expectation set, I guess, moved at all? Thank you, guys.
Speaker #4: Is this where the vast majority of the incremental 25% is going to show up? Or has the expectation set, I guess, moved at all?
Speaker #4: Thank you, guys.
Carsten Koerl: Good. Looking now to our partners. We're speaking here NBA, we're speaking Major League Baseball, we might speak, PGA. They all have a different view and a different approach here. It is centered around how to protect sports and how to protect the game. For all of them, they have some nuances. Of course, we would love to see very clear signals very quickly. We are ready with the product, but we have an official partnership, and it's about official data. We respect this from our partners there. We see an uptick opportunity in this year in the $ tens of millions, if the partners decide to go quicker.
Carsten Koerl: Good. Looking now to our partners. We're speaking here NBA, we're speaking Major League Baseball, we might speak, PGA. They all have a different view and a different approach here. It is centered around how to protect sports and how to protect the game. For all of them, they have some nuances. Of course, we would love to see very clear signals very quickly. We are ready with the product, but we have an official partnership, and it's about official data. We respect this from our partners there. We see an uptick opportunity in this year in the $ tens of millions, if the partners decide to go quicker.
Speaker #5: Good. So looking now to our partners. So we're speaking here MBA. We're speaking Major League Baseball. We might speak PGA. They all have a different view and a different approach here.
Speaker #5: But it is centered around how to protect sport and how to protect the game. For all of them, they have some nuances. Of course, we would love to see very clear signals, very quickly.
Speaker #5: We are ready with the product. But we have an official partnership. And it's about official data. So we respect this from our partners there.
Speaker #5: We see an uptick opportunity in this year in the tens of millions. If the partners decide to go quicker, we have now quite some resources on the product development, on the market maker side, as you hear, because we think we can help the existing market makers significantly with real-time models to predict liquidity and to predict risk streams.
Carsten Koerl: We have now quite some resources on the product development on the market-maker side, as you hear, because we think we can help the existing market makers significantly with real-time models to predict liquidity and to predict risk streams. So that is something exciting for us on R&D side, and we use this time to get ready. We have now 3 partners which gave us the green light, and we are beginning to deploy here the real-time information and later on the products on this. We understand that our partners are speaking with the regulators here. CFTC plays a main role in there. I think everybody is encouraged and everybody understands that regards for the protections need to be there. Still, this is a sector where we have different tendencies and where we have things.
Carsten Koerl: We have now quite some resources on the product development on the market-maker side, as you hear, because we think we can help the existing market makers significantly with real-time models to predict liquidity and to predict risk streams. So that is something exciting for us on R&D side, and we use this time to get ready. We have now 3 partners which gave us the green light, and we are beginning to deploy here the real-time information and later on the products on this. We understand that our partners are speaking with the regulators here. CFTC plays a main role in there. I think everybody is encouraged and everybody understands that regards for the protections need to be there. Still, this is a sector where we have different tendencies and where we have things.
Speaker #5: So that is something exciting for us on R&D side. And we use three partners which gave us the green light. And we are beginning to deploy here.
Speaker #5: The real-time information and later on the products on this. We understand that our partners are speaking with the regulators. CFTC plays a main role in there.
Speaker #5: And I think everybody is encouraged, and everybody understands that rail guards for the protections need to be there. Still, this is a sector where we have different tendencies and where we have things where we have now 39 or 40 states, including D.C., which have a regulatory framework.
Carsten Koerl: We have now 39 or 48 states, including DC, which have a regulatory framework, and they have a position on this, as we all know. Therefore, I think it is good for all of us, and we are well advised to put two things in focus, how to protect the player and how to protect the game and the players of the game. That's those things. We expect movements very soon from the partners which I mentioned here into a direction that they will allow us to deploy official data and the product space from this data, which are even more exciting. Looking now to IMG, the uplift, the revenue synergies, that's broadly. We have significantly more clients for the live data. We have the same for the AV feeds.
