Earnings call transcript: Tegna Q2 2025 highlights EPS beat, stock drops

Published 07/08/2025, 20:44
Earnings call transcript: Tegna Q2 2025 highlights EPS beat, stock drops

Tegna Inc. (TGNA) reported its second-quarter 2025 earnings, revealing an earnings per share (EPS) of $0.44, significantly surpassing the forecast of $0.36 by 22.22%. Despite this positive earnings surprise, the company’s stock fell by 6.45% to $16.36, reflecting broader market concerns and a cautious investor outlook. According to InvestingPro analysis, the stock appears significantly undervalued based on its Fair Value model, with a P/E ratio of just 5.35x and an impressive free cash flow yield of 24%.

Key Takeaways

  • Tegna’s EPS exceeded expectations by 22.22%.
  • Revenue decreased by 5% year-over-year to $675 million.
  • Stock price fell 6.45% post-earnings, nearing its 52-week low.
  • The company achieved 80% of its targeted savings through cost management.
  • Future revenue is expected to decline by 18-20% in the next quarter.

Company Performance

Tegna reported a mixed performance in Q2 2025. While the EPS beat forecasts, indicating strong cost management and operational efficiency, the company faced a 5% decline in total revenue compared to the previous year. This performance reflects ongoing challenges in the advertising sector, where revenue fell by 4%.

Financial Highlights

  • Revenue: $675 million, a 5% decrease year-over-year
  • Earnings per share: $0.44, a 22.22% surprise over forecast
  • Adjusted EBITDA: $151 million, down 14% year-over-year
  • Cash and cash equivalents: $757 million

Earnings vs. Forecast

Tegna’s EPS of $0.44 exceeded the forecasted $0.36, marking a significant 22.22% surprise. This result highlights the company’s effective cost management and operational strategies, which have outperformed market expectations.

Market Reaction

Despite the positive earnings surprise, Tegna’s stock fell by 6.45% to $16.36, close to its 52-week low of $13.37. This decline suggests investor concerns over the company’s revenue drop and future guidance, overshadowing the EPS beat.

Outlook & Guidance

Looking ahead, Tegna anticipates a challenging third quarter, with a projected 18-20% decline in total revenue year-over-year. The company remains focused on digital initiatives and local content, which are expected to drive future growth despite the near-term revenue challenges.

Executive Commentary

CEO Mike Stieb emphasized the importance of local news, stating, "Local wins. Catastrophic events such as the recent flooding in Texas highlight the power of local news." CFO Julie Heskett added, "We are reinvesting savings back into the business, but only into opportunities that enhance the quality and reach of our content or drive sustainable revenue growth."

Risks and Challenges

  • Declining advertising revenue poses a risk to future profitability.
  • Projected revenue decline in Q3 could impact investor confidence.
  • Regulatory changes in the broadcasting market may introduce uncertainty.
  • Macroeconomic factors, such as GDP growth, could affect consumer spending and advertising budgets.

Q&A

During the earnings call, analysts focused on potential regulatory changes and their impact on Tegna’s network affiliate relationships. Questions also addressed the company’s AI and technology initiatives aimed at cost savings and the strategic approach to potential mergers and acquisitions.

Full transcript - Tegna Inc (TGNA) Q2 2025:

Conference Operator: Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Q2 twenty twenty five TEGNA Inc. Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers’ presentation, there will be a question and answer session.

To ask a question during the session, you will need to press 11 on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press 11 again. Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker today, Kirk von Syelen.

Please go ahead.

Kirk von Syelen, Treasurer, TEGNA Inc.: Thank you. Good morning, and welcome to our second quarter conference call and webcast. My name is Kirk von Syelen, and I am TEGNA’s Treasurer. Today, our CEO, Mike Stieb and our CFO, Julie Heskett, will review TEGNA’s financial performance and results and provide TEGNA’s third quarter outlook. After that, we’ll open the call for questions.

