Q4 performance was characterized by a 7.7% increase in consolidated revenue when excluding the approximately $80 million headwind from prior-year political advertising.

The Digital Audio Group achieved mid-30s EBITDA margins, driven by podcasting revenue growth of 24.5% and rigorous financial discipline in content partnerships.

Management attributes podcasting success to a 'flywheel effect' where broadcast radio assets are used to build and promote original IP rather than just acquiring expensive third-party catalogs.

The Multiplatform Group (MPG) outperformed the broader radio industry by 500 basis points in 2025, supported by the scale of the company's local sales force across 160 markets.

Strategic partnerships with TikTok for music premieres and Netflix for video podcasts are being used to validate the reach and influence of radio personalities in a cross-platform environment.

The advertising marketplace is described as 'reasonably healthy' despite macro uncertainty and specific Q4 disruptions caused by major weather events.

Management expects 2026 adjusted EBITDA of approximately $800 million and free cash flow of approximately $200 million, supported by a robust midterm election cycle.

Programmatic revenue is projected to reach approximately $200 million in 2026, a 50% increase over 2025, as broadcast inventory integrates into Amazon and Yahoo! DSPs.

The company is implementing $100 million in total in-year cost savings for 2026, utilizing AI-powered tools to improve the efficiency of the operating structure.

Net leverage is expected to improve by more than a full turn to the mid-5s by year-end 2026, driven by high EBITDA-to-free-cash-flow conversion.

Q1 guidance assumes high single-digit revenue growth, though EBITDA is impacted by the timing of non-cash marketing expenses and the 'land of small numbers' in the first quarter.

The company utilizes non-cash co-marketing partnerships to build its proprietary audience database, which creates quarterly accounting mismatches in revenue and expenses.

Political revenue is a significant driver of working capital efficiency as these advertisements are typically paid for upfront.

Management flagged potential macro disruption risks stemming from recent geopolitical events in the Middle East.

Capital expenditures for 2026 are budgeted at approximately $90 million to support ongoing technological and programmatic infrastructure builds.

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Management explained that Q1 is the smallest quarter seasonally, making small expense shifts appear more significant.

Prepaid non-cash marketing expenses from Q4 are being deployed in Q1 to support the programmatic launch, creating a temporary margin drag.

Growth is driven by increased user penetration and higher consumption per listener, alongside expanding video podcasting opportunities.

Management stated that while they have reached their mid-30s margin goal for the Digital Audio Group, they see further upside through continued application of technology and capital discipline.

Video podcasts on platforms like Netflix and YouTube represent 'unforeseen revenue opportunities' that leverage existing radio talent.

Radio's massive reach is used as a promotional engine to drive audiences to these visual platforms, creating a unique competitive advantage over digital-only publishers.

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