Carsten Koerl: We have now 39 or 48 states, including DC, which have a regulatory framework, and they have a position on this, as we all know. Therefore, I think it is good for all of us, and we are well advised to put two things in focus, how to protect the player and how to protect the game and the players of the game. That's those things. We expect movements very soon from the partners which I mentioned here into a direction that they will allow us to deploy official data and the product space from this data, which are even more exciting. Looking now to IMG, the uplift, the revenue synergies, that's broadly. We have significantly more clients for the live data. We have the same for the AV feeds.
Speaker #5: And they have a position on this, as we all know. So therefore, I think it is good for all of us. And we are valid wise to put two things in focus: how to protect the player and how to protect the game and the players of the game.
Speaker #5: So that's those things. But we expect movements very soon from the partners which I mentioned here, into a direction that they will allow us to deploy official data and the products based on this data, which are even more exciting.
Speaker #5: Looking now to IMG, the uplift, the revenue synergies, that's broadly. So we have significantly more clients for the live data. We have the same for the AV feeds.
Carsten Koerl: Of course, we put it into our products, the visualizations, the managed trading services. There is not a specific product. It is broadly over the space that we see this revenue synergies.
Carsten Koerl: Of course, we put it into our products, the visualizations, the managed trading services. There is not a specific product. It is broadly over the space that we see this revenue synergies.
Speaker #5: And of course, we put it into our products, the visualizations, the managed trading services. So there is not a specific product. It is broadly over the space that we see these revenue synergies.
Clark Lampen: Thanks very much.
Clark Lampen: Thanks very much.
Speaker #8: Thanks very much.
Gerard Griffin: Your next question comes from the line of Jeffrey Staehsli with Stifel. Kind reminder to unmute yourself locally by pressing star six. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Gerard Griffin: Your next question comes from the line of Jeffrey Staehsli with Stifel. Kind reminder to unmute yourself locally by pressing star six. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker #1: Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Stanpiel with Stifel. Kind reminder to unmute yourself locally by pressing star six. Your line is open.
Speaker #1: Please go ahead.
Jeffrey Staehsli: Great. Good morning, Carsten, Craig. Thanks for taking our questions. You know, maybe starting off on AI, which has obviously been a hot topic this quarter, and we haven't touched on yet in the Q&A. Carsten, I'm curious for the core data business itself. Obviously, the transition as industry over the past decade or so to exclusive rights contracts has created a real meaningful moat. If you look at some of the other verticals, managed trading, streaming, marketing, can you just, you know, give us some thoughts on how you see the value in distribution and bundling, and maybe if there is risk as you see it today, if the marginal cost to develop some of these products starts to go down with the quality alliance continuing to get better?
Jeffrey Staehsli: Great. Good morning, Carsten, Craig. Thanks for taking our questions. You know, maybe starting off on AI, which has obviously been a hot topic this quarter, and we haven't touched on yet in the Q&A. Carsten, I'm curious for the core data business itself. Obviously, the transition as industry over the past decade or so to exclusive rights contracts has created a real meaningful moat. If you look at some of the other verticals, managed trading, streaming, marketing, can you just, you know, give us some thoughts on how you see the value in distribution and bundling, and maybe if there is risk as you see it today, if the marginal cost to develop some of these products starts to go down with the quality alliance continuing to get better?
Speaker #4: Great. Good morning, Carsten. Craig, thanks for taking our questions. Maybe starting off on AI, which is obviously been a hot topic this quarter. And we haven't touched on yet.
Speaker #4: In the Q&A, so Carsten, I'm curious for the core data business itself. Obviously, the transition in this industry over the past decade or so to exclusive rights contracts has created a real meaningful moat.
Speaker #4: But if you look at some of the other verticals, managed trading, streaming, marketing, can you just give us some thoughts on how you see the value in distribution and bundling and maybe if there is risk, as you see it today, if the marginal cost to develop some of these products starts to go down with the quality LLMs continue to get better?