Hopefully, you’ve had the opportunity to review this morning’s press release. If you’ve not yet seen a copy of the release, it’s available at tegna.com. Before we get started, I’d like to remind you that this conference call and webcast includes forward looking statements, and our actual results may differ. Factors that may cause them to differ are outlined in our SEC filings. This presentation also includes certain non GAAP financial measures.

We have provided reconciliations of those measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures in the press release. With that, let me turn the call over to Mike.

Mike Stieb, CEO, TEGNA Inc.: Thanks, Kirk. Good morning, everybody. Thank you for joining us. Coming up on a year as CEO here, I’m more confident than ever in what sets Tegna apart. Our strong local brands, high quality local journalism, loyal audiences, deep roots with advertisers, healthy balance sheet, and a terrific team puts us in a position of strength in this evolving moment for the broadcasting industry.

On the regulatory front, there seems to be positive progress for the local broadcasters who are working tirelessly for the public interest. Chairman Carr now has his majority and appears to be advancing a clear and encouraging agenda to allow broadcasters more scale in local markets and across The US. Importantly, the eighth US Circuit Court of Appeals recently handed down a decision to vacate the previous FCC’s top four prohibition rule, reasoning that the rule was arbitrary and capricious. The ruling will not take effect for a ninety day period while the FCC assesses whether vacating the rule would be unduly disruptive and or cure deficiencies found by the court. However, given Chairman Carr’s well established views on this topic, we believe the ruling will likely take effect following this ninety day period.

Of note, the court specifically held that the quadrennial review statute does not provide the FCC authority to tighten existing ownership rules. These developments are a significant step forward for our industry and for TEGNA’s wide range of options in this evolving landscape. While we track these regulatory developments closely, we’re staying focused on the work at hand, elevating TEGNA across our key priorities. Number one, building a world class team culture and company operating system that unlocks high impact execution. Number two, leveraging TEGNA’s strengths across our stations to improve performance.

Number three, fully deploying technology, automation and AI to supercharge our people and running more effective operation. Number four, growing digital revenue by deepening engagement with our digital audience. And number five, cutting unnecessary spend in bureaucracy, ensuring time and resources are maximally focused on growing audience and growing revenue. We’re scaling with purpose and discipline and doing it fast as part of building a world class team. We’ve named five new regional heads of content reporting to Adrian work.

They’ll lead content strategy across the country, building centers of excellence and further strengthening TEGNA’s award winning journalism. We’re delivering on our commitment to innovate and invest in our local newsrooms. We’re doubling down in the areas that drive our future, local, content and digital. Just last month, we announced a major local news expansion, adding dedicated seven to nine am streaming programming in over 50 markets. That’s more than one hundred new hours of local news every single day, giving people more of the critical local news and information they need to thrive in their communities.

To support this shift, we’re using automation and proprietary AI to boost productivity and speed, giving our journalists more time to do what matters most. By automating routine work, sharing resources, simplifying layers and bureaucracy, we freed up more time and dollars to invest in content. The result is better journalism, faster and at lower cost. It is a win win, and it works in every market. We’re still early in this game, but CTV streaming is a $30,000,000,000 market growing quickly, and we are building the muscle to lead in it by overhauling our sales process, reorienting our focus towards the digital opportunity.

The big picture is local wins. Catastrophic events such as the recent flooding in Texas highlight the power of local news. There is closer focus on local impact, helping communities rebuild, bringing people together, and helping fundraising for local communities. There’s massive opportunity in local news and community storytelling, and we are built to meet that need. Across platforms, we reach more than 100,000,000 people.

That reach is transforming how we create, distribute, and monetize content, and how we run the business behind it. We have the historical assets and the team to seize the opportunity and lead in local digital content. Before we wrap, I want to take a moment to recognize our Chief Operating Officer, Lynn Beal, who will be departing at the end of this month after more than thirty five years in the industry. It’s hard to capture a career like Lynn’s in a few sentences. Her leadership across broadcasting has been nothing short of extraordinary.

Most recently, she was honored with the 2025 Radio and Television Business Report Lifetime Leadership Award, a fitting tribute to someone who has helped shape the industry. Lynn, your impact on TEGNA and the broader industry is significant and lasting. You’ve been integral to supporting me over the past year and helping us craft a growth strategy that is already bearing fruit. We’re grateful and we wish you the very best in your retirement. As we approach the end of my first year, I want to thank the team for their extraordinary efforts to transform the way we operate at TEGNA.

Talented and motivated people with an important mission, super powered by technology can achieve amazing things. And I’m excited for what’s ahead. With that, I’ll turn it over to Julie for a closer look at our financial performance and third quarter guidance.

Julie Heskett, CFO, TEGNA Inc.: Thank you, Mike, and good morning, everyone. Our second quarter financial

Conference Operator: expectations, primarily driven by lower operating expenses, which came in better than our previously announced guidance range.

Julie Heskett, CFO, TEGNA Inc.: Our We had anticipated advertising softness to persist during the second quarter. As a result, our teams continue to take a proactive approach to advancing our broad transformation agenda, which is generating top line growth from various revenue streams. I am thankful for all of our employees for their ongoing focus and execution as we work to build a more sustainable and growth oriented future at TEGNA. I will begin today by covering our second quarter financial results, then provide an update on our operational initiatives and capital allocation priorities before closing with a review of our guidance. Total company revenue for the second quarter decreased 5% year over year to $675,000,000 in line with our outlook range of down 4% to 7%.

The decrease was primarily due to lower political advertising revenue, which is consistent with cyclical even to odd year comparisons and softer advertising and marketing services, which was expected going into the quarter. AMS revenue declined 4% year over year to $288,000,000 in the second quarter, reflecting ongoing macroeconomic headwinds. Amid economic uncertainty and softening consumer confidence, some advertisers remained cautious and delayed spending, contributing to weaker AMS performance within the quarter. As disclosed in our 10 Q filing, Gray Media, a reseller partner of Premion, exited its equity position and shifted to a nonexclusive advertising agreement. This change is reducing Premion related revenue and therefore negatively impacting year over year AMS comparisons by approximately 200 basis points, which began in second quarter and will continue for the next three quarters.

Excluding this impact, underlying AMS revenue declined 2% year over year in the quarter. Despite near term market pressures, we are encouraged by the continued growth of our owned and operated digital products, which delivered strong double digit growth year over year for the third consecutive quarter. We remain focused on accelerating digital initiatives where we have a clear competitive advantage. As Mike discussed earlier, our digital strategy remains on track with our underlying business performing in line with expectations, and we believe the long term growth opportunity ahead is substantial. Moving to distribution.

Distribution revenue in the second quarter was flat year over year at $370,000,000 due to subscriber declines partially offset by contractual rate increases. In terms of the distribution renewal cycle, approximately 35% of traditional subscribers are up for renewal at the end of this year. This comes after successfully renewing roughly 10 of our traditional MVPD subscribers at the end of the first quarter. In 2026, we have approximately 30% of traditional subscribers up for renewal at year end. During the quarter, we reached a comprehensive multi year agreement with Fox Corporation that renews station affiliations for six of our markets.

These FOX markets cover approximately 7% of our TEGNA households, which is our smallest affiliate portfolio. Moving on to cost cutting initiatives, we continue to drive significant improvements to our cost structure. As we have highlighted in recent calls, we’re aggressively deploying technology to run our stations more effectively and cutting all unnecessary spending. It’s important to note these improvements focus on our core operations, allowing us to streamline processes while maintaining our high standards of execution. This enables us to provide higher quality journalism at faster speeds and lower cost.