Jeffrey Staehsli: Just any sort of high-level strategic thoughts there would be helpful. Thanks.
Jeffrey Staehsli: Just any sort of high-level strategic thoughts there would be helpful. Thanks.
Speaker #4: Just any sort of high-level strategic thoughts there would be helpful. Thanks.
Carsten Koerl: To keep it with Steve Ballmer very short, I was witnessing him live on stage. He said to the auditorium, 70% from you guys will be redundant in 18 months' time. He laughed about this the way our Steve is laughing. There is really a revolution ongoing, and I'm very happy that we are prepared since 3 years on this. We applying this massively. We acquired the best brains available from Google for the topic AI and GenAI. I split this in 2 pieces this year. On the internal roadmap, the first priority is our engineering. 100% of the code from the engineers is AI supported. There is no way for the engineers around this. This increased our lead time already by 20%, and I expect significantly uplift on those numbers. The second focus area is operation.
Carsten Koerl: To keep it with Steve Ballmer very short, I was witnessing him live on stage. He said to the auditorium, 70% from you guys will be redundant in 18 months' time. He laughed about this the way our Steve is laughing. There is really a revolution ongoing, and I'm very happy that we are prepared since 3 years on this. We applying this massively. We acquired the best brains available from Google for the topic AI and GenAI. I split this in 2 pieces this year. On the internal roadmap, the first priority is our engineering. 100% of the code from the engineers is AI supported. There is no way for the engineers around this. This increased our lead time already by 20%, and I expect significantly uplift on those numbers. The second focus area is operation.
Speaker #3: To keep it with Steve Ballmer very short, I was witnessing him live on stage. He said to the auditorium, "Seventy percent from you guys will be redundant, and eighteen months is time." And he laughed about this, the way how Steve is laughing.
Speaker #3: But there is a really revolution ongoing. And I'm very happy that we are prepared since three years on this. So we are applying this massively.
Speaker #3: We acquired the best brains, available from Google, for the topic AI and Gen AI. And I split this in two pieces. This year, on the internal roadmap, the first priority is our engineering 100% of the code from the engineers is AI supported.
Speaker #3: There is no way for the engineers around this. This increased our lead time already by 20%. And I expect significantly uplift on those numbers.
Speaker #3: The second focus area is operation. Why should a human being not be replaced by an, from us, programmed AI agent? If the data is there, if computer vision is there, and video is there.
Carsten Koerl: Why should a human being not be replaced by an, from us, programmed AI agent if the data is there, if computer vision is there and video is there? There's no reason for it. We are already on 50% of our content produced with our own agents, which are working on computer vision to extract that information. Tens of thousands of more data points per match, depending on the sport which is in there. These are the two key focus areas. I would love to see much speedier deployment of agents in the financial sector and in the legal sector. I think that's a big, big benefit. Static KPIs is something which is from yesterday. You're going to need to adapt to the market. You need to understand what is in the market and how does that compare to the internal KPIs and numbers.
Carsten Koerl: Why should a human being not be replaced by an, from us, programmed AI agent if the data is there, if computer vision is there and video is there? There's no reason for it. We are already on 50% of our content produced with our own agents, which are working on computer vision to extract that information. Tens of thousands of more data points per match, depending on the sport which is in there. These are the two key focus areas. I would love to see much speedier deployment of agents in the financial sector and in the legal sector. I think that's a big, big benefit. Static KPIs is something which is from yesterday. You're going to need to adapt to the market. You need to understand what is in the market and how does that compare to the internal KPIs and numbers.
Speaker #3: There's no reason for it. So we are already on 50% of our content produced with our own agents, which are working on computer vision to extract that information.
Speaker #3: Tens of thousands of more data points per match, depending on the sport, which is in there. So these are the two key focus areas.
Speaker #3: I would love to see much speedier deployment of agents in the financial sector and in the legal sector. I think that's a big, big benefit: statical KPIs is something which is, from yesterday, you're going to need to adopt to the market.
Speaker #3: You need to understand what is in the market and how does that compare to the internal KPIs and numbers. So these are areas which are not the top, top priority.
Carsten Koerl: These are areas which are not the top priority, but we are working very hard on this. Engineering operations on the top internally. Externally, the real exciting thing is what can we do with all the data points and the deep data which we have? For this, we started now the foundation model for basketball. What it is we've seen this foundation model because we feed the tracking data into this, and that's billions of data points. When LeBron is, for example, doing a no-look pass. We see is he looking up, down, left, right. The human being can't see this, but based on this and based on the position of the other players, we predict now the next pixel and the next pixel, and from this, we can predict 7 seconds with a high probability from where is the point scored.
Carsten Koerl: These are areas which are not the top priority, but we are working very hard on this. Engineering operations on the top internally. Externally, the real exciting thing is what can we do with all the data points and the deep data which we have? For this, we started now the foundation model for basketball. What it is we've seen this foundation model because we feed the tracking data into this, and that's billions of data points. When LeBron is, for example, doing a no-look pass. We see is he looking up, down, left, right. The human being can't see this, but based on this and based on the position of the other players, we predict now the next pixel and the next pixel, and from this, we can predict 7 seconds with a high probability from where is the point scored.
Speaker #3: But we are working very hard on this. Engineering operations on the top internally. Externally, the real exciting thing is, what can we do with all the data points and the deep data which we have?
Speaker #3: And for this, we started now the foundation model for basketball. And what it is, is we see in this foundation model because we feed the tracking data into this.
Speaker #3: And that's billions of data points. When LeBron is, for example, doing a no-look pass, we see—is he looking up, down, left, right?
Speaker #3: The human being can't see this. But based on this, and based on the position of the other players, we predict now the next pixel and the next pixel.
Speaker #3: And from this, we can predict seven seconds with a high probability from where is the points scored. Imagine how cool this thing is for coaching applications.
Carsten Koerl: Imagine how cool this thing is for coaching applications, but imagine how cool it is for market makers to have that edge to predict what is the potential next movement underlying it with liquidity. This is exciting stuff, and that's now possible with AI. I could speak hours about this, but these are the main sectors where we are looking into.
Carsten Koerl: Imagine how cool this thing is for coaching applications, but imagine how cool it is for market makers to have that edge to predict what is the potential next movement underlying it with liquidity. This is exciting stuff, and that's now possible with AI. I could speak hours about this, but these are the main sectors where we are looking into.
Speaker #3: But imagine how cool it is for market makers who have that edge to predict what is the potential next move and underlying it with liquidity.
Speaker #3: So this is exciting stuff. And that's now possible with AI. I could speak hours about this. But these are the main sectors where we are looking into.
Jeffrey Staehsli: That's a really helpful overview. Thank you for that, Carsten. For our follow-up, turning over to Craig. You gave some commentary on quarterly cadence for 2026, which I think was helpful. I wanna drill in a little bit further and really focus on, you know, both top line and cost synergies for IMG. Can you just talk about, you know, a little bit how you see the phasing of that benefit, you know, going through 2026? If we look sorta to back half exiting into 2027, should we think about sort of late 2026 as a reasonable call go forward run rate? Is there still more to come that would flow through in 2027?
Jeffrey Staehsli: That's a really helpful overview. Thank you for that, Carsten. For our follow-up, turning over to Craig. You gave some commentary on quarterly cadence for 2026, which I think was helpful. I wanna drill in a little bit further and really focus on, you know, both top line and cost synergies for IMG. Can you just talk about, you know, a little bit how you see the phasing of that benefit, you know, going through 2026? If we look sorta to back half exiting into 2027, should we think about sort of late 2026 as a reasonable call go forward run rate? Is there still more to come that would flow through in 2027?