Second quarter non GAAP expenses finished down 3% year over year due to these operational cost cutting initiatives primarily seen in compensation and outside services, partially offset by an increase in programming expense driven by local sports rights. All other expenses outside of programming finished down 6% below last year, continuing the sequential improvement of structural cost reduction efforts. We remain on track to achieve our goal of generating 90,000,000 to $100,000,000 in annualized core non programming savings as we exit 2025. At the end of the second quarter, we’ve achieved 80% of our target. Our cost reduction program is more than just a target.

It’s a disciplined, zero waste, zero based budgeting approach. We’re scrutinizing every dollar we spend to ensure resources are aligned with our strategic priorities. We are reinvesting savings back into the business, but only into opportunities that A, enhance the quality and reach of our content or B, drive sustainable revenue growth. As a result, our total adjusted EBITDA in the second quarter decreased 14% year over year to $151,000,000 based on the previously discussed declines of high margin political and AMS revenues, partially offset by continued cost cutting initiatives I just spoke about. Turning to capital allocation, we remain committed to returning 40% to 60% of our adjusted free cash flow to shareholders over the two year period of 2024 and 2025.

We paid $20,000,000 in dividends to our shareholders in the second quarter. On July 2, we called $250,000,000 par value of TEDNA’s outstanding $550,000,000 senior notes due in March 2026 in a partial redemption with cash on hand, which leaves $300,000,000 in par value outstanding. Cash and cash equivalents totaled $757,000,000 at quarter end, and our net leverage finished at 2.8 times. We continue to take a disciplined approach to capital deployment to ensure we are investing for growth in all avenues we believe will create the most value for shareholders. Now let’s turn to our financial guidance elements.

As we noted in our press release this morning, we are reaffirming our adjusted free cash flow guidance of $900,000,000 to $1,100,000,000 over the combined two year twenty twenty four-twenty twenty five period. You can see all of our full year guidance metrics in our earnings release. We are lowering our full year 2025 interest expense guidance range to $160,000,000 to $165,000,000 reflecting the $250,000,000 par value partial redemption of our senior notes due in March that I just mentioned. Our financial guidance for the third quarter is as follows. We expect total company revenue to decline 18 to 20% year over year, in line with expectations given the cyclical nature of our business, specifically the shift from an even year with significant political and Summer Olympic advertising to an odd year without those revenue drivers.

We expect non GAAP operating expenses to decline 2% to 3% year over year. Before I close, I want to take a moment to recognize an extraordinary leader, our Chief Operating Officer, Lynn Beale. As Mike already said, she’s retiring at the end of the month. I have seen firsthand the commanding and lasting impact she has had, not just here at TEGNA, where she spent more than thirty five years shaping our culture, operations, and success, but also across the entire industry. Her leadership, strategic vision, and countless contributions have elevated the standard for excellence in local media.

On a personal note, Lynn is the person who hired me into this industry and has been a tremendous mentor and coach for more than two decades. I’m deeply grateful for her guidance, friendship, and unwavering commitment to developing those around her. On behalf of all of us at TEGNA, thank you, Lynn. We wish you the very best in your well earned retirement. In closing, our strong brands, robust local presence, a growing digital focused workforce, and industry leading balance sheet position us well to invest in internal growth opportunities and those that arise from potential deregulation.

We continue to generate results in line with expectations while investing for the future in local journalism, local content, digital development, and in our people. With that, operator, let’s open the call for questions.

Conference Operator: Thank you. At this time, we will conduct the question and answer session. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press 11 again. Please stand by while we compile the Q and A roster.

Our first question comes from the line of Dan Kurnos with The Benchmark Company. Your line is now open.

Dan Kurnos, Analyst, The Benchmark Company: Yeah. Thanks. Good morning. Appreciate the color as always, guys. Mike, I guess two.