Speaker #4: That's a really helpful overview. Thank you for that, Carsten. And then for our follow-up, maybe turning over to Craig. So you gave some commentary on quarterly cadence for 2026, which I think was helpful.
Speaker #4: I want to drill in a little bit further and really focus on both top line and cost synergies for IMG. Can you just talk about a little bit how you see the phasing of that benefit going through 2026?
Speaker #4: And then if we look sort of to back half exiting into 2027, should we think about sort of late 2026 as a reasonable call, go forward run rate?
Speaker #4: Is there still more to come that would flow through in 2027? Just anything to sort of help about the phasing as you go through the year on both top lines and cost synergies would be helpful.
Jeffrey Staehsli: Just anything to sort of help about the, you know, the phasing as you go through the year on both top lines and cost synergies would be helpful. Thanks.
Jeffrey Staehsli: Just anything to sort of help about the, you know, the phasing as you go through the year on both top lines and cost synergies would be helpful. Thanks.
Gerard Griffin: Sure. Thanks, Jeff. Appreciate the question. When you think about the IMG synergies on the revenue side, as Carsten mentioned, we're well on our way with regards to the outreach that we've had with our customers and our clients with regards to what kind of content they would like to see and what kind of content they would like to utilize. The revenue synergies and the timing of them for 2026 really comes down to two things. First and foremost, the timing of games and matches, right? There's less content for use in Q1 than there is, let's say, in Q2 or Q3 of the type of content that we acquired. There'll be a little bit of phasing related to that.
Gerard Griffin: Sure. Thanks, Jeff. Appreciate the question. When you think about the IMG synergies on the revenue side, as Carsten mentioned, we're well on our way with regards to the outreach that we've had with our customers and our clients with regards to what kind of content they would like to see and what kind of content they would like to utilize. The revenue synergies and the timing of them for 2026 really comes down to two things. First and foremost, the timing of games and matches, right? There's less content for use in Q1 than there is, let's say, in Q2 or Q3 of the type of content that we acquired. There'll be a little bit of phasing related to that.
Speaker #4: Thanks.
Speaker #3: Sure. Thanks, Jeff. Appreciate the question. So when you think about the IMG synergies on the revenue side, as Carsten mentioned, we're well on our way with regards to the outreach that we've had with our customers.
Speaker #3: And our clients with regards to what kind of content they would like to see and what kind of content they would like to utilize.
Speaker #3: The revenue synergies and the timing of them for 2026 really comes down to two things. First and foremost, the timing of games and matches, right?
Speaker #3: There's less content for use in the first quarter than there is, let's say, in the second or third quarter of the type of content that we acquired.
Speaker #3: So there'll be a little bit of phasing related to that. And then, the second thing, we'll obviously be— as we reach out to more and more clients and show them what we can do and offer to them, we should ramp up throughout the course of the year.
Gerard Griffin: The second thing will obviously be as we reach out to more and more clients and show them what we can do and offer to them, we should ramp up throughout the course of the year. You should see definitely, I would say the revenue predominantly in Q2 and Q3 from the benefit perspective, but there will be some benefit in Q1 as well. With regards to revenue in 27, before I turn to cost, the 27 synergies will predominantly look at which content we maintain from an IMG perspective. Obviously, from an IMG portfolio perspective, there's some content there that we wanna keep, there's some content there that we may not wanna keep. The revenue opportunity will really depend on the, I would say, quantity and quality of the revenue that we're maintaining.
Gerard Griffin: The second thing will obviously be as we reach out to more and more clients and show them what we can do and offer to them, we should ramp up throughout the course of the year. You should see definitely, I would say the revenue predominantly in Q2 and Q3 from the benefit perspective, but there will be some benefit in Q1 as well. With regards to revenue in 27, before I turn to cost, the 27 synergies will predominantly look at which content we maintain from an IMG perspective. Obviously, from an IMG portfolio perspective, there's some content there that we wanna keep, there's some content there that we may not wanna keep. The revenue opportunity will really depend on the, I would say, quantity and quality of the revenue that we're maintaining.
Speaker #3: So you should see definitely I would say the revenue predominantly in Q2 and Q3 from the benefit perspective. But there will be some benefit in Q1 as well.
Speaker #3: With regards to revenue in 2027, before I turn to cost, the 2027 synergies will predominantly look at which content we maintain from an IMG perspective.
Speaker #3: Obviously, from an IMG portfolio perspective, there's some content there that we want to keep. There's some content there that we may not want to keep.
Speaker #3: So the revenue opportunity will really depend on the, I would say, quantity and quality of the revenue that we're maintaining. Our customers, at the end of 2026, should be all lined up and ready to go.
Gerard Griffin: Our customers at the end of 2026 should be all lined up and ready to go. It'll be more about the content that we decide to keep. With regard to the cost side of the house, the cost side will be more phased, right? You'll see that kind of roll itself through 2026. You should start to see some more margin opportunities in the back half of the year from the cost side of the house than you would see in the first half of the year with regards to IMG. Certainly we would expect to continue to build on that in 2027 as we manage this as, I would say, a combined business.
Gerard Griffin: Our customers at the end of 2026 should be all lined up and ready to go. It'll be more about the content that we decide to keep. With regard to the cost side of the house, the cost side will be more phased, right? You'll see that kind of roll itself through 2026. You should start to see some more margin opportunities in the back half of the year from the cost side of the house than you would see in the first half of the year with regards to IMG. Certainly we would expect to continue to build on that in 2027 as we manage this as, I would say, a combined business.
Speaker #3: So it would be more about the content that we decide to keep. With regards to the cost side of the house, the cost side would be more phased, right?
Speaker #3: So you'll see that kind of roll itself through 2026. You should start to see some more margin opportunities in the back half of the year from the cost side of the house than you would see in the first half of the year with regards to IMG.
Speaker #3: And then certainly, we would expect to continue to build on that in 2027 as we manage this, as I would say, a combined business.
Gerard Griffin: You know, you got to remember what we're buying here is effectively content and we're managing this as a combined entity, and you'll see that kind of play itself out over 26 and 27.
Gerard Griffin: You know, you got to remember what we're buying here is effectively content and we're managing this as a combined entity, and you'll see that kind of play itself out over 26 and 27.
Speaker #3: You got to remember what we're buying here is effectively content. And we're managing this as a combined entity. And you'll see that kind of play itself out over 2026 and 2027.
Operator: Thanks very much. Operator, we have time for one more question.
Operator: Thanks very much. Operator, we have time for one more question.
Speaker #4: Thanks very much.
Speaker #3: Operator, we have time for one more question.
Operator: Your last question for today comes from the line of Bernie McTernan with Needham. Kind reminder to unmute yourself locally or press star six. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Operator: Your last question for today comes from the line of Bernie McTernan with Needham. Kind reminder to unmute yourself locally or press star six. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker #5: Your last question for today comes from the line of Bernie McTernan would need him. Kind reminder to unmute yourself locally or press star six.
Speaker #5: Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Bernie McTernan: Great. Thank you for taking the question. Carsten, just wanted to ask a broad one for you. I think we all just went through a, you know, earnings cycle with DraftKings and FanDuel, where you significantly lowered our growth expectations for the companies. Just wanted to get your outlook on the US market. Can this still be a major growth driver for Sportradar, relative to the rest of the world? Maybe breaking that down on just the regulated OSB product versus prediction markets. Thank you.
Bernie McTernan: Great. Thank you for taking the question. Carsten, just wanted to ask a broad one for you. I think we all just went through a, you know, earnings cycle with DraftKings and FanDuel, where you significantly lowered our growth expectations for the companies. Just wanted to get your outlook on the US market. Can this still be a major growth driver for Sportradar, relative to the rest of the world? Maybe breaking that down on just the regulated OSB product versus prediction markets. Thank you.