I know you did NBC last year, but, obviously, they’ve come under some more scrutiny from chairman Carr. And given how much they’re continuing to shift, exclusively onto Peacock, I just wonder, if you think that anything might evolve in terms of the structure of that deal or if you’re just simply locked in because of the deal that you did And then secondarily, I know that you have, a lot of wood to chop, and you’ve done a great job kind of reorganizing the business towards internal growth initiatives. I’m just kind of curious where your head is at in terms of a sense of urgency from an M and A perspective, especially since you’ve got both in market and out of market opportunities. You don’t have quite the same duopoly portfolio that others have, And so it kind of broadens the spectrum for how you can attack the M and A landscape.

So I’ll just stick with those two because it’s probably already a mouthful.

Mike Stieb, CEO, TEGNA Inc.: Thank you, Dan. So I’ll start with NBC. First, It’s important to say that the network affiliate relationship is important and it is symbiotic and we value our network partners. And we approach those partnerships with a constructive mindset in particular around the preservation linear bundle which has served this industry so well for such a long time. I’m also grateful that Chairman Carr is so focused on the good work that local broadcasters do for our local communities is looking to continue to help us uphold our public interest to those communities.

Beyond that, there’s nothing to comment on in our network relationships. You saw that we had a constructive engagement with Fox this quarter and you should expect to see us to continue to work collaboratively with our network partners. Your second question, and specifically you asked how much urgency we feel. Forgive me for being repetitive, but I’ll come back to it. First, we believe that deregulation is necessary important and coming.

Our industry is up against big tech competitors who have absolutely no encumbrances in how they compete across the and in our markets. Secondly, we believe that when the you’re going to create a significant profit pool for the broadcast industry, and we have every expectation that we will participate. We’ve told you that we are either a buyer or seller depending upon how the opportunities present themselves. And you’ve already heard in the last few weeks from some of our peers in the industry about swaps, which are great opportunities to be both the buyer and a lot of parties. We believe that it’s a great opportunity, but we also have a strong balance sheet and a great set of assets and we are going to be disciplined in how we approach this.

And so we are continuing to take that approach. We’re excited about the possibilities, and the team is doing their work.

Dan Kurnos, Analyst, The Benchmark Company: Okay. Thanks, Mike. I appreciate it.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Craig Huber with Huber Research Partners LLC. Your line is now open.

Craig Huber, Analyst, Huber Research Partners LLC: Yeah. Hi there. Thank you. I got a couple of questions. Maybe I’ll start with the first one.

You’ve spoken a lot over almost the last year now about significant cost savings at TEGNA using technology. Can you give us some of the biggest areas where you’ve used AI and technology to take out costs? What the big some of the biggest wins you’ve had on taking costs out using technology? Just some examples, please.

Mike Stieb, CEO, TEGNA Inc.: Sure, Greg. I’ll do some higher level examples. But I won’t, for today’s call, contextualize those in Julie’s sort of specific cost saving numbers that she’s been sharing with you. First, I’ll make an important distinction. Often think about AI’s involvement in the content creation itself.

And that’s not where we are playing. We believe you need good journalists for getting sold in global markets. And we have done do we have an audio problem?

Julie Heskett, CFO, TEGNA Inc.: Julie? A little choppy. Yep, it was a little choppy. If you want to try again, it’s intermittent. Mike, try again.

Mike Stieb, CEO, TEGNA Inc.: I’m sorry about that. So let me come back to the examples. We we want to do the fixations. And we have wing to wing analysis of the workflows of every person and every business process in the company, that there are a number of activities that are rote and could be automated and we’re looking for opportunities to automate those. One example is transcription.

We’ve had a lot of journalists who finish an interview and then handwrite the interview. What another example is video editing. It takes a lot of time to edit videos and we have found ways to deploy AI to do the video editing. Another is identifying new stories before the team gets to the office. We receive lots of emails from sources and those can be summarized and presented to the team so that they can jump on the hottest opportunities.