Speaker #3: Great. Thank you for taking the question. Carsten, just wanted to ask a broad one for you. I think we all just went through a earning cycle with DraftKings and FanDuel where we significantly lowered our growth expectations for the companies.
Speaker #3: Just wanted to get your outlook on the US market. Can this still be a major growth driver for Sportradar relative to the rest of the world?
Speaker #3: And maybe breaking that down on just the regulated OSB product versus prediction markets. Thank you.
Carsten Koerl: Thanks for giving me this opportunity, Bernie, to look a bit to the broader picture. If I'm looking from a Sportradar lens from the broader picture, 70% of our revenues are outside of the US. There's a well-oiled machine. It's global. We have the global strength and power in the distribution, and we deliver the results here. Looking now to the remaining 30%, two-thirds of it, roughly, is, betting in the US. From this, we see at the moment anything between 15% to 30% somehow influenced by prediction markets. What we hear from our partners, and that's now the FanDuel, the DraftKings, the Fanatics of this world, they see little or no cannibalization between the two things, prediction markets and online sports betting.
Carsten Koerl: Thanks for giving me this opportunity, Bernie, to look a bit to the broader picture. If I'm looking from a Sportradar lens from the broader picture, 70% of our revenues are outside of the US. There's a well-oiled machine. It's global. We have the global strength and power in the distribution, and we deliver the results here. Looking now to the remaining 30%, two-thirds of it, roughly, is, betting in the US. From this, we see at the moment anything between 15% to 30% somehow influenced by prediction markets. What we hear from our partners, and that's now the FanDuel, the DraftKings, the Fanatics of this world, they see little or no cannibalization between the two things, prediction markets and online sports betting.
Speaker #6: Thanks for giving me this opportunity, Bernie, to look a bit to the broader picture. If I'm looking from a sport radar lens on the broader picture, 70% of our revenues are outside of the US.
Speaker #6: There's a well-oiled machine. It's global. We have the global strengths and power in the distribution. And we deliver the results here. Looking now to the remaining 30%, two-thirds of it, roughly, is betting in the US.
Speaker #6: And from this, we see at the moment anything between 15% to 30% somehow influenced by prediction markets. What we hear from our partners, and that's now the FanDuels, the DraftKings, the Fanatics of this world, they see little or no cannibalization between the two things, prediction market and online sports betting.
Carsten Koerl: If you ask me now from a Sportradar perspective, we expect an uplift opportunity in the $ tens of millions, not in the $ hundreds of millions from prediction markets. Looking on the global scale, yes, we have to focus to keep that machine running, which is internationally significantly bigger than inside the US.
Carsten Koerl: If you ask me now from a Sportradar perspective, we expect an uplift opportunity in the $ tens of millions, not in the $ hundreds of millions from prediction markets. Looking on the global scale, yes, we have to focus to keep that machine running, which is internationally significantly bigger than inside the US.
Speaker #6: So if you ask me now from a sport radar perspective, we expect an uplift opportunity in the tens of millions, not in the hundreds of millions, from prediction markets.
Speaker #6: But looking on the global scale, yes, we have to focus to keep that machine running, which is internationally significantly bigger than inside the US.
Bernie McTernan: Thank you for that. Just as a follow-up, Craig, just wanted to make sure I understood the synergies right. If we're thinking about where the upside is from what you're currently messaging, is it fair to assume that the potential on the revenue synergy side is probably fully baked in at this point, so then therefore any potential upside would be from the cost side? Could you just take a moment to frame the potential cost synergy benefit versus the revenue synergy benefit?
Bernie McTernan: Thank you for that. Just as a follow-up, Craig, just wanted to make sure I understood the synergies right. If we're thinking about where the upside is from what you're currently messaging, is it fair to assume that the potential on the revenue synergy side is probably fully baked in at this point, so then therefore any potential upside would be from the cost side? Could you just take a moment to frame the potential cost synergy benefit versus the revenue synergy benefit?
Speaker #3: Thank you for that. And then just as a follow-up, Craig, just wanted to make sure I understood the synergies right. If we're thinking about where the upside is from what you're currently messaging, is it fair to assume that the potential on the revenue synergy side is probably fully baked in at this point?
Speaker #3: So then therefore, any potential upside would be from the cost side. And could you just take a moment to frame the potential cost synergy benefit versus the revenue synergy benefit?
Gerard Griffin: Sure. I would say we are not saying that our revenue synergies are fully baked in. Obviously, a lot of this comes down to what sort of content our customers wanna take, what kind of products we develop that we can ultimately sell to our customers. I would say there is definitely some additional revenue upside that can be had from an IMG perspective, depending on the dialogue that we have with our clients. On the cost side, I wouldn't say that they're baked into 2026, but I would say that they're easier to identify.
Gerard Griffin: Sure. I would say we are not saying that our revenue synergies are fully baked in. Obviously, a lot of this comes down to what sort of content our customers wanna take, what kind of products we develop that we can ultimately sell to our customers. I would say there is definitely some additional revenue upside that can be had from an IMG perspective, depending on the dialogue that we have with our clients. On the cost side, I wouldn't say that they're baked into 2026, but I would say that they're easier to identify.
Speaker #6: Sure. So I would say we are not saying that our revenue synergies are fully baked in. Obviously, a lot of this comes down to what sort of content are our customers want to take, what kind of products we develop that we can ultimately sell to our customers.
Speaker #6: So I would say there is definitely some additional revenue upside that can be had from an IMG perspective depending on the dialogue that we have with our clients.
Speaker #6: On the cost side, I think I wouldn't say that they're baked into 2026, but I would say that they're easier to identify. We know exactly the cost savings that we want to get from all the major cost buckets, whether it be scouting costs, whether it be headcount costs, whether it be a general facilities, whether it be IT, whatever it might be.
Gerard Griffin: We know exactly the cost savings that we wanna get from all the major cost buckets, whether it be scouting costs, whether it be headcount costs, whether it be general facilities, whether it be IT, whatever it might be. We've identified what we wanna do on that front, and we're gonna roll it out throughout 2026. We know that there are some additional things that can be done if need be, but the cost base is gonna match what the revenue opportunity ultimately is. We have said previously that we expect the IMG contribution to be margin accretive to the overall results from Sportradar in 2026 and beyond, and that's certainly what we expect for this year.
Gerard Griffin: We know exactly the cost savings that we wanna get from all the major cost buckets, whether it be scouting costs, whether it be headcount costs, whether it be general facilities, whether it be IT, whatever it might be. We've identified what we wanna do on that front, and we're gonna roll it out throughout 2026. We know that there are some additional things that can be done if need be, but the cost base is gonna match what the revenue opportunity ultimately is. We have said previously that we expect the IMG contribution to be margin accretive to the overall results from Sportradar in 2026 and beyond, and that's certainly what we expect for this year.
Speaker #6: We've identified what we want to do on that front, and we're going to roll it out throughout 2026. And then we know that there are some additional things that can be done if need be.
Speaker #6: But the cost base is going to match what the revenue opportunity ultimately is. And we have said previously that we expect the IMG contribution to be margin accretive to the overall results from sport radar in 2026 and beyond.
Speaker #6: And that's certainly what we expect for this year.
Bernie McTernan: Great. Thank you both.
Bernie McTernan: Great. Thank you both.
Speaker #3: Great. Thank you both.
Operator: We wanna thank everyone for joining us for our Q4 earnings call. Now we'll turn it back to the operator.
Operator: We wanna thank everyone for joining us for our Q4 earnings call. Now we'll turn it back to the operator.
Speaker #1: You want to thank everyone for joining us for our fourth quarter earnings call. Now we'll turn it back to the operator.
Operator: This does conclude today's call. Thank you all for attending. You may now disconnect.
Operator: This does conclude today's call. Thank you all for attending. You may now disconnect.