We see opportunities on the sales and go to market side as well, creating draft campaigns for prospects, warming up leads with new advertisers through email campaigns and others. It’s not one or two or even three potential AI automation initiatives. It’s a full company mindset around demanding that our people spend their time on the high leverage activities that only good smart people can do and have an expectation that when they can offload rogue tasks, they will.

Craig Huber, Analyst, Huber Research Partners LLC: Appreciate

Julie Heskett, CFO, TEGNA Inc.: that. I would add, Frank, this is Julie, just on the cost side and future leveraging cost of capital coming down both from a technology perspective as well as spaces real estate. And we’re finding really good progress on building if you will stations of the future, which is a smaller footprint from a square footage perspective, spending potentially 80% less in CapEx utilizing the new technology and the virtual technology that is available to us. And also identifying about 50% less in operating expenses by taking advantage of these opportunities.

Craig Huber, Analyst, Huber Research Partners LLC: Great. I appreciate that. Also wanted to ask you, can you talk a little further about your outlook for core advertising here in the third quarter year over year? What’s trending like right now, please?

Mike Stieb, CEO, TEGNA Inc.: Yeah, let me touch this first on the sort of macro piece of that is, as we look at it, the economy seems to be strong, choppy. And so far as first quarter was close to flat year over year growth. Second quarter, you saw a spike to three percent growth and tariffs certainly played a role in all that. As we look to Q3, the blue chip consensus was for GDP growth around 1% and the Atlanta Fed outlook based on the latest data is about 2.5%. So overall, we think the economy is heading in the right direction.

At the same time, and as I’ve shared with you all on these calls before, my experience is that uncertainty in the economy is not good for collecting advertising revenue. The advertisers tend to sit on the sidelines a little longer until they feel confident in the direction of the economy. It’s also been my experience that they always come back and you get to reclaim the dollars you didn’t take when advertisers were feeling that uncertainty. So at a high level, we sort of understand that the ad market might be a little bit softer right now relative to our view of the macro economy. It’s also been my experience that the advertisers tend to catch up with they tend to catch up and they tend to catch up with more in their pockets from the money that they kept on the sidelines in the previous quarter or quarters.

Julie Heskett, CFO, TEGNA Inc.: Yes, I agree with that Mike. I would add, Craig, another thing that is specific to TEGNA, a couple of things. One is Q3 is a tougher comp with our NBC portfolio being the largest NBC affiliate group up against the Summer Olympics last year. So that is unique to our Q3 advertising trends. It’s probably a disproportionate impact.

Second thing is, as I said in my remarks, is the change of our Premion reseller partnership, which is also impacting our AMS trends going forward that began in Q2 and now it will take three additional quarters to lap that. That was also about 200 basis points. I’m positive growth in digital of our owned and owned properties continues to ramp up and our go to market strategy of training up on capitalizing on the digital growth area is continuing to improve on a sequential basis. And then I would say while July and August are substantially weaker because of more of the Olympic and the trickle down of the tariffs, I can tell you exiting Q3 September is in a positive direction and pacing up on a year over year basis.

Craig Huber, Analyst, Huber Research Partners LLC: So when you roll that all together, Julie, where is the overall quarter looking like advertising might end up being the core advertising? What percent change, I guess, down year over year?

Julie Heskett, CFO, TEGNA Inc.: Yes. So we don’t guide to advertising specific. You saw the comments of total revenue is projected to be down 18% to 20%. And I would say, advertising is going to be in that low doubles to mid teens range.

Craig Huber, Analyst, Huber Research Partners LLC: Very good. Thank you.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Steven Cahall with Wells Fargo. Your line is now open.

Steven Cahall, Analyst, Wells Fargo: Mike, helpful comments about how you kind of think about the M and A market. And I know there’s a lot of options there between being a buyer or seller. One of your peer CEOs is just saying that everybody is talking to everybody right now. So I was wondering if you could give us some perspective as to whether or not you think this is more of a buyer’s market or more of a seller’s market. When I kind of look at things, it seems like there are quite a few things maybe for sale, not that many with at least cash for purchasing, which may skew those conversations in a particular direction.

But just wanted to know if that’s correct or if some things that maybe we’ve missed in that characterization. And again, I know whatever deals you do will be subject to those exact terms. And then maybe just secondly on reverse comp, are you seeing any sort of paradigm shifts in the way that these are done, whether it’s the pricing algorithm fixed versus variable? I know the renewal you did was relatively small in terms of your household. But just wondering if there’s any trends that you’ve seen in reverse that you think are sort of bigger picture for the next few years.

Thank you.

Mike Stieb, CEO, TEGNA Inc.: Thanks, Steve. On the first question, I can’t answer the market. I can only answer the market through our perspective. And our perspective is we have a strong balance sheet and strong relative to the market, and we have great assets. It should create significant value creation opportunities for our shareholders.

And so, we’re engaged in the market as you would expect us to be, seeking to identify the way to create the most value for our shareholders. And as we’ve noted, there are acquisition, swap and sale opportunities that can benefit across the board. We have a wide aperture on this. And at the end of the day, it is our job to be dispassionate capital allocators and do what’s best for the shareholders. The second question Julie, do you want to jump on the sort of reverse retrans?

Julie Heskett, CFO, TEGNA Inc.: Yes. So, Stephen, I’ll take that one. If you recall last year, I think we were one of the initial companies to identify a bend in the curve of what used to be a steep growth expense line item of programming fees with the networks is as they come up for renewal, there are opportunities to renegotiate and have favorable terms for both parties quite frankly on the partnership of those deals. So that continues to play out. Our reverse comp programming fee line item continues to be flattish as we look at year over year trends of each of those agreements.

Mike Stieb, CEO, TEGNA Inc.: Great. Thank you all for the color.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Pat Scholl with Barrington Research. Your line is now open.

Mike Stieb, CEO, TEGNA Inc.: Hi. Thank you. I just had a

Pat Scholl, Analyst, Barrington Research: follow-up question on Premion. Just with the exiting of the reseller relationship, can you just maybe talk about like just overall, how advertisers view that product with kind of just focus more on the TEGNA footprint and any just sort of broader impact that might have within like net for national advertisers or wider political buys.

Mike Stieb, CEO, TEGNA Inc.: On Premion, something I’ve shared with you all before, spent a lot of time with our sales team and our customers on Premion. And it is a real value to local advertisers who have a relationship with our sales teams and trust our sales teams. And have had that consultative partnership in helping them to reach their audience and reach their business objectives on television. Half of the audience left the traditional linear television bundle and went to streaming. And we’re able to go to those advertisers and offer them not only the reach that they’ve gotten historically by buying TV, because now they can buy from us both TV and connected TV streaming.

But in addition, a layer of demographic, psychographic and location based targeting that helps them to enhance their buy and improve their return on investment. The premium business is also highly synergistic with the efforts that we’ve leaned into very hard this year around our owned and operated streaming apps. It’s driving significant growth in our total digital unique audience and minutes streamed every month, and is creating a real and significant opportunity for us on both fronts. So we are we’re excited about Premion. It is and we’re engaged in conversations with folks around premium service.

As you can imagine, we had a good and constructive partnership with Gray, and we’re keen to have more like that. Okay. Thank you.

Conference Operator: Thank you. I’m showing no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn it back to Mike Stive for closing remarks.

Mike Stieb, CEO, TEGNA Inc.: Well, just as always, thank everyone for your interest. You know, we’re a year into this journey right now, and I want to reiterate, I’m extremely proud of the team. Is difficult to change the strategic and operational and pace of execution in the way that’s necessary to capture this moment of opportunity. But the gang has really stepped up and I’m really excited about the future. So I’d like to thank everybody for your engagement as always, and talk to you next quarter.

Conference Operator: Thank you for your participation in today’s conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect.

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